187 Misc. 9 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1946
By this action the plaintiff seeks judgment that she be put into possession and share jointly with the defendant the occupancy and use of real estate of which the plaintiff and her husband, Alfred B. Infante, are tenants by the entirety.
The plaintiff and her husband were married in 1939. In 1943 they became the owners, as tenants by the entirety, of the premises involved in this action consisting of a dwelling and parcel of land in the village of Garden City, Nassau County, New York, which was thereafter used as the family home, one child having by then been born to them. Dissension arose between them and late in November, 1944, the plaintiff, with her child, left the family home and the parties have not lived together since then. About December 20, 1944, Alfred B. Infante, the husband, executed a written lease with Bay S. Sperber, the defendant in this action, whereby he purported to lease to Sperber the premises described in the complaint for a period of two years beginning January 1, 1945. In the latter part of that month Mrs. Infante learned that Sperber
There would seem to be no question that the law of the State is well settled that one member of a tenancy by the entirety may mortgage his interest in the estate during the joint lives of both tenants and that by the foreclosure of such a mortgage and the sale of the husband’s interest in the premises under a judgment of foreclosure, the purchaser acquires the interest of the husband and becomes a tenant in common of the premises subject to the right of survivorship of the other tenant (Hiles v. Fisher, 144 N. Y. 306). Furthermore, it has been held that a husband’s interest in a tenancy by the entirety is subject to a sale under execution upon a judgment against him and that a purchaser at such a sale is entitled, upon a showing of ouster, to maintain an action of ejectment to secure joint possession, of the premises with the - wife and is lawfully entitled to share with her the occupancy and use thereof (Finnegan v. Humes, 252 App. Div. 385, affd. 277 N. Y. 682).
The conclusion is inescapable, therefore, that the plaintiff is entitled to prevail in this action unless she has by some act or
There will accordingly be judgment for the defendant on the merits, but without costs. Proceed on notice accordingly.