147 N.E. 541 | NY | 1925
One Michael E. O'Donnell, the life tenant of real property in Brooklyn, made a lease with covenant of quiet enjoyment to the William K. Voorhees Grain Company for seven years from November 1, 1917, at the yearly rent of $600 payable in equal monthly installments. He died on November 17, 1920, before the seven years had expired, and with his death, the title to the property passed to his daughter, one Anna S.M. Martin, who then and at the making of the lease was the owner of the remainder in fee. The effect was the extinguishment of the estate for years (Williams
v. Alt,
On November 30, 1920, the attorney for the new owner wrote to the lessee stating that his client had succeeded to the title, and closing with the words: "You will therefore kindly until further notice pay all rents to Mrs. Martin." This the lessee did for six months thereafter. In May, 1921, it was notified that beginning with June first, rent must be paid at the rate of $100 a month instead of $50 as before. The attorney for the lessee protested that the owner had recognized the existing lease, and had continued it in force for the residue of the term. The owner in answer "repudiated the suggestion that she had recognized the lease" or adopted it. When June arrived, the lessee tendered its check for $50, paying at the old rate. This the owner returned, insisting that more was due. The result was that nothing was paid that month, or in the two succeeding months, July and August. On August twenty-second the lessee moved away its goods and chattels, and abandoned possession. A week later the owner sued for the unpaid rents, but at the rate of $50 only. She took the position then, as affidavits filed in connection with a bill of particulars show, that in accepting rent for six months she had created a tenancy under the statute (Real Property Law, §
The question now is whether there has been a breach of the covenant of quiet enjoyment imposing liability for damages upon the estate of the lessor. The lessee's claim, filed upon the settlement of the executor's accounts, was upheld by the surrogate, who fixed the damages at *104 $1,900. At the Appellate Division the order was reversed and the claim dismissed.
A covenant for quiet enjoyment "can be broken only by an eviction, actual or constructive" (Scriver v. Smith,
We are thus brought to a consideration of the effect of an attornment when made to title paramount. At common law the consent or attornment of the tenant was essential to a grant of the reversion (Tiffany, supra, § 19, p. 172; 3 Holdsworth, History of English Law, 73, 74, 199; Digby, History of Law of Real Property, p. 245). "Attornment at common law signified only the consent of the tenant to the grant of the seignory, whereby he agreed to become the tenant of the new lord" (Simers v.Saltus, supra, 216). This consent is necessary no longer (Real Property Law, §
The question remains whether payment and receipt are supplemented here by declarations and circumstances sufficient to justify a finding of the prolongation of the term in accordance with the first demise. We shall assume in favor of the respondents that such declarations and circumstances may sometimes be sufficient, though there is no writing to be interpreted and though the *107 term is in excess of a year, the usual limit for oral leases. In so doing we pass the question by whether there is need, to avoid the operation of the Statute of Frauds, that the case be brought under some recognized head either of estoppel or of fraud, and of the equitable jurisdiction appropriate thereto. If all this be assumed in the way most favorable to the respondents, we are satisfied that the continuance of such a term may not legitimately be inferred from declarations or circumstances that are uncertain or equivocal. Such, we think, are the circumstances and declarations relied on by the respondents. The letter asking for the rents was signed by a lawyer as part of a routine demand. There is no evidence that the lawyer was empowered by his client to make a lease for a term of years, and nothing to suggest his assumption of such authority. If there had been a genuine understanding that he was binding her to that extent, we might expect something more of formality and precision. Instead, the demand appears upon its face to be provisional and temporary. The tenant is to pay the rents to Mrs. Martin "until further notice," and no longer. In all this there is little trace of a definitive election that the tenancy previously existing shall be kept alive until the end. Payments were accepted, it is true, for six months thereafter, but payments pursuant to the notice were presumably subject to its conditions, unless, it may be, after a lapse of time so great, a delay so unusual or unreasonable, as to import a new agreement. When finally the demand for higher rent was made, and was met by the lessee's suggestion that the owner had "recognized" the lease, there was prompt repudiation and disclaimer by the owner, and this in turn was followed on the part of the tenant by acquiescence and surrender.
Viewing these events in their totality, we are unable to discover in them the clear and unequivocal tokens of an intention to accept an attornment effective for a term *108
of years. The owner of the remainder was not in privity with the life tenant under whom the lessee had gone into possession (Oakley v. Monck, supra; Williams on Real Property [23d ed.], p. 371). As a consequence, the acceptance of an attornment or some license equivalent thereto was essential to relieve the lessee of liability as a trespasser. The effect of the attornment was to give it such relief, but only while the license continued, or at most, under the statute (Real Property Law, §
We think the surrogate did not err in applying as the measure of damage the difference between rent and value (Pumpelly v.Phelps,
Other questions are in the case, but they were properly disposed of in the courts below.
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, and the decree of the Surrogate's Court affirmed, with costs in the Appellate Division and in this court.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., POUND, McLAUGHLIN, CRANE, ANDREWS and LEHMAN, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, etc. *109