63 Misc. 293 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1909
This is an action to recover an unpaid balance due under a lease, alleged to have been executed by defendant as tenant. A recovery for the full term was allowed by the trial justice, and the only question presented is whether the lease received in evidence ever had any inception. The following state of facts would seem to be corroborated by the plaintiffs’ own testimony. Defendant, a musician, agreed to lease an apartment from plaintiffs at forty-five dollars a month. He requested that the landlord permit him to display a sign at the front of his apartment and to alter the terms of the lease that it might so read. Plaintiffs declined to do the latter, as they would then be unable to regulate the style of sign which defendant should use, but plaintiffs promised to make some verbal arrangement. They then handed a prepared lease to defendant which contained a provision forbidding the display of any sign except by permission of the landlord. This lease defendant took to his lawyer who changed the above section so that it read as a permission to display signs, which plaintiffs had already refused to permit as a part of the lease. Defendant then signed the lease as altered by his attorney, returned it to the landlord, and subsequently took possession of the premises. The landlord refused to sign the altered lease, but permitted defendant to occupy the premises for thirteen and -one-half months during which he paid rent monthly. Defendant moved out on or about June fifteenth. The lease purports to run until the first of October, following, and plaintiffs seek to recover the rent for June, July,
This is the only legal construction which the facts will permit.
Judgment modified by reducing the same to the sum of forty-five dollars and appropriate costs in the court below and, as modified, affirmed, without costs of this appeal to either party. •
Present: Gildersleeve, Dayton and Goff, JJ.
Judgment modified and, as modified, affirmed, without costs of this appeal to either party.