162 N.E. 97 | NY | 1928
Plaintiff leased to defendant a seven-story building in the city of New York for a term of twenty-one years and two months, commencing August 1, 1924, and ending October 1, 1945, at a rent of $72,000 a year, payable monthly in advance, for the first five years together with all taxes, assessments, insurance charges and other expenses incidental to the maintenance and management of the building, and at a higher rent thereafter.
Defendant went into possession, but paid the rent for *336 only a few months, and was dispossessed in summary proceedings on December 31, 1924.
The lease contained the following provision as to the liability of the tenant after re-entry by the landlord:
"In case the tenant shall be dispossessed or ejected, or shall remove from or abandon the demised premises after a demand for the rent or the service of a notice as provided by section 1410 of the Civil Practice Act, or after the commencement of dispossess proceedings, or for any other reason, the landlord may re-enter the said premises by force or process of law or otherwise, and relet the same as agent for the tenant, and the tenant shall remain liable for all damages which the landlord may sustain by any such breach of this agreement, or through such entry or reletting."
Plaintiff, upon resuming possession, made diligent effort to relet. Three floors it relet to one tenant, two to a second and a part of one floor (the first) to a third. For a few months it ran a garage on the remaining part of the first floor, but later relet this also. By August 1, 1925, it had relet the whole building. The new leases were for varying terms. Three and a half floors were relet for fifteen years; two and a half for ten years; and one for three years. After all are at an end, a substantial period will remain before October 1, 1945, when the defendant's liability expires.
This action, begun in March, 1926, is brought to recover the damages suffered by the landlord through the deficiency of rents computed to that time. The defendant is credited with $30,000, a security deposit, and with the profits earned through the use of the garage as well as with the rents collected. The result is a deficiency of $25,529.39, for which judgment is demanded. The Trial Term dismissed the complaint. The Appellate Division reversed, and gave judgment for the plaintiff.
The principal question is whether the action is premature. After the tenant had been ejected in summary *337
proceedings, the lease was at an end. What survived was a liability, not for rent, but for damages (Kottler v. N YBargain House Co.,
The provision that the landlord may relet as the agent of the tenant after the termination of the lease does not mean that he is an agent in a strict sense. Plainly, he is not, for after the termination of the lease, what he relets is his own. The privilege to relet as agent for the former tenant means this and nothing more, that the reletting shall be evidence of the damages sustained. We find an analogy in the statement, not infrequent in the books, that a vendor of personal property is the agent of a vendee in reselling upon default (Moore v. Potter,
The question is still left, how often and when shall the damage be computed? Is there to be a single cause of action in which all the damage will be computed down to October, 1945, or are there to be monthly causes of action to recover successive deficits, though conceivably new leases made when the present ones are over will make the net result a surplus?
No doubt, a damage clause can be drawn in such a way as to make a tenant responsible for monthly deficits after the re-entry of his landlord, and this without charging the landlord with a duty to account for a surplus in other seasons. Such a clause will be found in McCready v. Lindenborn (
We do not overlook the hardship to the landlord in postponing the cause of action until October, 1945. The hardship is so great as to give force to the argument that postponement to a date so distant may not reasonably be held to have been intended by the parties. There is no reason to suppose, however, that the landlord was expectant of so early a default or so heavy a deficiency. It had in its possession a deposit of cash security in the sum of $30,000. Very likely this was supposed to be enough to make default improbable and the risk of loss remote. If the damage clause as drawn gives inadequate protection, the fault is with the draftsman. The courts are not at liberty to supply its omissions at the expense *339 of a tenant whose liability for the future ended with the cancellation of the lease except in so far as he bound himself by covenant to liability thereafter.
The judgment of the Appellate Division should be reversed and that of the Trial Term affirmed, with costs in the Appellate Division and in this court.
POUND, CRANE, ANDREWS, LEHMAN, KELLOGG and O'BRIEN, JJ., concur.
Judgment accordingly.