97 Misc. 343 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1916
This action was brought by plaintiff to recover from defendants the balance of a deposit of $1,500 placed by plaintiff with defendants as security under a lease. Defendants were themselves merely lessees of the premises, which were used as a theatre.
On December 1, 1913, they executed to plaintiff a sublease of the premises for a term of five years, namely, from December 1, 1913, to December 1, 1918, at a rental of $100 weekly payable in advance.
The lease contained, among other material provi
“ 8th. That if the said premises, or any part thereof, shall become vacant during the said term, the Landlord or their representatives may re-enter the same, either by force or otherwise, without being liable to prosecution therefor; and re-let the said premises as the Agent of the said Tenant and receive the rent thereof, applying the same, first to the payment of such expenses as they may be put to in re-entering, and then to the payment of the rent due by these presents; the balance (if any) to be- paid over to thé Tenant who shall remain liable for any deficiency. ’ ’
“ 13th. That if default be made in any of the covenants herein contained, then it shall be lawful for the said Landlord to re-enter the said premises, and the same to have again, re-possess and enjoy. The said Tenant hereby expressly waives the service of any notice in writing of intention to re-enter, as provided for in the third section of an act entitled ‘An act to abolish distress for rent, and for other purposes, ’ passed May 13th, 1846.”
“ 21. The Tenant herewith deposits the sum of Fifteen Hundred ($1500) Dollars as security for the faithful performance of the terms, covenants and conditions of the within lease and the safe return, to the Landlords of any and all personal property leased herein, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, by the Landlords and in the event of a breach of any of the terms, covenants and conditions of the within lease, the landlord shall retain the said security as fixed and liquidated damages and not by way of penalty, and upon the faithful compliance by the tenant of the terms, covenants and conditions herein, the said*347 sum of Fifteen Hundred ($1500) Dollars shall be applied towards the payment of the rent for the last fifteen weeks of the term herein demised.”
Apart from the covenant to pay rent, the tenant also agreed to deliver up the premises at the termination of the lease in good condition; to execute all rules, orders, ordinances and regulations of the city government and its bureaus; not to under-let or alter the premises without the landlords’ consent; to refrain from placing signs upon the building except as indicated by the landlord; to pay nine dollars and fifty cents monthly for a watchman’s clock service, with a provision that in the event of default in such payment, the amount should be added to the rent; and to procure at his own expense fire insurance covering the chattels leased. There are other agreements on the part of the tenant, but as they seem to be largely regulatory and of very slight importance, I do not mention them in detail.
The complaint, served on or about June 1, 1914, alleges that on May 25, 1914, the plaintiff was dispossessed by the defendants by summary proceedings brought for non-payment of rent; that at that time there was due defendants three weeks’ rent, less $25 paid on account thereof, namely, a net amount of $275; that the summary proceedings and the warrant thereunder duly issued and duly executed 1 ‘ cancelled and annulled said lease, except that the defendants were entitled to receive $275 as rent, etc.;” that the terms of paragraph 21 of the lease (covering the deposit of $1,500) “ are null and void and of no effect for the reason that the same are contrary to law, and contrary to public policy, and, because of the terms and covenants therein contained, amount in effect to a forfeiture or penalty, and that the said covenants do not constitute liquidated damages. * * * ”
By way of counterclaim, the defendants alleged that rent was due to them up to and including the 15th day of June, 1914, in the amount of $700, less $125 theretofore paid by the tenant, leaving a balance of $575 due, wherefore judgment was demanded against the plaintiff for said $575.
It is not important to adjust precisely the apparent difference in calculations between the complaint and answer. It suffices for the purposes of this appeal to note that the plaintiff was willing to credit the defendants with $275 unpaid rent up to the time of the issuing of the precept in the summary proceedings, May 29, 1914, and that the defendants’ counterclaim included that sum of $275 and two weeks’ additional rent alleged to have accrued subsequently to the issuance of the warrant in dispossess.
