29 Misc. 133 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1899
This action was brought to recover compensation for the use by the defendant, for advertising purposes, of the westerly wall of the house No. 204 East Ninety-seventh street, in the city of New York.
From February, 1896, to February, 1897, the defendant had the use of the wall under a written contract pursuant to which it had placed thereon the advertisement of one of its customers.
On the expiration of the agreement a renewal was entered into providing “ That for and in consideration of sixty-five dollars to be paid quarterly in advance the party of the first part (plaintiff) leases unto the party of the second part (defendant) the westerly wall of the house known as 204 East 97th street to be used
The stipulated consideration mentioned in this renewal was duly paid, and throughout its term the display of the original advertisement was continued. There was no further renewal. The advertisement was not painted out or obliterated in February, 1898, when the renewal expired, and has never been effaced.
The plaintiff sought to recover compensation computed at the rate provided for in the renewal agreement for the use of the wall for the fourteen months succeeding February, 1898.
On the trial the defendant gave evidence of notice to. the plaintiff to the effect that it would discontinue the use of the wall on the expiration of the renewal agreement. There was some dispute as to the time when the notice was given, and considerable „ stress is laid by both counsel on this feature of the case. In the view which we take, however, even could the finding of the justice in the defendant’s favor be disregarded, it would not avail the plaintiff as the defendant was not chargeable even in the absence of notice.
Both upon the trial and upon the argument of the appeal from the judgment in favor of the defendant, both counsel have labored under a misapprehension of the nature of the relation which the agreement created between the parties. The appellant urges at length a series of propositions, unexceptionable perhaps, but inapplicable to this case. His main contention is that the agreement constituted a lease between the parties and he consequently invokes the application of legal principles that obtain between landlord and tenant. He argues that the defendant by failing to paint out his advertisement became a “ hold over,” that the plaintiff as landlord, therefore, had the option of treating him either as a tenant or a trespasser, and that having elected to regard him as a tenant, liability for the rent attached.
The respondent, apparently acquiescing in this view of the law, sought to escape responsibility by showing the existence of a custom which sanctioned his abandonment of the wall without removing the sign.
The misconception of both sides arises from treating the instrument as a lease. The relation'of landlord and tenant did not
In effect the transaction between the parties amounts to a simple contract or bargain for the right to place signs upon the wall for a compensation. Reynolds v. Van Beuren, 155 N. Y. 120, 123. In the case just cited the Court of Appeals, incidently construing an agreement similar to the one before us, say:
“ While this paper is called a lease it is manifestly nothing more than a mere license by the tenant in possession to the defendants to go upon the roof of the building and place advertisements upon the sign ” (at p. 123). • In Lowell v. Strahan, supra, where a like contract was interpreted, it was said: “This was a license and not a lease. It was permission to do a particular act, namely, to affix a sign to the wall, and gave no authority to do any other act upon the premises. The fact that the permission was paid for, and that the act permitted was a continuing one, are ordinary elements of a license. * * * It is clear, in this case, that the intention was that the licensee should have no other right in the premises than to affix his sign to them, and that every other right should remain in the defendant. An agreement of this nature cannot be construed as a lease; it must create either a license or an easement ” (at p. 12)..
It is unnecessary for the determination of this appeal to decide
The judgment below was correct in law and must be affirmed.
Ereedmah, P. J., and MacLean, J., concur.
Judgment affirmed, with costs to respondent.