120 N.Y.S. 556 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1909
Lead Opinion
On the 8th day of April, 1887, one Mary Elizabeth Moore, the defendants’ predecessor in title, leased certain premises in the city of New York to the plaintiff for a term of twenty-one years from the 1st day of May, 1887, at the yearly rental of $130, payable in semi-annual payments on the first days,of May and November in each year. A copy of the lease is annexed to the complaint. There had been erected upon the said premises a .dwelling house which belonged to the plaintiff, who was in possession of the premises under the said lease down to the time of the commencement of this action in September, 1908. J. N. Wells’ Sons, a firm of real estate agents, had represented the defendants to collect the rent from-the plaintiff, and the same brokers were the plaintiff’s agents to collect the rent due from sub-tenants, for ten years prior to the termination of the lease. These real estate brokers, thus representing both the plaintiff and defendants, were in the habit of sending a notice to the plaintiff when the rent was due, and upon the receipt of such notice plaintiff sent a check to the brokers for the rent. Checks were produced for the payments of rent from November, 1894, showing that payments had been made at varying dates from five to twenty-five days after the rent became due, and had been accepted by the defendants. No objection was ever made on the ground that the rent was not paid in time, nor had payment on the first day of the month when the rent became due been insisted on, and thus a custom had grown up in relation to the method by which the rent should from time to time be paid. This lease contained the usual covenant of re-entry; required the tenant to pay all duties, taxes and assessments. The lease also contained a provision that “ if at
On the first day of May when the term expired, six months’ rent of the premises was due. JSTo notice was sent to the plaintiff that the rent was due in accordance with the existing custom that had been in force for over ten years, and the plaintiff, relying upon the fact that she would receive the usual notice when the rent was required, did not pay the rent on that day. On the 5th of May, 1908, the plaintiff received a letter from the attorneys for the defendants stating that under the terms and provisions of the lease which expired on May first the plaintiff was not entitled to a renewal unless she should have during’ the whole of the said term well and faithfully kept all the terms and covenants on her part to be performed ; that the plaintiff had not kept all of these covenants, having violated among others the covenant to' pay the rent, and that the landlord was, therefore, under no obligation to grant to the plaintiff a renewal, and did not care to do so. Immediately upon receipt of this letter plaintiff sent to the defendants a check for the rent which was. accepted, and plaintiff received from the defend
By the terms of the lease the rent was due upon the 1st day of May, 1908. There was nothing in the lease which required this rent to be paid at the termination" of the demised term. Under"the terms of the lease the plaintiff would have the whole of the first day of May-to pay the rent before she was in default. The covenant in regard to the renewal of the lease was that “ if at the end and expiration of the said term hereby granted there shall be standing on the hereby demised,premises a good and substantial dwelling house * * * and the said party of the second part, her executors, administrators and assigns shall and will during the whole of the said term well and faithfully keep all and every the covenants herein contained on her and their part and behalf, that then the said party of the first part, her heirs .or assigns, shall and will, at such the end and expiration of the said term grant unto the said party of the second part, her executors, administrators or assigns, at her or their
The power of a court of equity to open or disregard defaults or penalties,incurred without the fault or neglect of the party against whom the default is sought to he enforced cannot be questioned. Nor can there be any question about the right of a party to whom a sum of money is payable at a specific time to waive the right to receive it at such a time or to enforce any penalty or forfeiture because of a failure of payment at the specific date named. And where a party is entitled to receive payments at specific dates, with a forfeiture or penalty imposed for a failure to pay at any date specified, the right to enforce such penalty or forfeiture may be waived by the parties having established a custom by which a particular method has been adopted for making such payments, and so long as such custom is complied with the person who is obligated to
We think, therefore, that where under a lease in which payment of the rent is required upon a day certain the parties by a course of conduct extending for years have acquiesced in a method by which the rent is to be paid, the provision for payment in the original contract is so far waived as to prevent a claim that a failure to pay upon the day named is a breach of the condition until the lessee has notice of the fact that such a custom will not in the future be continued and payment is required upon the day named in the contract.
The court below found that it was the plaintiff’s custom to make payment of the semi-annual ground rent to the order of James IN. Wells Sons on behalf of the landlord; that said firm was also the agent of the plaintiff to collect the rent from the sub-tenant; that for many years prior to May 1, 1908, the plaintiff did not pay the various installments of rent on the very day upon which the installments became due and plaintiff did not pay any of such installments until from fifteen to twenty-nine days after the same respectively became due, and then only after the receipt by the plaintiff from the said defendants’ agents of a notice given subsequent to the day upon which payment was due that the said payment was overdue and requesting that it be made; that no such notice or any other notice was given with regard to the installment which became due on May 1, 1908, and that said defendants prior to May 1, 1908, always accepted the rental so paid after the sending of such notice without question ; that plaintiff has been at all times ready and willing to take a new lease of said premises for a term of twenty-one years from the 1st day of May, 1908, but said defendants have refused and still refuse to execute such renewal lease. "Upon the facts the court dismissed the complaint.
We think upon the facts here established that the defendants waived the payment of the rent upon the first day of each month upon which it was payable, and that before the plaintiff could be said to have violated one of the terms or conditions of the lease notice that the rent was due must be given or a notice before the'
It follows, therefore, that the judgment, should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the. event.
