59 How. Pr. 487 | New York Marine Court | 1880
—The statute under which this proceeding is authorized provides that whenever the lessee or occupant of demised premises shall use or occupy the same, or any part thereof, for any illegal business, the lease or agreement for
. The occupation by Lampson, under such circumstances, by force of the statute, made McCarty’s lease void, at the option of his landlord or of his assigns (See The People agt. Bennett, 14 Hun, 63).
The lease being nullified, the landlord Was authorized by statute to take the same remedies to recover possession of his premises as are given him by law in a case of a tenant holding over after the expiration of his lease. The assignee of the landlord has therefore resorted to this remedy (Code, sec. 2235). He has done nothing, since the lease was so annulled, which operates in law as a waiver of the statutory right. On the contrary, he promptly commenced proceedings before justice Langeein, in the seventh district court, but that justice dismissed the proceedings because they were, in his judgment, prematurely brought.
The tenant’s counsel claims that the dismissal is a bar to these proceedings. The objection, however, is untenable (Dexter agt. Clark, 35 Barb., 271; The People agt. Vilas, 36 N. Y., 460).
The tenant’s counsel also claims that before the present proceeding was commenced, the tenant induced Lampson to
The tenant herein has incurred the- penalty, and although the statute is highly penal, I must enforce its mandates. The landlord is therefore entitled to judgment for possession.