Upon the trial, which took place June 22, 1916, defendants were permitted, with plaintiff’s consent, to amend the counterclaim to include rent “ for the last week of April, 1914, up to and including August 14th, aggregating the sum of $1,700, less $125 paid,” namely, for a net sum of $1,575. Defendants claimed no amounts beyond August, 1914, because they were on that date themselves evicted from the premises by the dominant landlord.' Before any evidence was offered, the defendants moved to dismiss the complaint on the grounds, first, that the action had. been
In support of the first ground, defendants urged that notwithstanding the summary proceedings the plaintiff’s covenant to pay rent survived until August, 1914, that, consequently, defendants had the right to hold the deposit as security until that time, and therefore that the action brought in June, 1914, was premature. This argument is based upon the assumption that the summary proceedings did not terminate all the tenant’s obligations under the lease. Defendants, of course, concede that, unless special provision be found in the lease to the contrary, the issuance of the warrant in summary proceedings would abrogate the lease. Their claim was, however, that this result was obviated by the provisions of paragraph 8, herein-above quoted. A recess was taken by the learned judge below for an examination, of the lease and authorities, and on reconvening the motion was denied on the ground, in "substance, that the eighth paragraph had reference solely to the contingency of the premises becoming vacant during the term, whereas the summary proceedings had been brought for nonpayment of rent under paragraph 13 of the lease. In my opinion, this ruling upon a vital point in the case was correct.
Since the decision of Michaels v. Fishel, 169 N. Y. 381 (1902), it is well settled that a provision permitting the landlord merely to “ re-enter ” for covenant broken refers solely to re-entry by the common law action of ejectment, and that, consequently, where in a lease it was further provided that in the event of such re-entry the landlord might re-let as the agent of the tenant, receive the rent, and hold the tenant liable for any deficiency, the landlord’s privilege, and the
In Anzolone v. Paskusz, 96 App. Div. 188 (1904), a léase was considered which contained a clause similar to the one interpreted in the Michaels case, except that it permitted the landlord to “ re-enter the premises either by force or otherwise,” and provided for the survival of the tenant’s obligation to indemnify the landlord for a difference in rent of the premises when relet after any such re-entry. It was there, held (p. 193), after consideration of the Michaels case, that: “ The word ' otherwise ’ necessarily broadens the significance" of the word ‘ re-enter ’ and prevents its. limitation to the technical definition of that word.” It was decided, therefore, that the tenant’s obligation to indemnify the landlord, and the provisions in the, lease covering a deposit of $2,000 as security, survived the removal of the tenant by summary proceedings. Other examples of forms of leases designed to overcome the technical difficulty are to be found in Baylies v. Ingram, 84 App. Div. 360 (1903); affd. without opinion, 181 N. Y. 518; Asher-Simon Realty Co. v. Goldberg, 61 Misc. Rep. 684 (1909, and Pannuto v. Foglia, 55 id. 244 (1907). See, also, Longobardi v. Yuliano, 33 Misc. Rep. 472 (1900). .On the other hand, careless revision of forms of leases has failed of its purpose. Thus in Wolf v. Rudinsky, 135 App. Div. 175 (1909), the lease contained two clauses, the 18th and 16th identical with the 8th and 13th respectively in the instant case. It was there pointed out that the survival of the tenant’s obligation w;as “ limited to the contingency of the premises becoming vacant,” and that, therefore, the obligation did not survive where the dispossess
It follows, therefore, that the ruling of the learned judge below in the cáse at bar was correct to the effect that the obligation of the tenant to indemnify the landlord for loss of rent subsequent to the tenant’s removal by summary proceedings was limited to the event that the summary proceedings be brought because the premises had become vacant and did not survive a removal if made as alleged in the complaint and conceded on the trial, solely for nonpayment of rent. In accordance with this ruling, there was left to the jury, practically as the single issue of fact, to determine whether the respondent had vacated the premises prior to the time of his removal by virtue of the warrant. On this issue the finding of the jury was in favor of the tenant respondent, namely, that there had been no such vacancy. Since it is clear that no other covenants survived the dispossess, it follows that the action was not prematurely brought.
We come then to the question whether the learned judge below was right in his further ruling that the deposit in the instant case was one by way of penalty, and not to be treated as liquidated damages, although expressly so denominated in the lease. The general rules for determining whether a provision of the kind here involved is one for liquidated damages or merely for a penalty seem to be fairly well settled. In the first place: ‘1 The circumstance that the deposit is described in the lease as liquidated damages for a breach of the agreement is not at all conclusive. The character of the deposit, whether liquidated damages or a penalty, depends upon the intention of the parties as disclosed by the situation and by the terms of the instrument.” Caesar v. Rubinson, 174 N. Y. 492, 496.
