Court Opinion

ID: 5408184
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-08 16:04:54.886929+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:30:40.285143
License: Public Domain

Gildersleeve, J.
The action was brought to recover damages for an alleged breach of contract arising out of the sale of a house and lot in One Hundred and Twelfth street, Eew York city. The pleadings are oral and there is no dispute as to the facts.
The rents in question were, in the language of the contract “ to be adjusted as of June 1, 1901.” That is, the defendant should account to the plaintiff for his proportionate part of rent becoming due after June first, as, for instance, the rent of a quarter beginning May first, and ending July thirty-first, where he had collected it in advance; and the plaintiff should account to the der fendant for the same class of rent if payable after June first. The action was for a breach of this stipulation. It is unquestioned that no adjustment of the rents was made and that, in fact, there was no rent due from any of the tenants. The position of the plaintiff is that the defendant is liable to him for the rent of the third and fifth floors for June and July because, when he let that part of the premises he accepted the rent for May under an agreement that the tenants should have the premises free of rent for June and July. To sustain this action, it was necessary for the plaintiff to prove that, on June first, there was rent due, or thereafter to become due, which had been collected by the defendant, and a proportionate part of which belonged to the plaintiff. But it appeared affirmatively, that under the arrangement made by the defendant with the tenants of the two floors, there was no such rent due. The defendant, as he had the right to do, had, before the contract was made, given the premises in question, free of rent for June and July. The evidence shows that he did not accept the rent for May, in payment of the rent for May, June, and July, but that, in consideration of the tenants’ paying the May rent, he permitted them to occupy the premises for June and July free of rent; and, of course, he could not require them to pay rent for those two months. Consequently, within the meaning of the contract, there was no rent to be adjusted on June first. The contract contains no stipulation regarding the existence of rent, nor did the defendant make any representation that any rent would be due June first or thereafter. It was for the plaintiff to show affirmatively that rents were due June first, or would become due thereafter, and that they had been previously collected by the defendant. Of this, there was no evidence; hence no damages for the breach charges were proved. Even if it were charged that defendant was guilty of a suppressio veri in fraudulently concealing the true state of the rent account of the prem*774ises, the action is not based on fraud, but on a simple breach of the contract, and, therefore, there can be no recovery on that ground. No statement was exacted by the plaintiff when the contract was entered into regarding the existence of rent due, or to become due, and defendant made none. If the plaintiff did not choose to require such a statement, he cannot now obtain the same relief to which he might have been entitled ?f the defendant had made a statement which was equivalent to a warranty, or was false and fraudulent.
Judgment reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant, to abide the event.
Fbeedmah, P. J., and MacLeaet, J., concur.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant, to abide event.