38 N.Y.S. 236 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
It must be conceded that the lease was not made in form by the plaintiffs, either as executors or as trustees. Appropriate words were not used in the body of the lease and the signatures were not in proper form to make the lease one by the plaintiffs as executors or trustees. The property did not belong to the plaintiffs personally or as individuals, but as executors and trustees, and they very likely intended to make the lease in their capacity as executors and trustees, but it was not properly done. It was in form legally a lease by them as .individuals; the words trustees, etc., in the body of the lease and following the signatures of the two who signed were merely words describing the persons. It is claimed, moreover, that if the lease had been made in proper form it would have been void, only two of the three trustees or executors having signed it. Even if the lease was improper in form and void because not signed by all the executors or trustees, still under the facts alleged and- proved in the case, the plaintiffs -were entitled to recover.
There is no pretense that the plaintiffs as individuals had any right to lease this property or that the defendant supposed they
We think this case is clearly distinguishable from the case of Shaefer v. Henkel (75 N. Y. 378). In that case a lease was made by a person who was in fact the agent of the owners of the property, he describing himself in the lease as agent and adding the word “ agent” merely to his signature. The lease was under seal, the principals’ names did not appear in it, and there was nothing in the lease to show that they had anything to do with or any interest in the demised premises or the execution of the lease, or that it was executed in their behalf. It was not stated in whose behalf the agent acted'. It was not made to appear upon the trial that the defendant had any knowledge or intimation whatever at the time of the execution of the lease that the agent was acting in behalf of the owners or for their benefit. For whom the agent acted was not made known to. the defendant, and it only appeared by parol proof upon the trial. The plaintiffs, without any assignment of the agent’s interest under the lease, brought an action to recover the rent unpaid upon the ground that the lessor acted merely'as their
“ ISfor can it be claimed upon any valid ground that the question now presented is whether the lease is a bar, for the apparent reason that the plaintiffs have made the lease the foundation of their right to recover, and claim under it, and under no other or different agreement. Upon the trial the plaintiff proved by the agent, Brown, that he was authorized orally to demise the premises in the complaint mentioned, and that he did so by the instrument in question. It was also ¡Droved that the defendant entered upon the premises and occupied the same; and that the amount claimed was due thereon. At this stage of the case, the defendant’s counsel claimed that the lease was not the act and deed of the plaintiffs, and that they had no cause of action arising out of the same against the defendant, no proof being offered, and it not being claimed that the premises were let other
“ Another point is made that the plaintiffs have ratified the contract, and the defendant has been in possession and has paid the plaintiffs $150 on account of the rent. There is no evidence
These statements and this quotation from the opinion in the case speak for themselves, and distinguish that case from this. In this case all the facts were known to the defendant (the lessor) when the lease was made, and were set out in the complaint and proven on the trial. The defendant knew that the property was held by the plaintiffs, not personally nor as individuals, but as executors and trustees under the will; that the building was built upon the property under the terms of the lease by the plaintiffs as such executors and trustees, and that the lease was intended to he made by them in their representative capacity and not as individuals. The rents were paid to the plaintiffs as executors and trustees. All the parties seemed to have regarded the lease as properly executed by the plaintiffs as such executors and trustees, and the defendant dealt with the plaintiffs in their representative capacity for five years, and only when he was sued by the plaintiffs in their representative capacity for the first quarter of the sixth year’s rent, and the defendant wanted to make some defense to the action, did he first discover what he thought was a technical defense to the action in the form of the lease and its invalidity as a lease by the plaintiffs in their representative capacity. We think the case referred to is not an authority to defeat the right of recovery, by the plaintiffs as executors and trustees, of the rents sued for in this action under the facts alleged and proved in this case.
No question of variance arises. All the facts were alleged and the lease was set out and the facts alleged.were proved. Upon the pleadings and proofs the verdict was properly ordered. (Thomas v. Wilson, 69 N. Y. 118.)
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., Patterson, O’Brien and Ingraham,' -LI., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.