Summary
In Koenig v. Eagle Waist Co., Inc., (176 App. Div. 726) this court after stating that equity will not take real estate from one party and give it to another by mandatory injunction, held that if a tenant is denied possession he has an adequate remedy at law in ejectment or by summary proceeding or by an action for damages, in which he can recover all damages that naturally flow from the refusal of the landlord to give possession.
Summary of this case from Knower v. AtkinsOpinion
March 23, 1917.
Charles J. Steinberg, for the appellant.
Morris W. Hart [ Morris Quasha with him on the brief], for the respondents.
The complaint alleges the making of a lease whereby the defendant demised to the plaintiffs certain premises therein described for a term of six months; the payment of the first month's rent; and that the defendant has wrongfully and arbitrarily failed and refused to permit the plaintiffs to enter said demised premises or to use and occupy the same. There are other allegations in the complaint which might have indicated that the plaintiffs had been given possession, but subsequently their peaceable possession had been interfered with, if they had not positively alleged that the defendant refused to allow them to enter, use or occupy the premises. The judgment demanded is that the defendant be commanded to forthwith deliver to the plaintiffs full, complete and absolute possession of the premises and commanding the defendant to provide the plaintiffs with the means of free access to the premises at all times during the term of the lease; and for an award of compensatory damages.
The learned justice at Special Term has granted pendente lite a mandatory injunction that the defendant forthwith deliver to the plaintiffs full, complete and absolute possession of the premises and provide the plaintiffs with means of free access to the demised premises. No provision for the giving of an undertaking was provided in the order as required by section 620 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The learned justice, therefore, granted in a preliminary injunction all the equitable relief to which the party would have been entitled in the final judgment, and without affording the possibility of indemnity if the court should finally determine that the plaintiffs were not entitled to such relief. (See Palmer v. Foley, 71 N.Y. 106; Howley v. Francis Press, 127 App. Div. 646.)
The authority for the granting of an injunction pendente lite must be found in the Code of Civil Procedure. As the action is for an injunction the right to a temporary injunction depends on the sufficiency of the complaint. (Code Civ. Proc. § 603.) The complaint does not show that the plaintiffs were entitled to the relief demanded, for equity does not take the possession of real estate from one party and give it to another by mandatory injunction. (High Inj. § 4; Bachman v. Harrington, 184 N.Y. 458, 463.) Although some of the language used in the opinion in Goldman v. Corn ( 111 App. Div. 674) would seem to indicate that a tenant was entitled to a mandatory injunction to put him in possession, it is clear from a careful reading of the opinion that the assignor of the excluded tenant was in possession under an unexpired lease, which could be assigned without the consent of the landlord, and that the landlord having no right of re-entry except as permitted by the lease, the attempted exclusion of the tenant was a continuing trespass against which equity will restrain.
In the case at bar the plaintiffs if they are aggrieved have full and adequate remedy in accordance with well-recognized and long-settled rules of law and procedure. If they desire to recover possession, an action in ejectment would afford the relief. If the delay incident to the trial of an action would render such relief inadequate a summary proceeding, it would seem, could be instituted as provided in section 2235 of the Code of Civil Procedure by the person forcibly kept out of possession. Furthermore the plaintiffs have a full and adequate remedy at law in an action for damages; not alone could they recover the difference between the rent reserved and the actual rental value of the premises for the stipulated term, but also such other proximate damages as naturally would flow from the refusal of the landlord to give possession under the covenants of the lease. ( Friedland v. Myers, 139 N.Y. 432, 436.)
The order should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion denied, with ten dollars costs.
CLARKE, P.J., SCOTT and DAVIS, JJ., concurred; SMITH, J., concurred in result.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs.