87 N.Y.S. 887 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
This is an action for rent. The complaint set out the execution of a lease between the parties whereby the plaintiff rented to the defendant an apartment in the borough of Brooklyn for three hundred and twenty-four dollars a year, payable in equal monthly payments of twenty-seven dollars each in advance on the first day of each and every month during the term of the letting, which was one year from October 1, 1902. It further alleged that on July 1, 1903, the sum of twenty-seven dollars became due and payable under such lease for rent from that date until the first of August following; and that no part of such sum had been paid. ' Judgment therefor was accordingly demanded. The answer pleaded (1)
The plaintiff has recovered judgment for the twenty-seven dollars rent which was payable in advance under the terms of the lease on July 1, 1903.
The proof did not sustain either the first or third defense set up in the answer. The only important question raised upon the trial or presented by this appeal relates to the effect of the 6th covenant in the lease, which reads as follows: “ That in case of default in any of the Covenants, the Landlord may resume possession of the premises, and re-let the same for the remainder of the term, at the best rent that can obtain for account of the Tenant, who shall make good any deficiency, and any notice in writing, of intention t® 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 Hay 13th, 1846,
The defendant moved out. of the premises on July 1, 1903, and the plaintiff, on the first of the September following, two months after the defendant had left, and one month before the expiration of the lease, relet the apartment. It is contended in behalf of the defendant that this conduct on the part of the plaintiff precludes him from maintaining any action upon the lease until the expiration of the term. This position is not tenable, so far as the rent payable in advance July 1, 1903, is concerned. This rent had become due before the plaintiff re-entered the premises and while the lease was in full force, and the right to recover the amount is in no wise affected by the plaintiff’s subsequent entry under the defeasance clause. (McCready v. Lindenborn, 172 N. Y. 400, 406.) That re-entry put an end to the relation of landlord and tenant. In the case cited the defeasance clause authorized the lessor to relet the premises and required the lessee to pay any deficiency in equal
All concurred.
Judgment of the Municipal Court affirmed, with costs.
See Laws oí 1846, chap. 274, § 8, now contained in Code Civ. Pioc. § 1505.— [Rep.