57 Misc. 628 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1908
The action was brought to recover rent under a written lease for an apartment in the Westminster apartment house. The lease ran from October 1, 1906, to October 1, 1907. The action was brought to recover the August and September installments of rent. The rent was payable monthly in advance. The tenant (defendant) paid the rent in advance for the month of July. The lease contained the following clause: “ 7th. The tenant agrees to give three months’ notice of intended removal and to permit said landlord or his agent to show the premises to other parties at any reasonable hours of the day and will allow a notice ‘ To Let ’ to be put thereon three months prior to the expiration of this lease, and will allow landlord, or his agent, at any time during the term, to visit and examine them at any reasonable hour of the day and whenever necessary to have any repairs to same, or any part of the building.” The plaintiffs are the landlords. On July eighteenth the plaintiffs’ attorneys wrote the defendant tenant asking him to make an amicable arrangement for showing the premises and received no answer by the next day but one, July twentieth, on which date the plaintiffs broke into the defendant’s apartment, which was locked, changed the lock, retained, the key of the new lock and instructed the superintendent to show the apartments when he had applications for them. It appears that the- apartment was not at that time occupied by the defendant, but his effects were there.; and the defendant, as soon as he ascertained that forcible entry had been made in his apartment, removed forthwith. The defense claimed that the tenant had been evicted from the apartment prior to August first, and that therefore no action could lie for the rent due in August and September. Plaintiffs claim they had the right to so enter defendant’s apartment because of the provisions of the lease, permitting them, three months before the expiration of the lease, to show the apartment. This provision of the lease is quite a common provision in leases in this city.
A man’s house is his castle and it does not seem that a fair construction of this clause means that a landlord, when a tenant is absent from his apartment, may write him a letter,
Gxbeersleeve and Seabury, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.