Pattebsokt, P. J., Laughlin and Scott, JJ., concurred; Clabke, J., dissented; , •
Dissenting Opinion
The defendant Moore is the' owner of a piece of property on West Twenty-fourth street. In 1866 a lease of said property was made-to one David Seaman for twenty-one years.. It was -provided that in case of the erection on the said lots of buildings of specified -description the. owner, his successors or assigns should, at the expiration of the said term, grant a new lease for the further term of twenty-one years át a reasonable rent to be ascertained as therein provided. On the 8th of April, 1887, a lease -was made to the plaintiff which recited the former lease and that buildings had been erected on- the said lots of ground of the description mentioned. This lease provided that the lessee should have- and hold the said lot from the-1st of May, 1887, for and during and until the full end and term of twenty-one years, paying $130 yearly and every' year during the said term in two.equal half yearly payments on the first
It will be seen that the rent was payable, not in advance, but at the end of each half yearly period, and that the option of a renewal or of paying for the value of the buildings was not given to the landlord on May 1, 1908. He was bound to give the tenant a renewal of the lease which expired on said day if the tenant should have complied with the conditions precedent on his-part to entitle him to such renewal. Before the expiration -of the term, on March 18, 1908, the landlord informed the tenant that" her lease would expire on May first; that the rent for the next term would be $425 ■a year and asked to be advised promptly if she wished to renew. This increased rent the tenant refused to pay and appraisers were appointed, the time therefor being extended by mutual consent,, so that it was not until the twenty-ninth of April that the defendant appointed his appraiser. These appraisers have not yet reported. The plaintiff did not pay the rent due for the last half year of the ■ twenty-one-year lease on May 1, 1908. On May fourth the landlord wrote : ^ Under the terms and provisions of your lease of Ho. 460.West 24th street, which expired on May 1st,"you are not entitled to a renewal unless you shall have during the whole of said term well and faithfully kept all of -the covenants on your part to be performed. You have not, as we are informed, kept all of these covenants, having violated among others, the covenant to pay the rent. The landlord is, "therefore, under no obligation to grant you a renewal and does not care to do so. If you care, however, for a. short lease we are willing on behalf of the landlord to take the matter up with you; otherwise we must ask you to surrender posses
In September thereafter the landlord commenced dispossess proceedings in the Municipal Court and the plaintiff thereupon commenced this action in equity to enjoin the prosecution of such proceedings, to be relieved of her forfeiture, if any, and to compel the granting of a renewal lease for twenty-one years upon such rent as should be fixed by the arbitrators appointed or upon the method fixed by the lease in case such arbitrators refused or did not act by an ascertainment of the value of the land considered as vacant property and a rental based upon five per cent of such ascertained value.
The plaintiff proved that-she had never paid the rent upon the due day, and some ten checks were offered in evidence showing payments from twenty-five to ten days after the due day, and testified that she was accustomed to wait until she received notice, which was always received after the due date, and that she then sent the check and that there was never at any time any objection made to the delay in the payment; that she was ready, willing and able to pay on the 1st of May, 1908, the sixty-five dollars due and that it was a mere inadvertence in not paying; that she promptly sent her check upon receipt" of the letter alluded to. She claims that this was a condition subsequent and that a court of equity ought to relieve her of such a forfeiture ; that she had a right to rely upon the course of conduct which had existed for so many years, the pleasant relations which had always been had and the appointment of the arbitrators so close to the end of the term.
The difficulty is that this is not a forfeiture. No lease has been
So in the case at bar the time to pay thié last installment of rent had not expired when the appraisers were appointed and their appointment had nothing to do with this last rent payment, but was an entirely independent act. The court in the case cited goes onto say: “ The counsel for the plaintiff seeks to avoid the effect oh the default in the payment of the taxes upon the ground that there was only a technical forfeiture which a court of equity will relieve. Equity will relieve against a breach of covenant for the payment of money, where the covenant is in the nature of á penalty or forfeiture and designed merely as a security to enforce the principal obligation, and in such cases only where by the payment of money the parties can be put in the same position as if there had been no default. * * * So, also, in case of mistake, accident, fraud or surprise, relief may be obtained in equity; but the rules stated, which are sometimes invoked to prevent injustice have no application where, as in the case at bar, the mode of determining the rights of the lessor or his assigns to a new lease or to payment for his building are expressly provided for, .and the liability of the defendant as specified is dependent upon the performance of conditions precedent which have not been performed. There is no ground upon which a court of equity should intervene to relieve the lessee from the consequences of a failure or neglect to perform.” This seems to be one of those cases where a party has the right to stand upon his legal rights no matter how selfish or harsh such conduct may appear to be. (Pike v. Butler, 4 N. Y. 360; McIntosh v. Rector, etc., 120 id. 7.) Here was an owner of property who was bound under the terms of his lease to renew for a long term of years at an annual rental much below what he thought the property could bring, and here was a lessee who was entitled to such renewal with the opportunity to sublet at very much more than he was receiving for the same period. That right depended, however, upon the clearly expressed covenant of full and complete performance during the whole term of the prior lease. The landlord did nothing to prevent the payment of the amount due; no fraud can possibly be attributed to him, and the failure to pay upon the day cannot be
The judgment appealed from should, therefore, be affirmed, with costs and disbursements to the respondents.'
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.