Judges: Banks, Haines, Hinman, Maltbie, Wheeler
Filed Date: 7/9/1930
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
This is an action to recover rent under a written lease of an apartment in New York City which provided that the rent should be paid on the first day of each month in advance. The defendant lessee did not pay that due December 1st, 1928, nor that due on the first day of the succeeding months. On or about January 2d 1929, the plaintiff caused a dispossess notice, issued out of the Municipal Court of the city of New York, to be served upon the defendant. This notice required that she forthwith vacate the premises or show cause before that court on January 9th, 1929, why possession should not be delivered to the plaintiff. She continued to occupy the premises until January 9th when she vacated them. this action was brought in March, 1929, and the complaint claimed a recovery of the rent due on December 1st, 1928, January 1st, February 1st, and March 1st, 1929. The trial court gave judgment for the plaintiff to recover the rent so claimed.
As the lease was made in New York of an apartment there located, the case must be determined by the law of that State. Chillingworth v. Eastern Tinware Co.,
The lease contained the following provision: "In case of default on the part of the lessee in any of the covenants of this lease, or if the demised premises become vacant, the lessor may re-enter without notice, or by means of summary proceedings, or in any other method prescribed by law, and resume possession and relet the premises in his own name, for the account of the lessee without terminating this lease or in any manner affecting the obligations of the lessee to pay as *Page 700
damages the amount herein covenanted to be paid as rent." Since the defendant does not question the plaintiff's right to recover the rent due on February 1st and March 1st if she was dispossessed for breach of covenant, she no doubt concedes that this provision in the lease was within the New York decisions permitting a recovery as damages of rent falling due after her dispossession for breach of covenant, under similar provisions.Mann v. Munch Brewery,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.