82 Misc. 2d 174 | New York County Courts | 1975
This date marks the 129th anniversary of the abolition in the State of New York of distress for rent. It is anachronistic that a point of law settled during the second quarter of the nineteenth century should be an issue between parties in a civil action at the close of the third, quarter of the twentieth century. Yet, the plaintiff finds it necessary to take legal action to undo the defendant landlord’s reincarnation of a late and unlamented mode of self-help.
In this action for conversion, the plaintiff moves for partial summary judgment, whereby her personal property allegedly in the possession of the defendants will be restored to her possession. The defendant Jack & Betty Realty Corp. admits its possession of certain items of the plaintiff’s personal property. However, the defendants raise "a partial affirmative defense and counterclaim” that the plaintiff and one Terry Fidler abandoned the dwelling unit, owe to the defendant corporation rent in the amount of $235, and caused the defendant corporation to expend $300 in removal and storage expenses. The defendants move for summary judgment in the amount of $535, and move to dismiss the plaintiff’s cause of action.
The plaintiff asserts that Terry Fidler and she were locked out of their dwelling unit, and the defendants contend that the premises were abandoned. The defendant corporation maintains that its removal of the plaintiff’s property was authorized by paragraph 8th of the agreement of lease be
The common-law ex parte remedy of distress
Whether the plaintiff abandoned the premises or was locked out, the defendants have no right whatever to the plaintiffs personal property. The seizure by the defendant corporation of the plaintiffs personal property because of alleged accrued rent is distress for rent, and is prohibited. The consequential expenditures which arose from the illegal seizure must be
Assuming without deciding that the plaintiff’s property were simply abandoned, and no alleged right is sought to be enforced by the defendants, seizure of the property would be illegal nonetheless. It is the obligation of a person who holds unclaimed property of another person to have that property declared abandoned, and to pay the property to the comptroller. (Abandoned Property Law, § 1310.) An agreement between parties to the contrary is invalid, because it is State policy to utilize unclaimed property for the benefit of all the people of the State. (Abandoned Property Law, § 102.) Moreover, the agreement of lease was between the defendant corporation and Terry Fidler. Thus, the plaintiff, who was not a party to the agreement of lease, did not waive any right thereunder. In any event, the plaintiff cannot be deemed to have abandoned the property, since the action in conversion is an assertion of ownership. (Matter of Rathgeber, 23 AD2d 577.)
Accordingly, partial summary judgment in favor of the plaintiff is granted. (CPLR 3212, subd [e]; Blye v Globe-Wernicke Realty Co., 33 NY2d 15 (n. 3 on p. 176.) The defendants’ cross motions are denied. The defendants shall account for all personal property of the plaintiff removed from her former dwelling place. If any controversy arises between the parties, the plaintiff or the defendants may move for an immediate trial. (CPLR 3212, subd [c].)
. Distress "is the taking of a personal chattel out of the possession of the wrongdoer into the custody of the party injured, to procure a satisfaction for the wrong committed.” (3 Bl. Comm. 6.) The origin of this ancient self-help remedy is lost in the mist generated by the passage of time.
. L. 1846, ch 274, passed May 13,1846.
. See, e.g., Sniadach v Family Finance Corp. (395 US 337); Fuentes v Shevin (407 US 67, rehearing den 409 US 902); and Blye v Globe-Wernicke Realty Co. (33 NY2d 15).