33 How. Pr. 238 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1867
The affidavit of the respondent, Mary Teed, states that she is the landlord; that Oscar Teed hired the premises, and promised to payher $22.50 per month, in ad-r vanee, for the use and occupation. That on the 1st day of December, 1866, the sum of $22.50 was due for one month’s rent of the said premises for the said month.. That Oscar is dead, leaving his wife, the said Emma, surviving; that she is his legal representative, and ■ as such is in possession'; that the rent has Been demanded of the said Emma since ¡it became due; that she has made default-; and that the said Emma* as such legal representative, tenant,-and one Leaycraft, under-tenant, hold over and.continue in possession,-without permission of ¡the landlord* after default in the payment ¡of. the-rent. •
At the trial the title was proven to be in Mary Teed by deed to her, and also that Oscar in his life time paid her rent ; that when he paid money to Mary Teed, he said, “ there is my rent.”
It is insisted by the relator, that the affidavit of Mary Teed is defective in not stating when the hiring was made, and the duration of the lease ; and that these are facts essential to be set out, to give the justice jurisdiction'of the proceeding.
. The statute does not prescribe that the landlord shall state in the affidavit the date or duration of the lease. The facts constituting a tenancy are stated—ownership and hiring— the rent due, when it became payable, and for what period, are also stated. The facts put in evidence are the ownership and the hiring. The conveyance to Mary Teed, and the payment of rent by Oscar Teed, established both of these issues against the relator. If the nature of the hiring was such that the landlord could not take the remedy by summary proceedings, the tenant must set up that defense,
The same question was raised in Norsworthy v. Bryan, (33 Barb. 153.) It was there insisted that the landlord should state the nature or duration of the tenancy. It was held that if the contract be not fully stated,'the tenant should 'have supplied the defect, (p. 155.) The lease does not appear to be in writing. It continued till the following May, presumptively, in case the rent was punctually paid. (1 B. 8.741,•§ 1.) .The facts stated in the affidavit of the landlord, and not denied by the affidavit of the tenant, are admitted.
It is also objected that the return shows that the jury retired to deliberate upon their verdict, but does not show that an officer was sworn to keep the jury, &c.
The statute is directory in this respect. We cannot infer that the jury were not kept by an officer, or that he was not sworn. The relator might have procured a further return, if the' magistrate did, in fact, neglect the performance of his duty, and the relator had desired to make it appear. It was the duty of the magistrate to swear an officer, and it is the intendment, in the absence of proof to the contrary, that he performed his duty. (Hatch v. Mann, 9 Wend. 262.)
The judgment and proceedings should be affirmed, with costs.
Ingraham, J. concurred.
There can be no doubt that in a summary proceeding to .recover the possession of premises, under the statute, the affidavit must show the tenant or lessee to be one at will or sufferance, or for a part of'a year, or for one or more years. (See § 28, of statute.) And I dissent from so much of the within opinion as states or. intimates to the contrary ; but I concur in affirming the proceedings, on the ground of the local law. (3 JR. S. 5th ed. 34, § 1.)
Judgment and proceedings affirmed.
Ingraham, Leonard and Sutherland, Justices.]