E. BRONX PROPS. v. James

Decision Date24 March 1951
Citation200 Misc. 180
PartiesEast Bronx Properties, Inc., Landlord,<BR>v.<BR>Kenneth James, Tenant.
CourtNew York District Court

Samuel Pecker for landlord.

Murray Freeman for tenant.

FRANK, J.

This is a nonpayment summary proceeding. The proof on the trial established that the landlord although the owner of the premises at the commencement of the proceeding was divested of title by virtue of a condemnation proceeding prior to the trial. The landlord does not seek a final order but maintains that he is entitled to a money judgment for past due rent.

In the instant case it is obvious that a final order cannot be signed awarding possession to the petitioner for it is no longer entitled to possession. Can, therefore, a final order be entered for the landlord? Or, can a money judgment be entered without a final order? The record discloses that the petitioner conceded that the court could not sign a final order awarding it possession of the premises in question. Section 1425 of the Civil Practice Act, in part, provides: "If the precept contain a notice that demand is made in the petition for a judgment for rent in arrears, and the precept is served at least five days before the return day thereof, the court, upon rendering a final order, may determine the amount of rent due to the petitioner and give judgment for the amount found to be due." (Emphasis supplied.)

Prior to the 1924 amendment of section 1425 of the Civil Practice Act to include the above-quoted paragraph (L. 1924, ch. 514), no money judgment was obtainable in a summary proceeding. The amendment to effect a practical result and to eliminate the necessity of a separate action for rent authorized the granting of a judgment "upon rendering of a final order".

The petitioner contends that the court having had jurisdiction at the commencement of the proceedings, should retain that jurisdiction for all purposes and to support its position cites two cases: 21 West Forty-six St. Corp. v. Latherizer Corp. (142 Misc. 487) and Matter of Wythe v. White (150 Misc. 405). The petitioner's position can probably be best stated in the language of Judge ANDREWS in Matter of Byrne v. Padden (248 N.Y. 243, 247) which is: "In short an inferior or local court, having once obtained jurisdiction may dispose of the entire dispute between the parties unless prohibited by Constitution or Statute."

The jurisdictional questions considered in the cases cited by the petitioner arose as the result of the removal from or abandonment of the premises by the tenant. The decisions in those cases may therefore be justified by the argument that the tenant could not oust the court of jurisdiction and thus burden the landlord with additional litigation by his act in surrendering possession.

In the case under consideration, the tenant remains in possession. He has a new landlord. The petitioner is no longer entitled to possession. The tenant has performed no act to divest the court of its jurisdictional power to sign a final order.

The change in title and the right to possession which divests the court of the power to sign a final order in favor of the landlord flows from the landlord and not the tenant.

Should a landlord who divests the court of jurisdiction to sign a final order in a summary proceeding by his own act, nevertheless, be entitled to a judgment for rent which is purely incidental relief? I think not. Research has failed to reveal any case on the precise point. The decisions have held that a landlord by an assignment of rent loses the right to maintain summary proceedings. (45 Maiden Lane v. Reynolds Buffets, 143 Misc. 679.) A mortgagee who "enters upon and takes possession" pursuant to the terms of a mortgage prior to foreclosure and sale may...

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2 cases
  • Morningside Studios, Inc. v. Lucille Hotel Corp.
    • United States
    • New York City Court
    • 20 Julio 1972
    ...there no longer possessed title to the premises and the landlord-tenant relationship had ceased to exist (East Bronx Properties v. James, 200 Misc. 180, 103 N.Y.S.2d 535, Bronx, Moreover, if we failed to allow recovery in this proceeding, it may subsequently be held that any independent cla......
  • Papp v. Maffei
    • United States
    • New York City Court
    • 2 Noviembre 1970
    ...of a summary proceeding, and was available only upon 'rendering a final order', in favor of the landlord (East Bronx Properties Inc., v. James, 200 Misc. 180, 103 N.Y.S.2d 535; see Matter of Byrne v. Padden, 248 N.Y. 243, 162 N.E. 20.) If this were still the law, the outcome indicated here ......

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