98 N.Y.S. 48 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1906
The action is for the conversion of five sewing machines, certain office fixtures and furniture and other personal property, of the alleged value, of $8,500, During a. period of abont two years prior to the 1st, day of February, 1898, plaintiff conducted the business of manufacturing ladies’ underwear in the third loft of premises Hos. 68 and 70 Grand street, Hew York, under a lease from the Merchants’ Central,Club. The defendant Herrman then became owner or succeeded to. the right to possession of the premises; and he leased the loft to the plaintiff for the month of February for a rental
The defendant Stein was not served and did not appear. The verdict in favor of the defendant Herrman was directed upon motion of his counsel, made upon the grounds (1) that the plaintiff had failed to establish a cause of action of any kind(2) that the plaintiff’s cause of .action, if any, was not for conversion, but for breach of a contract of bailment, and that the sole cause of action pleaded in the complaint was one for conversion; (3) that the defendant’s possession being .originally rightful, a demand was necessary to make it unlawful; that such demand was a condition precedent to the maintenance, of an action for conversion, and that none had been proved.
It appears that Herrman did not notify plaintiff that he had leased the premises to Stein, or request him to- remove the property. We are not in accord on the question as to whether the notice to remove in the event that the premises should be leased was for the benefit of the defendant Herrman alone, or whether he owed a duty to the plaintiff to give such notice; but that is not material, because if such duty existed a breach thereof might give rise to a cause of action for damages for breach of the contract, but it would not constitute a conversion of the property. It is unnecessary to .decide whether the facts give rise to any cause of action ex contractu, for, the complaint being in conversion, no recovery could be had without proof thereof." (Wamsley v. Atlas Steamship Co., 168 N. Y. 533, 540.) The defendant Herrman exercised no dominion over the property. In the exercise of his legal right to sell or lease the premises, he leased the entire building, but not its contents. The defendant Stein thus came into possession of the building, subject ■ to the rights of the plaintiff. Clearly, the mere execution of a deed or lease of the. premises and surrender of possession'thereof to another does not render the owner liable in conversion for' all the property of the tenants of the building either as to tenants in possession and occupation or as to tho&e who have left some of their property temporarily. (Peck v. Knox, 1 Sweeny [N. Y. Super.
The contract by which the goods were left does not differentiate the case — considered as an action for conversion—from one in which the goods were left after the removal of a tenant by summary proceedings, as in Peck v. Knox (supra). Plaintiff saw fit to leave.his property in the building,- not for a month or two or three, but for a year and eight months,, inspecting it himself at intervals. It was not reasonable to expect that defendant had surrendered his right to sell or lease his property indefinitely. In fact the execution of a lease by him was contemplated, and if plaintiff was entitled to any notice at all it was, according to the com tract, only to be given after the premises had ieen leased. He did not lease it until after three or four months, and the property was not disturbed until nearly a year and a half -thereafter. It is sufficient to sustain the judgment that it has -not been shown that defendant Herrman exercised any dominion over the property. The execution .of the lease and transfer of possession was lawful and invaded no right.of the plaintiff with respect to the ownership or possession of the property. The possession of the property was not disturbed. The plain tiff, .under the arrangement with Herrman, in effect had a lease of the space occupied by the property, terminable on notice, or a license to leave the goods there -until notified to •remove them. . It did not constitute conversion of the-property for Herrman to lease the building subject to plaintiff’s right -which is, in effect, .what he did. If this action for conversion could be sustained then it would be for failure to notify plaintiff of the lease to Stein and even though the property" were still in the building-uninjured.
It follows that the judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.
O^Beien, P. J.,. Ingbaham, McLaughlin and Houghton, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs. Order filed.