72 N.Y.S. 1026 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
■ The question to be determined in this case is-whether the plaintiff or .the defendant is the owner of. the boiler and engine referred to in the statement of facts submitted.
The defendant is, and for many years has been, the owner of certain premises situate on Twenty-fourth street near Third avenue in
Quesenbury entered into possession of the premises under his lease on the 1st day of May, 1899, and sometime prior to January 1,1899, affixed to the premises the boiler and engine in question for the purpose of furnishing power to turn the machinery installed and used by him in the planing and molding mill.
Quesenbury continued in the occupancy of the premises, and paid the rent to August 1, 1900, when he defaulted, and has ever since failed to pay the rent, taxes or water rates, or to perform any of the other conditions of the lease. On October eighteenth the defend.ant commenced summary proceedings against Quesenbury, and such proceedings were thereupon had therein that a final order was made on the twenty-third of October awarding to the defendant the delivery of the possession of the property for the non payment of the rent due, and directing the removal of the tenant from the premises. The warrant was issued and delivered to the city marshal October 30, 1900. On the following day an order was made adjudging Quesenbury a bankrupt. The plaintiff was appointed'trus
It further appears by the agreed statement of facts that during the term “ this .plaintiff as such trustee sold and caused the removal of all the property then on said * * * bankrupt’s estate, but did not sell or cause the removal of said boilers and engines, although making due claim against this defendant that the same Were trade fixtures and that title thereto was fully vested in him as a part of the estate of said bankrupt.” ■
It also appears that the “ boilers and engines have not been removed or their position on said premises in any wise disturbed since they were affixed thereto by said Quesenbury prior to his defaulting in the payment of rent on August 1st, 1900.”
It is not to be denied that as between landlord and tenant the placing of machinery or other fixtures by the tenant upon leased premises, ■for the purpose of trade or manufacture to be carried on by the tenant,, does not make the property so affixed a part of the freehold, ■but it still remains personalty, so far as the right of removal is con
The right of a tenant to remove trade fixtures is conceded to him for reasons of public policy, and being in the nature of- a privilege, it must be exercised before the expiration of the term, or before he -quits possession. He cannot afterward, because the right of the fixture vests in the landlord at the same-time as the right of possession of the landlord. (Brooks v. Galster, 51 Barb. 199; Talbot v. Cruger, 151 N. Y. 117.)
I think that the issuing of the warrant for the removal of the tenant from the premises canceled the agreement for the use of the premises and annuled the relation of landlord and tenant. (Code Civ. Proc. § 2253.)
If, however, we assume that the unexercised right of removal' extended to the plaintiff when he was appointed trustee of the tenant’s estate, and that he then stood in the same situation as the tenant, it cannot be doubted that the taking of a new lease of the premises with the boiler and engine affixed thereto, without any reservation of a right to remove them, was a waiver of the privilege.
In Talbot v. Cruger (supra), Judge Gray, speaking of the effect of a new lease, said: “ A tenant may remain in possession after the old lease has expired, but unless he reserves the right under the new lease to remove the fixtures upon the land, the right will be deemed to have been abandoned and they will become the property of the landlord.”
In Loughran v. Ross (45 N. Y. 792) the court said: “If a tenant, having the right to remove fixtures erected by him on the demised premises, accepts a new lease'of such premises, including the buildings, without reservation or mention of any claim to the buildings, and enters upon a new term thereunder, the right of removal is lost, notwithstanding his actual possession has been continuous. * * * Elementary writers are very well, agreed that when a tenant continues in possession under a new- lease or agreement, his right to remove fixtures is determined, and he is in the same situation as if the landlord, being seized of the land with the fixtures, had demised both to him.”
It may also be observed that the new lease carried with it the
I am, therefore, of the opinion that the defendant is the owner of - the boiler and engine in question, and that judgment to that effect should be directed, with costs to the defendant.
Goodrich, P. J., Woodward, Hirschberg and Jenks, JJ.„ concurred. ■
Judgment for defendant on submitted case, with costs.