93 N.Y.S. 732 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
This is a submitted controversy in which the plaintiffs seek to compel the specific performance of an option agreement for a renewal for five years contained in a lease, for a like period executed between the parties February 14, 1900, the defendant claiming that the lease for five years with the renewal option to the lessees was in effect'a lease for more than five years, and was, therefore, void as to the renewal provision as being in violation of section 86 of the Real Property Law (Laws of 1896, chap. 547), which is as follows :
“ When trustee may lease trust property.— A trustee appointed to hold real property during the' life of a beneficiary, and to pay or apply the rents, income and profits thereof to, or for, the use of such beneficiary, may execute and deliver a lease of such real property for a term not exceeding five years, without application to the court. The Supreme Court may,- by order, on such terms and conditions as seem just and proper, in respect to rental and renewals, authorize such a trustee to lease such real property for a term exceeding five years, if it appears to the satisfaction of the court that it is for the best interest of the trust estate, and may authorize such trustee to covenant in the lease to pay at the end of the term, or renewed term, to the lessee, the then fair and reasonable value of any building which may have been erected on the premises during such term. If any such trustee has leased any such trust property before June fourth, eighteen hundred, and ninety-five, for a longer term than five years, the Supreme Court, on the application of such trustee, may, by order, confirm such lease, and such order, on the entry
. It is contended by the plaintiffs that said section is an enabling act, while the contention of the defendant is that its purpose was to restrict the existing powers of trustees in respect to leases of trus't property. In construing this statute we are not aided by judicial utterances, except so far as general rules of construction have been established. ' The particular; clause requiring construction' in this case is :• “ A trustee ’ * * * may execute and! deliver a lease of such real property for a term not exceeding five years, without application to the court.” While the language quoted is permissive only, and a. strict and literal Construction would not import to' it a purpose to restrict existing powers, it would seem, at first blush, and when read without reference to other parts, of the statute in pari materia;, and without regard to the history Of the legislation, to have been intended by the Legislature to provide a rule. which should-govefn the'act of-a trustee in leasing, trust property, "and that it should be construed as though it read, “ Avtrusteé * ’ * * shall not execute and’ deliver á lease of such real property for a term exceeding five years, without application to the cburt;” but as this requires us to transpose words' and to give to the word “ may ” an unusual and secondary rather than its primary and common mean-' ing, we should not adopt this construction without ascertaining the purpose of the Legislature,, not alone from the' language employed, but as well from the theretofore existing law, the history of the legislatibn and the other sections, of the statute in pari materia. Séction 86' of the Real Property LaW was taken from section 65 of title 2 of chapter 1 of part 2 of the Revised Statutes (1 R. S. 730, as amd. by Laws of 1895-, chap. 886), relating to uses and trusts. The provisions of said title of the Revised Statutes,- as amended from time to time and as finally revised and consolidated in . the Real Property Law, did not create rises arid trusts, but abolished certain uses and'trusts, preserving others as regulated and modified. The statute related particularly to the creation arid validity of such estates, and did not assume to provide exclusive- rules governing the conduct of the trustee in the administration of the trust estate, but . left that matter to be controlled by the rules of the common law applicable thereto, except so far as' the statute expressly or by
But it is objected by the defendant that the clause of the lease • giving the plaintiffs the option of renewal is void, in that it provides that the rent shall be $ll;000, and one-half of the excess over said sum for which the-appraisers therein appointed shall determine said premises can be rented to a responsible party for said period, and that said appraisers having determined that $15,000 is the fair rental value, the renewal, of the lease for $13,000 per year would constitute a waste and result in loss to the life beneficiaries of the sum of $2,000 per year, or $10,000, It is undoubtedly true that the court will not compel a. trustee to commit waste, nor will it compel a trustee to do an act the doing of which would be restrained at the instance: of the beneficiary, but will leave the parties in the situation in which it finds them to "whatever remedies an action at law might afford. It appears that the option agreement was made in consideration of the plaintiffs’ agreeing to prosecute an appeal in the case of Zipp v. Weir in the Court of Appeals,' and if successful to build upon the court yard space involved in said litigation, and also in consideration of the plaintiffs’ taking up the option made on June 4, 1897, for five years from May 1, 1900, at $11,,000 per year, which was an increase over the rental ■ theretofore paid of $2,000 per year. There is no statement in the agreed facts as to the rental value of the premises during the five years from May 1, 1900, nor is there any statement as to the expenses incurred In the prosecution of the case of Zipp v. Weir, of of the reasonable value of whatever efforts the plaintiffs put forth in that behalf. The: following statement is, however, contained in the admitted ‘facts: “12. That the act of the plaintiffs in taking up the option made on June 4, 1897, for five years.from May 1, 1900, at $11,000'per year, increased the income of both Charles G. Barker and Samuel P. Barker to the ■ extent of two thousand dollars ($2¿000.00) per year for five years, and that the successful-prosecution of the Appeal in the; case of Zipp v. Weir in the Court of Appeals would have given the defend
