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Fifth Avenue Building Co. v. Kernochan

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Oct 16, 1917
221 N.Y. 370 (N.Y. 1917)

Summary

In Kernochan, the landlord leased to the tenant part of the first floor and basement of a Fifth Avenue building. By the terms of the lease, the basement included a vault beneath the sidewalk in front of the building.

Summary of this case from Eastside Exhibition Corp. v. 210 East 86th St. Corp.

Opinion

Argued October 3, 1917

Decided October 16, 1917

William Greenough and Carroll G. Walter for appellant.

John Burlinson Coleman for respondent.


The action is for rent. The plaintiff leased to the defendant's testator part of the first floor and basement of the Fifth Avenue Building in the city of New York. By the terms of the lease, the basement included a vault beneath the sidewalk. This vault was in fact maintained under a revocable license from the city of New York. During the term of the lease, the city revoked the license, and excluded the tenant, at first from the whole vault, and later from part of it. The rent in suit accrued during the period of exclusion. The defense is a partial eviction with a demand that the rent abate in proportion to the diminished rental value. The lease contains no express covenant for quiet enjoyment. The landlord insists that in the absence of such a covenant, eviction is no defense. We do not share that view.

Eviction as a defense to a claim for rent does not depend upon a covenant for quiet enjoyment, either express or implied. It suspends the obligation of payment either in whole or in part, because it involves a failure of the consideration for which rent is paid ( Royce v. Guggenheim, 106 Mass. 202; Morse v. Goddard, 13 Metc. 179; O'Brien v. Ball, 119 Mass. 28; Lodge v. Martin, 31 App. Div. 13, 14; Lawrence v. French, 25 Wend. 443; Pendleton v. Dyett, 4 Cow. 581, 583; 8 Cow. 727, 730; 18 Halsbury Laws of England, Landlord and Tenant, 479, 480, 482; Cruise Dig., title 28, ch. 3, sec. 1; Bacon Abridg., Rent L.; Woodfall Landlord T. [19th ed.] 478, 486). We are dealing now with an eviction which is actual and not constructive. If such an eviction, though partial only, is the act of the landlord, it suspends the entire rent because the landlord is not permitted to apportion his own wrong. If the eviction is the act of a stranger by force of paramount title, the rent will be apportioned, and a recovery permitted for the value of the land retained ( Christopher v. Austin, 11 N.Y. 216; Blair v. Claxton, 18 N.Y. 529; Duhain v. Mermod, J. K.J. Co., 211 N.Y. 364; Royce v. Guggenheim, supra). The right to an abatement of the rent in such circumstances does not grow out of the covenant for quiet enjoyment. It has been enforced in cases where there was no breach of any covenant ( Gates v. Goodloe, 101 U.S. 612, 619; Gillespie v. Thomas, 15 Wend. 464; Lodge v. Martin, supra, and cases there cited). In the days of common law pleading, it was the subject of a plea in bar ( Pendleton v. Dyett, supra; Smith v. Shepard, 15 Pick. 147, 149). A covenant for quiet enjoyment, either express or implied, is essential where eviction by title paramount is the subject of a claim for damages. It is not essential where the tenant asserts a failure, either complete or partial, of the consideration for the rent. Carter v. Burr (39 Barb. 59) neatly illustrates the distinction. There a lease had been made in fee. Such a lease, unlike one for years, was held to be a conveyance of real estate, and no covenant was implied. For that reason, the tenant's claim for damages as the result of a partial eviction was rejected, but none the less he was held to be entitled to an abatement of the rent.

The landlord is also in error in its contention that the implication of a covenant for quiet enjoyment is now prohibited by law. At the date of this lease, the Real Property Law of 1896 (L. 1896, ch. 547) was in force. By section 216 (now section 251; Cons. Laws, ch. 50), "a covenant is not implied in a conveyance of real property, whether the conveyance contains any special covenant or not." This provision is a re-enactment with immaterial verbal changes of a provision of the Revised Statutes (1 R.S. 738, sec. 140). The Statutory Revision Commission state in their notes that the section is unchanged in substance. It is settled law that the corresponding section of the Revised Statutes was not applicable to leases which created estates for years ( Mayor, etc., of N.Y. v. Mabie, 13 N.Y. 151, 153; Vernam v. Smith, 15 N.Y. 327; Graves v. Berdan, 26 N.Y. 498; Mack v. Patchin, 42 N.Y. 167; Burr v. Stenton, 43 N.Y. 462) It was restricted to conveyances of real estate, and real estate was defined in the same chapter as equivalent to lands, tenements and hereditaments. Those words, it was held, did not include a chattel real ( Mayor, etc., of N.Y. v. Mabie, supra). That definition of real estate is preserved in the present statute (Real Prop. Law, sec. 2). The argument is made, however, that the Real Property Law has established a new definition of a "conveyance." By section 205 of the act of 1896 (sec. 240 of the present act, L. 1909, ch. 52; Cons. Laws, ch. 50), "the term `conveyance,' as used in this article, includes every instrument, in writing, except a will, by which any estate or interest in real property is created, transferred, assigned or surrendered," and "the terms `estate' and `interest in real property' include every such estate and interest, freehold or chattel, legal or equitable, present or future, vested or contingent." This definition, however, is not new. All that is new about it is its location. In its substance it is a re-enactment of a provision of the Revised Statutes (2 R.S. 137, secs. 6, 7). It is there included in the Statute of Frauds. The Statute of Frauds, which in the Revised Statutes made up a separate article, has now been transposed and consolidated with other articles. The result has been to place its provisions, including its definition of a conveyance, in the same article which forbids the implication of a covenant in a conveyance of real property.