In order to ascertain that intention, it has been usual to apply the doctrine that: “ Where the language of such a provision specifying the amount of
Although in the case of leases of real estate the lessee almost invariably subscribes to a large number of other covenants in addition to his covenant to pay rent, little attention seems to have been paid in the decisions to rules which have an important bearing in that regard. They are to the effect that where a sum is specified as liquidated damages for the breach of a number of different covenants, some or one of which provides merely for the payment of a fixed sum of
It would seem nevertheless to be perfectly logical that where a gross sum is deposited as security against or stipulated to be paid upon a breach of a number of covenants or agreements any one of which is of such character as that if it were the sole agreement secured it would require the amount named as security to be treated as a penalty, the gross sum should be so treated. For it follows quite naturally that had the . parties really intended that the security should be treated as liquidated damages, they would have so apportioned it as to prevent the infirmity. If, therefore, one or more of the covenants secured is for the payment of a fixed sum or is one the damages for the
I confess that the application of these rules, or indeed the recognition of the distinctions suggested thereby, does not appear to have been uniform in the adjudicated cases in this state; but in large part such apparent inconsistencies lie frequently rather in expressions used arguendo than in the actual determination of the respective cases. See for.example, Peabody v. Richard Realty Co., 69 Misc. Rep. 582; affd without opinion, 145 App. Div. 983, 207 N. Y. 642; Feyer v. Reiss, 154 App. Div. 272, in both of which cases the provision was held to be one for liquidated damages.
On the other hand, it has been construed as a penalty in Feinsot v. Burstein, 78 Misc. Rep. 259; 82 id. 429; affd., 161 App. Div. 651, and again affd. without opinion, 213 N. Y. 703; Steiger v. Feldman, 94 Misc.
The difficulty of reaching a decision in any particular case, and the task of harmonizing the decisions is greatly increased by the fact that the leases involved exhibit infinite variety of detail in the covenants and stipulations which they contain. If the sum deposited were solely to secure the tenant’s covenant to pay rent and the provision for its “ forfeiture ” were made dependent upon the breach of that covenant alone, and if the tenant’s obligation thereunder were made to survive a termination of the lease by the landlord in any event and for any cause, it might be fairly clear that the provision, if so denominated, was one for liquidated damages. Even in this aspect, however, an element of doubt has been suggested in Logobardi v. Yuliano, supra, 33 Mise. Rep. 472, namely, to the effect that as the sum deposited is invariably considerably larger than the monthly rent, it could scarcely be contemplated by the parties that it would be liquidated damages for breach of the covenant to pay the last month’s rent. The answer to that argument, however, suggested in the same case, is that the leases generally provide that the deposit is to be applied in payment of the rent of the last months of the term, and that as to those months the latter provision would take precedence over the provision for liquidated damages. It does not seem to have been decided that the mere fact that a breach during the early months of the term would in all probability be followed by very large damage, whereas a breach in the later months would necessarily result in far smaller damages — is in itself sufficient to determine the character of the deposit as a penalty. Although generally also the rule seems to have been adopted that in the absence of a surviving obligation of the
As I have said above, the problem of the proper interpretation of the intent of the parties is complicated by the fact that the tenant’s obligation is frequently, as in the case at bar, stipulated to survive a termination of the lease only in certain ways and for certain causes. Thus, in the case at bar, if the plaintiff-tenant was dispossessed for failure to pay rent, his future obligations would terminate, leaving only a past breach of covenants, the damages from which'
The contrary conclusion was arrived at in a contract of the nature of a contract of employment in Wilhelm v. Eaves, 27 Pac. Rep. (Or.) 1053, where the sum was held to be a penalty. It was regarded as liquidated damages in the case of an agreement to convey land where all the conditions were to be simultaneously performed in Clement v. Cash, 21 N. Y. 253. The same consideration was urged by Shankland, J. (the sole dissenting judge) in Lampman v. Cochran, supra, 16 N. Y. 275, 276.
My conclusion, therefore, is that in view of the failure of the parties to provide expressly or in effect that the covenant to pay rent (or to be more accurate, to indemnify the landlord for future loss of rent), should survive the termination of the lease in any event, and because of the fact that the deposit was made to secure the performance of all the covenants undertaken by the tenant, which, so far as.they must be taken into account, vary radically in value, importance and character (as to exact measurement of loss from their breach), the ruling of the learned judge below that the provision for liquidated damages in the lease was to be construed as one for a penalty merely was correct.
The judgment should, therefore, be affirmed, with costs to respondent.
Guy and Shearn, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed, with costs to respondent.