It is insisted by the plaintiffs that this is an admission that the act of the plaintiffs in taking up the option increased the income of the ’ life beneficiaries to the extent of $2,000 per year in excess of what they would otherwise have received, while the ’defendant contends that the admission was simply intended to mean that it increased their income to that extent in excess of the amount which they had previously been receiving, and it is quite possible that -the language is susceptible of the latter construction, although the purpose of this statement in the agreed facts was evidently to show the consideration supporting the option agreement, and if it is to have the construction claimed on behalf of the defendant it might' be suggested that it would have occurred to the-parties that the court could subtract nine from eleven and ascertain the fact without the aid of a computation contained in the statement of agreed facts. Thus we are' asked not only to construe the statute, but as well the statement of agreed facts upon which this controversy is submitted to the court. It might be urged with some force that the act of the plaintiffs in taking up the option agreement was not the’ cause of increasing the income of the beneficiaries $2,000 per year if the premises could have been leased for the sum of $11,000 during the period covered by said renewal lease, but it is unnecessary to determine this question as the court will not presume that the act of the, trustee in making this agreement was improvident, and it appearing by the agreed facts that the option agreement was supported by a consideration, to wit, the taking up of the option for five years from May 1, 1900, and the prosecution of the case of Zipp v. Weir, and the agreement to build on the premises if said litigation resulted favorably, in the absence of facts showing that- such consideration was not adequate to support the option agreement, this court will presume for the purposes of this action that it was. The agreement sought to be enforced is the personal agreement of the trustee, and the determination of this action requiring the trustee to per
. It .is further objected that,, the option agreement having provided, for' an appraisal by the Chauncey Real - Estate Company and by the firm of John F. James & Sons, and that John F. James, one of the members of said latter firm, having died prior-to the appraisal, that firm ceased to exist, and, therefore, no provision having been made in the contract for an appraisal in any other manner, it is impossible to carry put the agreement made by the parties, and the- court will not compel parties to submit to arbitration or appoint arbitrators for them. It is undoubtedly true that the present firm of John F. James & Sons is not the firm designated in the agreement as one of the appraisers; the defendant cannot be compelled to accept an appraisal by a different firm than the one agreed upon, and it may be urged with 'some force that the defendant’s agreement to renew was. conditioned upon the amount of rental being determined, / by the persons stated in the agreement, and that such determination being rendered impossible by the death of one of the appraisers, the defendant cannot be required to accept a valuation determined in a different manner. . The plaintiffs having exercised their option of -renewal by serving notice thereof on the defendant,- the agreement to renew became mutual ,and binding upon both parties. The term of the renewal lease is fixed by the agreement, and all that remains is a mere matter of detail in determining -the "rental value. Had the .parties reserved to themselves the right to agree upon the. rent to be paid, specific performance of the agreement could not be com- . pel-led; but having agreed that the rental should be determined in accorda,nce with the rental value of the premises, such value to be determined by persons stated, it cannot be assumed that the parties .relied -upon such persons fixing a 'value in excess -of the real value. The method agreed upon having been rendered impossible by the - death ■ of one of the parties selected, a case peculiarity for equitable relief is presented, as the court is not powerless to grant relief in ~ such -a case, and it will not be assumed, that the actual and fair rental value cannot, be determined by the court. "The refusal to
If the defendant does not desire to accept the appraisal in this case, a referee may be appointed by the court at Special Term to ascertain what sum said premises can be rented for to a responsible party for the said term of five years from May 1, 1905, and the plaintiffs should have judgment accordingly.
Hirschberg, P. J., Bartlett and Rich, JJ., concurred; Woodward, J., not voting.
Judgment for plaintiffs, without costs, upon submitted controversy, in accordance with opinion of Miller,- J.