126 Misc. 356 | New York County Courts | 1926
On or about January 1, 1921, the defendants leased of the plaintiff a store apartment in Canastota, N. Y., to be used in carrying on defendants’ furniture and undertaking business. There was no written lease. The plaintiff claimed it was from month to month while the defendants insisted that it was a hiring by the year. The defendants were in possession and carried on the business as Preston &■ Newberry until October 18, 1925, when the corporation of Preston, Newberry & Tuttle, Inc., was formed and took over the business and property of Preston & Newberry, occupying the same store. Mr. Preston became president and Mr. Newberry became secretary and treasurer of the new corporation, which, although it became a separate and distinct legal entity, quite evidently represented the same business and interests as the firm which it succeeded, except the interest which Mr. Tuttle acquired as one of the incorporators.
On October 28, 1925, the plaintiff caused notice to be served on the defendants that the tenancy would terminate on December 1, 1925, and demanding possession of the premises on that date. On December 2, 1925, the demand not having been complied with, this proceeding was commenced. The corporation was not made a party, but Preston and Newberry as individuals were served with the precept. The defendants appeared and litigated the case. Their answer was a general denial and an affirmative allegation that the lease was yearly and would not expire until January 1, 1926. It did not otherwise indicate that the wrong parties were being proceeded against. There was a jury trial and the issues were tried on the merits. Besides, proof was offered by the defendants that plaintiff knew of the incorporation and change of ownership of the business, which knowledge was denied by the plaintiff. Defendants’ motion to dismiss on these grounds was denied and the jury found for the plaintiff.
It is the contention of the defendants appellants that the whole proceeding was void and the court without jurisdiction; that
It seems to me that the only question is as to whether the plaintiff was justified in instituting the proceeding as against the defendants. As against the corporation the proceeding was clearly void, but that seems immaterial in view of the fact that the premises were vacated by the corporation and all concerned on January 1, 1926.
Appellants cite, among other authorities, Rodack v. New Moon Theatre (121 Misc. 63, 68), where the court said: “ Possession in the person sued is necessary to give jurisdiction in summary proceedings. Therefore, if the only person who is sued is not in possession, the court has no jurisdiction and the proceeding must be dismissed.”
Although the court used that language, the case was entirely different from the one at bar. In the Rodack case the original lease had been assigned several times, finally to Shapiro who assigned to the New Moon Theatre, taking back a chattel mortgage on the lease for a part of the purchase price. Thereafter, while the New Moon Theatre was in default to him for payments and to the landlord for rent, the latter prosecuted summary proceedings against the New Moon Theatre, which did not defend, and obtained an order for possession, without having made Shapiro a defendant. Then a lease was made (or claimed to be) by the landlord with one Rhulman, which was believed to have been collusive with the New Moon Theatre (aided by Shulman), to cut off Shapiro’s rights as mortgagee of the lease. The court held that the mortgage of the lease to Shapiro gave him the legal title subject only to defeasance or redemption by payment of the chattel mortgage; that Shapiro was the real person in possession with the New Moon Theatre as his agent, and should have been made a defendant.
Warrin v. Haverty (149 App. Div. 564), cited in the Rodack case in support of its dictum, was a case where both the tenant and his subtenant had removed from the premises and surrendered the keys to the landlord. Held, that plaintiff could have his action for rent but not summary proceedings.
Fults v. Munro (202 N. Y. 34) is in principle similar to the case at bar. Munro had leased a farm to Fults, who immediately, with Munro’s knowledge and consent, assigned his lease to his wife. In this respect the case was even stronger as against the landlord than it is in the instant case. Subsequently, Munro instituted summary proceedings against Mr. Fults, the original lessee, for non-payment of rent. The wife, the real holder of the lease, was not made a party. Upon a warrant in this proceeding
Preston, Newberry & Tuttle, Inc., could not, as such, have been removed from the premises, even though there had been no appeal and no collateral attack upon the warrant that was issued. In the command to remove “ all persons,” it only “ followed the language of the statute, which, however, does not mean literally all persons, but only those in actual possession who are made parties to the proceeding and their guests, agents, servants and the like.” (Fults v. Munro, supra.)
Following the reasoning of the court in Fults v. Munro, it seems to me that the proceeding in question was valid as against Preston and Newberry, the defendants. If they had no goods in the leased premises on December 2, 1925, or when the warrant was issued, they were not injured. They were not such strangers to the matter, or so obviously out of the lease and of possession as was the case in Warrin v. Haverty (supra). Balducci, the landlord, had never released the defendants from their lease. Assuming that he knew of the transfer of the partnership business and property to the corporation and had proceeded against it, he could not safely have omitted to join these defendants as parties.
I do not see that anything is involved at this time except the question of costs. The case was defended by the defendants upon the merits and as far as appears, as fully as though the corporation had been joined as a party.
The judgment appealed from must, therefore, be affirmed, with costs.
Let judgment to that effect be submitted.