21 N.Y.S. 838 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
The action was for rent. Issue was joined in the justice’s court by written pleadings. The complaint alleged that one John S. Lane, in his lifetime, rented the premises to the defendants at a monthly rental, which they agreed to pay in advance, on the 1st day of each month, from August 1, 1889; that on the 3d day of November, 1889, the lessor died intestate, leaving the plaintiff, his-only heir at law; that since his death the defendants had paid the rent accruing, to the plaintiff, except the balance due, for which this action was brought. The answer was a general denial and a plea of payment. On the trial the plaintiff produced one Cornelius Lane as a witness, who testified that the deceased, John S. Lane, was a son of the plaintiff; that he died November 3, 1889, leaving no wife or children; that since his death the witness had collected the rent from the defendants for the plaintiff; and—under the defendants’ objection —that John 8. Lane was the owner of the premises at the time of his death. At this point the defendants gave notice that they disputed that John 8. Lane was the owner of. the premises at the time of his death, and thereupon moved that the complaint be dismissed
We think the complaint was properly dismissed, and that the reversal of the judgment of the justice was error. The complaint made a case in which the defendants were estopped to deny the title of the deceased, John S. Lane, at the time of the letting, and in which— that title being presumed to continue until the contrary was shown— the plaintiff had succeeded thereto by descent. The complaint also contained allegations to the effect that the defendants had attorned to her, and were thus estopped to deny her own title. Both of these allegations were denied by the answer, and the plaintiff might recover upon establishing either. Under the former of the two allegations, viz. that the plaintiff has succeeded to the title of her deceased son, it was necessary that it should appear, either by direct proof or by implication, that title was in the son at the time of his death; and this it was which the defendants proposed to dispute, and this they were entitled to dispute. They admitted the title of their "lessor at the time, by entering into possession under a lease from him, and they are estopped to deny what they have thus admitted. But the estoppel goes no further. Jackson v. Rowland, 6 Wend. 670; Despard v. Walbridge, 15 N. Y. 374; Hilbourn v. Fogg, 99 Mass. 12. In the first of these cases the court says:
“Á tenant cannot dispute the title ot his landlord, so long as it remains as it was at the time the tenancy commenced, but he may show that the title under which he entered had expired or been extinguished. ”
In the Massachusetts case the court, in an opinion by Justice Gray, says:
“The well-settled rule of law by which a tenant who has entered into possession under an oral lease is estopped, so long as he continues in possession under the lease, to deny the lessor's title at the time of making the lease, as against the lessor, his heirs and assigns, is founded on the injustice of allowing a person who has obtained possession by admitting the title of another to deny that title, and, in case of failure in proof of it, to hold the premises himself. The rule applies in every form of action by wnieh the lessor may seek to assert the rights reserved or promised to him in "his lease. But it is equally well settled that the tenant is not estopped to deny that, since his entering into possession, his lessor’s title has expired, either by its own limitation, by the act of the lessor, or by eviction by title paramount, and that, when the estoppel is set up by one claiming as assignee of the lessor, the tenant may show that such assignment was ineffectual to pass the lessor’s title. ”
To this proposition Judge Gray cites, among other authorities, the case of Despard v. Walbridge, supra. In that case Judge Selden quotes the language of the court, as above, in Jackson v. Rowland, and himself states the rule limiting the estoppel in the words, “the tenant can be estopped only from denying what he has once admitted.” The defendants in this case, therefore, were not estopped to deny that the title of their lessor, which they admitted when they entered into possession under a lease from him, either expired by its own limita
Judgment of the county court of Cattaraugus county reversed, and that of the justice affirmed, with costs of the two appeals to the defendants. All concur.