219 A.D. 275 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1927
The question in substance presented for review is whether the complaint states an action to recover a deposit under a written lease, upon the ground that it is a penalty and not liquidated damages. The appeal is from an order granting a motion to dismiss the complaint for insufficiency and from the judgment entered thereon.'
“ Ninth. That in and by the said lease it was further provided that in the event that the said tenant be dispossessed from the said premises,, that then and in that event the said sum of $20,000 shall belong to the landlord as fixed liquidated and accrued damages in payment of such disbursements, costs and expenses as he may undergo for the purpose of regaining possession of said premises, and for the loss of the benefits accruing to him under.this lease, and it was further covenanted and agreed in and by the terms of the said lease that the retention by the said landlord of the said sum of $20,000 shall not in any manner be considered as payment for any rent due or to become due by reason of the said lease, or in any manner release the tenant from such rents to be paid or from any of the obligations assumed under and pursuant to the said lease by the said tenant.”
By this paragraph the pleader, after alleging what shall happen in the event of a dispossession of the tenant from said premises, goes on to allege that the forfeiture of this sum of $20,000 shall not in any manner release the tenant from the rents to be paid or from any of the obligations to be assumed under the lease. If this is an allegation — and it would seem to be so intended — that the tenant is still to remain liable to the landlord after eviction for any deficiency in rent to the end of the period covered by the lease and for the breach of any other covenants of the lease, then if the landlord obtained all the amounts due him under the lease, it is obvious that the $20,000 would be disproportionate to the ascertained damage that had accrued, namely, $1,300. Under such circumstances the $20,000 would constitute a penalty. In Seidlitz
If the lease had provided that this sum of $20,000 should remain as security until it was seen at the end of the term whether all deficiencies, if any, would be paid by the tenant and the landlord made whole, the action would be prematurely brought. The difficulty with this contention, however, is that the plaintiff has alleged that in the event the tenant is dispossessed from the premises, this sum shall belong to the landlord as fixed, liquidated and accrued damages, and, so far as appears, there is nothing in the lease which provides that this sum shall stand as security until the end of the period covered by the lease. In other words, the complaint alleges that in the event of dispossession of the tenant, the $20,000 shall become immediately due as liquidated damages, and there is shown no intention of the parties that the $20,000 is to remain as security until the end of the lease. Thus the only way in which the $20,000 might be held by the landlord, namely, as security, is negatived by the terms of the lease.
If, on the other hand, the lease does not provide that the tenant shall remain liable upon the covenants of the lease, including a liability for the rent until the end of the period covered by the lease, then whether the $20,000 constitutes liquidated damages or a penalty depends upon the terms of the written lease and the expressed intention of the parties in the light of the admitted facts
It follows that the judgment and order appealed from should be reversed, with costs, and the motion denied, with ten dollars costs, with leave to the defendant to answer within twenty days from service of the order to be entered hereon upon payment of said costs.
Dowling, P. J., Mebbell, McAvoy and Peosicaueb, JJ., concur.
Judgment and order reversed, with costs, and the motion denied, with ten dollars costs, with leave to the defendant to answer within twenty days from service of order upon payment, of said costs.