We do not think that this transposition of sections has effected a change of meaning (Fowler Real Prop. L. sec. 251, note). The Revised Statutes distinguished sharply between conveyances of real estate and conveyances of interests in real estate. We find the distinction emphasized in the very sections from which the present definition of conveyances has been borrowed (2 R.S. 137, secs. 6, 7): "lands" were coextensive in meaning with "lands, tenements and hereditaments;" "estates and interests in lands" might embrace a chattel real. The same distinction is preserved to-day (Real Prop. Law of 1896, secs. 2 and 205; Real Prop. Law of 1909, secs. 2 and 240). When this distinction is kept in mind, the meaning of the statute is no longer doubtful. The prohibition of implied covenants is still applicable, not to conveyances generally, nor to conveyances of "interests in real property," but solely to conveyances of real property, i.e., of lands, tenements and hereditaments. If the purpose had been to extend the prohibition to implied covenants in leases, it would have been very easy to say so in terms too clear for misconstruction. The re-enactment of the old section was an adoption of the meaning which it had acquired by judicial construction for more than half a century ( Davis v. Davis, 75 N.Y. 221; Caesar v. Bernard, 156 App. Div. 724, 732; 209 N.Y. 570; Jay v. Johnstone, 1893, 1 Q.B. 25, 28; Comm. v. Hartnett, 3 Gray, 450, 451). Changes in arrangement or in the division of sections will not work a change of meaning unless the intent to change is manifest ( Davis v. Davis, supra). That principle applies with special force to consolidating statutes ( Mitchell v. Simpson, 25 Q.B.D. 183, 190). It finds its proper application here. The rule that a covenant for quiet enjoyment will be read into a lease has become a settled rule of property. We cannot believe that the legislature would have over-thrown such a rule without clearer token of its purpose. It would not have retained the old phrases, and left a change of meaning to be gathered by doubtful inference from the order of the sections. More significant than anything which it did change are the things which it omitted to change. The ancient landmarks have been preserved.

Any other conclusion would lead indeed to strange anomalies. A covenant for quiet enjoyment will be implied in oral leases. It results from the mere relation of the parties ( Markham v. Paget, 1908, 1 Ch. 697; Budd-Scott v. Daniell, 1902, 2 K.B. 351; Dexter v. Manley, 4 Cush. 14; Rawle Covenants of Title, sec. 274). But the statutory definition of conveyances is limited to instruments in writing (Real Prop. L. sec. 205, now sec. 240). The landlord, therefore, would have us hold that the covenant is implied when the lease is oral and rejected when the lease is written. Such a distinction, if it is to be made, must rest upon a clearer manifestation of the legislature's purpose.

One other argument in support of the landlord's claim remains to be considered. The tenant, it is said, was chargeable with knowledge that the landlord's occupation of the highway was by force of a revocable license ( Deshong v. City of N.Y., 176 N.Y. 475). From this imputed knowledge, the consequence is deduced that ouster by the city was by implication excepted from the covenant, and that the tenant, having taken his chances, must continue to pay the rent. But the language of the lease repels that view of the relation. It is all a question of intention, and here the intention is unmistakable. The vault and the rest of the basement are joined in a single description; and the whole is leased to the tenant for a term of ten years. Nothing in the lease suggests a distinction between the landlord's duties in respect of one part and his duties in respect of others. We cannot doubt that the enjoyment of the whole was the consideration for the rent. The purpose could hardly have been clearer if the vault had been leased alone. The space within the highway was more than an incident or an appurtenance. It was the subject-matter of the grant. Being the subject-matter of the grant, it was also the subject-matter of the covenant ( Pabst Brewing Co. v. Thorley, 145 Fed. Rep. 117; 179 Fed. Rep. 338).

In thus holding, we place the incidence of loss where justice requires it to fall. Without warning the tenant of the chance of revocation, the landlord undertook to make a lease which should continue for a fixed term. We will not whittle down the consequences that normally attach to such a letting by nice assumptions of constructive notice. The tenant had the right to take the landlord at his word. Whether the paramount title be public or private, the consequence of ouster is a suspension of the rent.

The order should be affirmed with costs, and the questions certified answered in the affirmative.

HISCOCK, Ch. J., CHASE, COLLIN, HOGAN, McLAUGHLIN and CRANE, JJ., concur.

Order affirmed.


Summaries of

Fifth Avenue Building Co. v. Kernochan

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Oct 16, 1917
221 N.Y. 370 (N.Y. 1917)

In Kernochan, the landlord leased to the tenant part of the first floor and basement of a Fifth Avenue building. By the terms of the lease, the basement included a vault beneath the sidewalk in front of the building.

Summary of this case from Eastside Exhibition Corp. v. 210 East 86th St. Corp.

In Fifth Avenue Building Company v. Kernochan (supra), Judge CARDOZO, writing for the court, was careful to point out that "we are dealing now with an eviction which is actual and not constructive."

Summary of this case from Two Rector Street Corp. v. Bein

In Fifth Ave. Bldg. Co. v. Kernochan (221 N.Y. 370, supra) the landlord had rented part of the first floor and basement including a vault beneath the sidewalk.

Summary of this case from Matter Enn-Jay Corp. v. Allied Instrument
Case details for

Fifth Avenue Building Co. v. Kernochan

Case Details

Full title:THE FIFTH AVENUE BUILDING COMPANY, Appellant, v . J. FREDERIC KERNOCHAN…

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: Oct 16, 1917

Citations

221 N.Y. 370 (N.Y. 1917)
117 N.E. 579

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