2 Daly 213 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1867
The defendant, St. John, covenanted to renew if the lessees should give six months’ written notice previous to the expiration of the lease, of their desire to renew it. After the covenant was made,’ St. John removed
On the 20th of December following, St. John sent a letter advising the plaintiffs, that as he had not received any notice of the desire of the plaintiffs to renew the lease until the 3d of November, 1865, and, cansidermg the use that had been made of the premises, by storing cotton within it to his prejudice, he was unwilling to accept the notices which had reached him at too late a date to be a compliance with the provisions of the lease. On the 15th of January following, he made a contract for the sale of the premises to the defendant Smith, and on the 19th of March thereafter, hq conveyed them to Smith.
As St. John had advised the plaintiffs, through their agent, that any communications they had to make as tenants, respecting the premises, were to be addressed to him by mail, I am disposed to think that the depositing of the letter containing the notice, in the post office of this city, addressed as he had re
It is insisted that if the notice was in time, it operated as a renewal of the lease, and that there is no ground for bringing this action. The giving of the notice would, as against' the plaintiffs, charge them with the payment of rent, according to the terms of the original lease, if they remained in possession ; but if they had, as they appear to have had, by the terms of the covenant, a right to a lease for a further term of two years, upon giving notice, they might bring an action to compel the specific performance of the contract, and there was no reason why they should rest in doubt, or run any hazard as to the construction which might be put upon the sufficiency of the notice, in law, when they could be relieved in equity. Lord Redesdale, in Lennon v. Napper (2 Sch. & Lef. 682), reviewed at length the grounds upon which a court of equity will compel a specific performance of a covenant to renew an estate in land, where there has been a neglect to comply literally with the condition upon which the renewal was to be granted, and the rule to be collected from his statement is, that equity wfil not relieve where there has been gross laches, or the neglect was willful, but will do so where the party has acted fairly, and no injury was done to the other party by the failure to do the act required strictly within the time. The present case is within the rule laid down by this eminent judge. The plaintiffs meant to give notice in time, and in the mode which the defendant St. John had requested, and then* mistake, assuming that notice was not given
Order affirmed.