Tunick v. Federal Food Stores, Inc.

117 Misc. 329 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1921

Kelby, J.

The premises in question were formerly owned by one Frederick Erlenwein, who died seized of said premises, leaving a last will and testament, which was duly probated in the Surrogate’s Court in July, 1914. By the terms of this will the premises in suit were devised absolutely to the children of said decedent, in equal shares, subject to a life estate of the testator’s widow, Ida Erlenwein. On September 18, 1919, the said life tenant, Ida Erlenwein, being in possession of the premises under the terms of said last will, entered into a written agreement with the Federal Food Stores, Inc., the tenant herein, for a term of two years, from November 1, 1919, and with the privilege of renewal of three years.

The tenant went into possession under this lease ' from the life tenant, and the life tenant died on November 23, 1920, whereupon the fee of said premises became vested in the children of Frederick Erlenwein.

On June 2, 1921, by deed from these children, the plaintiff, Samuel Tunick, took title to the premises in fee. From and after the death of the life tenant the present tenant, the Federal Food Stores, Inc., continued to pay rent to the remaindermen under the will, and the present petitioner permitted the present tenant to remain, as he claims, a monthly tenant from month to month, and claiming that the last term expired on July 31, 1921.

The appellant in his brief states that “ the tenant continued paying the rent specified in said lease up *331to the time of this proceeding to Charles Erlenwein, the executor, under the last will and testament of Frederick Erlenwein, deceased. He then paid it to Samuel Tunick, the new owner and petitioner herein, in June, 1921.” It is admitted that the existence of the original lease to the present tenant was known to the present landlord before he signed the contract to purchase the property.

The trial justice disposed of the case by holding that the acceptance of rent, reserved in the lease, by the remaindermen after the death of the life tenant was a ratification and adoption of the lease of the life tenant, and that the present owner likewise ratified the lease by accepting the amount reserved in the life tenant’s lease for a period of a few months.

In the case of Williams v. Alt, 226 N. Y. 283, 288, it was held that when the life tenant died the lease made by him as owner of a life estate terminated. The court in that case cited section 1664 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which reads as follows: “A person in possession of real property, as guardian or trustee for an infant, or having an estate determinable upon one or more lives, who holds over and continues in possession, after the determination of his trust or particular estate, without the express consent of the person then immediately entitled, is a trespasser. An action may be maintained against him, or his executor or administrator, by the person so entitled, or his executor or administrator, to recover the full value of the profits, received during the wrongful occupation. ’ ’

'The tenant, therefore, was a trespasser if he held over and continued in possession after the termination of the life estate without the express consent of the owner, that is, the remaindermen under the will of Frederick ;Erlenw§in, deceased. But in this case *332the remaindermen did consent by accepting rent, and, therefore, changed the status of the tenant from that of a trespasser to a tenant at sufferance.

In the case of Coakley v. Chamberlain, 8 Abb. Pr. (N. S.) 37, it was squarely held that The mere fact that the remaindermen, by an action instituted for that purpose, collected the rent reserved by the lease, from the death of the life tenant up to the time of the final partition of the premises, cannot be construed into an adoption and ratification of such covenant on their part.” And so in the case of Hinton v. Bogart, 166 App. Div. 155, where the court said: ‘‘ Undoubtedly by the death of the life tenant the lease by her of the property terminated and plaintiffs as owners of the property became entitled to possession thereof. Defendant, however, continued in possession of the premises and continued to pay the rent reserved by the lease and the taxes upon the property down to May 1, 1910, at which time by the notice served upon the defendant plaintiffs required defendant to deliver possession of the property to them. There can be no question, I think, that upon the continuance in possession of the premises, holding under the lease, defendant became tenant at will, and became liable for the use and occupation; the value of the use and occupation to be determined by the amount defendant agreed to pay as rent during the continuance of the lease.”

'To the same effect see Guthmann v. Vallery, 51 Neb. 824, the court holding in that case that a lessee remaining in possession after the termination of the life estate, in the absence of an express contract with the reversioner, becomes liable to the latter for the reasonable value of the use and occupation of the premises, but not liable on the contract with the tenant for life.

*333The trial justice was, therefore, in error when he held that there was a ratification of the life tenant’s lease.

Another matter appears in the record, and as there is to be a new trial mention should be made of it. It appears that upon receipt of the rents for the months of June and July from the tenant, the present owner caused his attorney to serve a notice upon the tenant to the effect that the new owner would accept the rent from the tenant from month to month only, and that this notice was sent to the tenant at its place of business. The court refused to receive this notice in evidence on the ground that it was a self-serving declaration.

As the tenant became a tenant by sufferance only after the death of the life tenant it was proper for the present landlord to notify the tenant that its holding over in the "future would be by the month only, and this evidence was competent and should have been admitted as tending to prove a valid contract between the parties.

For these reasons the final order is reversed and a new trial granted, with ten dollars costs to the appellant to abide the event.

Cropsey and Lazansky, JJ., concur.

Order reversed.