Judges: Putnam
Filed Date: 7/8/1893
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
This is an appeal;from a judgment entered in Albany county on October 27, 1892, upon a verdict for the defendant, directed by the trial court. The action was ejectment. Both parties derived title under the lease executed by Stephen Van Rensselaer to Johannes Shafer, dated May 29, 1797, reserving an annual rent. Under said lease the lessor,.Van Rensselaer, obtained judgment of ejectment for nonpayment of rent on April 28, 1864, against-John Sicldes, then in. possession of the premises in question. The rights of Van Rensselaer in said judgment and premises were duly transferred to Walter S. Church prior to January, 1883. The latter, on June 19, 1883, obtained an order of the special term giving leave to him, as assignee of the judgment, to issue execution thereon, the order reciting that it was granted on the affidavit of Walter S. Church, and on proof of the due service of said affidavit and notice of motion. Execution was issued, and the return of the sheriff in-' dorsed thereon shows that Church was put in possession of said property on July 27, 1883. On that day John Sickles, the defendant in the action, and Nicholas A. Sickles, who were in possession of said premises at the time, executed a paper whereby they surrendered the possession thereof to Church, and acknowledged that they
If the proceedings of Church under the judgment of ejectment were regular and authorized, it is- clear that defendant, as assignee of the landlord’s interest in said lease, has a title to the farm in question, under the judgment of re-entry, superior to that of the plaintiff, who claims title under the lessee named in said durable lease. When the order of June 19, 1883, allowing the issuing of the writ of possession or execution was offered in evidence, the only objection made by plaintiff to its reception was that the statute provides that no writ shall be issued to revive a judgment after 10 years from the time of filing the judgment roll, and the court had no power to issue the writ. This objection was not well taken. Van Rensselaer v. Wright, 121 N. Y. 626, 25 N. E. Rep. 3. An execution by leave of the court may be issued on such a judgment at any time, even after the lapse of 20 years from the rendition thereof.
It is suggested by plaintiff that the notice of motion should have been served on Shultes, the plaintiff, but no such objection was made on the trial. Perhaps, if then made, it could have been obviated. Again, the statute only requires notice to be served on the defendant in the action. Therefore it was not necessary to serve on Shultes. Code Civil Proc. § 1378. In the action of ejectment for nonpayment of rent brought by Van Rensselaer, John Sicldes, the party in possession of the demised premises, was properly made a defendant. It was not necessary to name Shultes as a party to the action, and the judgment against Sickles, while not conclusive against Shultes as to the averments of the complaint, yet, as it was obtained against the person in possession of the farm, it enabled Church and his grantee to defend his title and possession against plaintiff. Bradt v. Church, 110 R. Y. 537, 18 N. E. Rep. 357.
The plaintiff proved by the certificate of the sheriff that he delivered possession of said property to Church on July 27, 1883, and also read in evidence a written attornment made by John Sickles, the defendant in the action, and Richolas A. Sickles, who were then in possession of said premises. The judgment having been obtained in pursuance of the provisions of the durable lease under which plaintiff claims title to said premises as lessee, and the effect of the judgment being to terminate the lease, (Van Rensselaer v. Wright, supra,) we think the attornment was not in violation of the provisions of the statute. See Witbeck v. Van Rensselaer, 64 N. Y. 32; Newell v. Whigham, 102 N. Y. 20, 6 N. E. Rep. 673. Under the execution, Church having been put in possession of the premises on July 27, 1883, the writ and return thereon were filed in the county clerk’s office on August 4, 1883. After the lapse of six months from the time the landlord was so put in possession under said judgment, viz. on January 27, 1884, his title to the property became absolute. The lease then, if not before, was terminated. Church then became the owner of the property, the rights of the tenants therein being extinguished the same as if said lease had never been executed. But it is claimed by the plaintiff that