64 N.Y.S. 1040 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
The provision of the lease with reference to an extension of the term is somewhat indefinite, but not sufficiently so to render it void
The holding over by the tenant for the period specified was sufficient evidence of an election on his part to accept the privilege of an extension for one year under the lease, inasmuch as the lease did not require any other notice of such election. (Voege v, Ronalds, supra; Kelso v. Kelly, 1 Daly, 419, 424; McAdam Landl. & Ten. [3d ed.] § 157.)
The lease under consideration gives the landlord the .right to “ re-enter ” or “ resort to any legal remedy for the tenant’s failure to pay the rent as agreed; but it does not in terms provide that such failure will ipso facto terminate the tenancy or effect a forfeiture or cancellation of the lease. In such case the term does riot expire by its own limitation. The landlord might have terminated the lease by making a common-law demand (Section 1504, Code of Civil Procedure, would not be applicable as. rent was not due six months before April 1, 1899) for the rent and giving notice of her election to declare the forfeiture and might then have brought an action of ejectment to obtain possession; but then the léase would terminate, not by expiration of the term, but by the election and act of the landlord, and consequently summary proceedings would not lie. (Beach v. Nixon, 9 N. Y. 35 ; Miller r. Levi, 44 id. 492; Kramer v. Amberg, 15 Daly, 205; Kramer v. Amberg, 53 Hun, 427, 429; Horton v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 12 Abb. N. C. 30 ; affd., 102 N. Y. 697; Penoyer r. Brown 13 Abb. N. C. 82; Estelle v. Dinsbeer, 9 Misc. Rep. 487.)
The proceeding was instituted on the theory that the tenant’s term expired at the end' of the first year. It was not contended, however, that the provision of the lease giving the tenant the right to an extension was unenforcible, but it was claimed that the payment of the rent according to the tenor of the lease for the first year was a condition precedent to the tenant’s right to elect to hold for a longer term. It is claimed that the justice, has found, in accordance with the petitioner’s theory, that the tenant failed to
It follows from these views that the judgment of the County Court and the final order of the Justice’s-Court must be reversed, with costs to the- appellant. •
All concurred.
• Judgment .of County Court and final order of Justice’s Court reversed,, with costs:. -