33 N.Y.S. 747 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1895
This action was brought to recover damages for an alleged unlawful entry upon property on Graham avenue, in the city of Brooklyn, of which the plaintiff claimed to be in possession as a tenant of the defendant, and for injury to property therein. It appeared that the plaintiff had been in occupation of the premises as a monthly tenant of the defendant for upwards of three years. On June 1,1891, he paid the rent for that month in advance to William
By chapter 357, Laws 1889, it is provided:
“No monthly tenant shall hereafter be removed from any lands or tenements in the city of New York or in the city of Brooklyn, on the ground of holding over his term (except when the same expires on the first day of May), unless at least five days before the expiration of the term the landlord or his agent serves upon the tenant, in the same manner in which a summons in summary proceedings is now allowed to be served by law, a notice in writing to the effect that the landlord elects to terminate the tenancy, and that unless the tenant removes from said premises on the day on which his term expires, the landlord will commence siSnmary proceedings under the statute to remove such tenant therefrom.”
The court charged the jury that, if the tenant" gave notice of his intention to quit at the end of the month, it was not necessary for the landlord to give the five-days notice required by law, and that the defendant had a right to take possession on July 1st, to which the plaintiff took an exception. We are of the opinion that this charge was correct. .The statute quoted was enacted for the benefit of tenants. It required from a landlord a notice of his intention to terminate a tenancy, and protects tenants from removals without being afforded an opportunity to secure other property. But it has no application to a case where the tenancy is terminated by the act of the tenant. In such a case there is no reason that the landlord should serve a notice, and such a requirement would be a useless one. The plaintiff having terminated the tenancy, it was his duty to remove the property on July 1st, and the defendant was entitled to take possession, provided he could do so without violence or a breach of the peace. As to the landlord’s right to possession at the termination of the lease, there can be, of course, no question. He might enforce such right through a judicial proceeding, but he was entitled to re-enter on the property without judicial process, provided he could do so without violence or a breach of the peace. The true owner may always regain possession in a peaceable manner of his own property, and when the entry is a peaceable one he may