2 Barb. 180 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1848
I think the proof sufficiently establishes the fact that there was an agreement between the parties to the lease, that at the end of the second year Niver should be discharged, and that Rockefeller alone should become the tenant of the plaintiff, for the remaining year of the term specified in the lease.
The principal question then, is as to the legal effect of this verbal agreement. If the first lease is not to be regarded as having been surrendered, Niver, although he left the premises, with the consent of the plaintiff, has no ground of defence against the action, upon his express covenant to pay the rent. And this depends upon the question whether the new agreement was such as to constitute a valid lease between the plaintiff and Rockefeller for the third year, The true rule seems to be that a new lease of the premises, whether by parol or not, if valid, will operate in law as a surrender of the former lease. (2 Starkies Ev. 342. Schieffelin v. Carpenter, 15 Wend. 400.) In the case last mentioned, the ground of defence was that before the expiration of the term in the lease upon which the action was brought, other persons, with the consent of the lessees, had taken possession of the premises under a parol agreement for a lease for eight or ten years. The court held that such an agreement, being void under the statute which declares that “ every contract for the leasing for a longer period than one year, &c. shall be void, unless in writing,” did not operate as a surrender of the first lease. It is undoubtedly conclusively settled by authority, that a second lease, to operate as an effectual surrender of the first, must itself be effectual to vest in the lessee the term it professes to convey, and must bind him to a performance of its conditions on his part. But it has never, I apprehend, been decided that a lessor who has consented to a change of tenancy, and permitted a change of occupation, and received rent from the new tenant as an original and not as a sub-tenant, can afterwards charge the original tenant for rent accruing during the occupation of the new tenant. If the case of Schieffelin v. Carpenter is to be regarded as an authority maintaining this position, I think it is in that