Plaintiff, First National Stores, Inc., is the tenant and defendant, Yellowstone Shopping Center, Inc., is the landlord under the lease of the supermarket building in the Yellowstone Shopping Center, Forest Hills. By order of the Fire Department of the City of New York dated November 9, 1966, the landlord was directed to install a wet automatic sprinkler system in the cellar. This resulted in a dispute between the parties as to who was obligated under the lease terms to pay for the sprinkler system.
Article Twelfth of the lease provides in part: “In case lessee shall default in the performance of any covenant or agreement herein contained, and such default shall continue for ten (10) days after receipt by the lessee of written notice thereof given by
The Supreme Court, Queens County, in the exercise of its discretion, declined to entertain jurisdiction of the declaratory judgment action on the ground that “ the facts which form the basis of the instant complaint can be asserted by [the tenant] as a defense to a summary proceeding (Real Property Acts and Proceedings Law, section 743) ”. We are not directly concerned with this determination, however, because, on appeal, the landlord by stipulation waived its contention that the court should dismiss the action, and authorized the Appellate Division to determine the controversy on the appeal as a matter of law.
The Appellate Division unanimously held that it was the tenant’s obligation to install" the sprinkler system in the basement of the supermarket. Arguing that this determination is erroneous, the tenant calls our attention to article Fifth of the lease, entitled “Lessor’s Repairs ”, which provides in pertinent part: ‘ ‘ Lessor further agrees * * * to make all repairs to or alterations of the leased premises which may be-required by governmental authority ”. If our reading of article Fifth stopped
This language, as the Appellate Division noted, makes the tenant responsible for repairs, alterations, or additions to the premises required by governmental authority as a result of its specific use of the premises.
Although the landlord owns 19 stores in the shopping center where the supermarket is located, the Fire Department order requiring the sprinkler system applies only to the tenant’s premises. Accordingly, we agree that this is not an alteration or addition required by governmental authority which affects retail establishments generally. The Fire Department cited six reasons for requiring the sprinkler system: (1) heavy fire loading and large quantities of combustible stock; (2) inadequate ventilation; (3) wheeled conveyor belts throughout cellar; (4) unprotected lolly columns; (5) stream penetration hindered by large amount of stock stored in cellar; (6) housekeeping fair. Except for the unprotected lolly columns (hollow steel cylinder filled with concrete, used to support the floor above), it is clear that the necessity for the sprinkler system arose primarily because of the manner in which the tenant used its premises. Consequently, we conclude that it is the tenant’s obligation to install the sprinkler system and, by failing to do so, the tenant breached the covenant in the lease.
While the Appellate Division unanimously held the tenant responsible for installing the sprinkler system, it nevertheless
As Professor Borchard has noted, “ declaratory relief is sui generis and is as much legal as equitable ” (Borchard, Declaratory Judgments [2d ed.], p. 239; see, also, Anderson, Actions for Declaratory Judgments [2d ed.], § 214, pp. 459, 462; 26 O. J. S., Declaratory Judgments, § 105). Thus, in a proper case, a court has the fullest liberty in molding its decree to the necessities of the occasion. But, it cannot grant equitable relief if there is no acceptable basis for doing so. Here, the lease had been terminated in strict accordance with its terms. The tenant did not obtain a temporary restraining order until after the landlord acted. The temporary restraining order merely preserved the status quo as of the date it was obtained. Once the Appellate Division determined that the tenant had in fact defaulted by not installing the sprinkler system, the conclusion had to be drawn that the lease was terminated in accordance with its terms. The Appellate Division could not revive it unless it read into the lease a clause to the effect that the tenant could have an additional 20 days to cure its default before the landlord could commence summary eviction proceedings. This the court was powerless to do absent a showing of fraud, mutual mistake or other acceptable basis of reformation.
The sympathetic attitude of the majority below is understandable, but must be rejected. Article Twelfth of the lease, which gives the landlord the right to terminate after a 10-day notice of default, is neither harsh nor inequitable; a landlord’s right
Should we hold that the termination of this lease is harsh and inequitable, then the same conclusion can be reached in every instance where a landlord exercises his contractual rights, and, in that event, the right of termination or any other right specified in a lease would be rendered meaningless and ineffectual (cf. Matter of Feist & Feist v. Long Is. Studios, 29 A D 2d 186).
Accordingly, the order appealed from should be modified to the extent of reversing so much of the order which preserves the lease and enjoins the landlord from instituting summary proceedings to evict the tenant, and, as so modified, affirmed.
Judges Burke, Bergan, Keating and Breitel concur with Judge Scileppi; Chief Judge Fuld and Judge Jasen .dissent and vote to affirm on the opinion at the Appellate Division.
Order modified in accordance with the opinion herein and, as so modified, affirmed, with costs.
