76 N.Y.S. 177 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
The facts in this case were not disputed. The plaintiff, being the owner of certain property upon Fifth avenue in the city of New York, by a lease dated April 1, 1886, leased the premises to one •Richard de Logerot for twenty-one years and nineteen days from the 12th day of April, 1886, the term ending on the 1st day of May, 1907, at the yearly rent of $23,000, payable in equal quarterly payments on the first days of October, January, April and July in each year; the tenant to pay all taxes and assessments and also to make certain alterations and improvements in the building upon the said premises which should cost not less than $50,000. The tenant appears to have entered into possession of the premises
It appeared that after the execution of this agreement the defendant took possession and control of the leased premises and collected the rents of the same from that time until and including March 31, 1899 ; upon which day it surrendered possession thereof to the plaintiff; that on December 31, 1898, the amount that the . defendant had paid to the plaintiff, and for taxes, assessments and other disbursements which by the 3d clause of the agreement ■was to be first paid out of the rents received, exceeded the amount that it had received for rents, by the sum of $26,095.59. It was admitted by the defendant that these amounts thus disbursed were “ for ground rent provided to be paid in and by the lease, taxes, assessments, water rents, insurance premiums, both fire and of rentals, necessary and proper charges for repairs, alterations and additions, costs and expenses in the running, care and management of the said premises, and in or about every suit or action brought or maintained.
This agreement was not made for the benefit of the plaintiff, nor was it ever contemplated by either of the parties to it that this defendant should assume any obligation under it to pay to the plaintiff the rent due upon the lease. The object of the agreement as stated was to provide a way and means to the easy extinguishment, of the tenant’s indebtedness to the defendant and to have the benefit of the aid and services of the defendant in the collection of the rents of the ¡premises, the care and custody thereof and the management of the same; and to accomplish this result the tenant retained, employed and engaged the defendant as his sole agent to take the sole care, charge and management of the premises, and he made the defendant his attorney in fact to take possession of the demised premises and to collect and receive from time to time all rents that should, be receivable" therefor. Under this agreement it could not be disputed but that the defendant was accountable to the plaintiff for the rents
We also think it clear that the defendant was not a mortgagee in possession of the premises. It took possession, not as mortgagee,
It follows that upon no principle could the plaintiff maintain this action and that the direction of a verdict for the defendant by the learned trial judge was clearly correct.
We think, therefore, the judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Hatch and Laughlin, JJ., concurred; Yah. Brunt, P. J., and Patterson, J., concurred in result.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.