
    HAUSAUER et al. v. DAHLMAN et al.
    (Supreme Court, General Term, Fifth Department.
    October 20, 1893.)
    1. Summary Proceedings—Defenses—Renewal of Lease.
    It is a complete defense to summary proceedings commenced at the termination of a lease for a year that defendant availed himself of a provision of the lease, giving him the privilege of renewing the lease for four years by giving notice of intention, as the notice of itself creates the new term.
    2. Same—Equitable Defenses.
    Such a defense is not an equitable one, and therefore a municipal court can take cognizance of it.
    Appeal from special term, Erie county.
    Action by Charles A. Hausauer and others against Sarah Dahlman and others. From an order denying defendants’ motion to vacate an injunction pendente lite, defendants appeal.
    Reversed.
    Argued before DWIGHT, P. J., and HAIGHT, J.
    H. J. Swift, for appellants.
    A. Moot, for respondents.
   DWIGHT, P. J.

This action was brought to obtain specific performance of an alleged agreement of the defendants to extend a lease of premises in Main street in the city of Buffalo, which they had given the plaintiffs for the term of one year from May 1, 1890, to cover a term of four years in- addition thereto; and the injunction restrained the defendants in the mean time from prosecuting summary proceedings begun by them in the municipal court of Buffalo to remove the plaintiffs from the premises. The complaint alleged the execution in writing and under seal hy the defendants of the lease for one year, with the privilege to the plaintiffs, at their option, to renew the same for four years more at the same annual rent, and on the same conditions, on giving notice three months beforehand of their intention to do so, provided, that the defendants themselves should obtain an extension of their lease under which they let to the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs also allege that the defendants put them in possession of the premises on the 1st day of May, 1890, and that they have ever since continued in possession of the same “und^r said written lease and agreement,” and that the plaintiffs have regularly paid, and still pay, the monthly rent (at the rate of $2,500 a year) reserved by the said lease, although since the commencement of the summary proceedings referred to such rent has been paid under a stipulation that it shall not affect such proceedings; that such proceedings were commenced in November, 1892, under a claim that the plaintiffs are tenants at will or by sufferance, and that the plaintiffs have answered in such proceedings, denying that they are tenants at will or by sufferance, and denying other material allegations of the petition. The complaint also alleges that they did in due time give notice to the defendants that they did elect to renew7 the lease, as by its terms it was their privilege to do, for the further term of four years, and that one of the defendants, acting for and with the authority of the defendants, agreed to such renewal. It is a curious fact that the complaint contains no allegation that the defendants had procured an extension of their own lease, but no objection seems to have been made to the injunction on that ground, and some proof was made in the moving papers of the defendants to the effect that they had procured a new lease, though not on the terms and conditions of their former lease. Whether such is “an extension of their lease” within the meaning of their agreement with the plaintiffs is probably a question to be tried between the parties.

The injunction was prayed for in the complaint on the ground that the affirmative defense to the summary proceedings above foreshadowed was an equitable one only, and one of which the plaintiffs could not avail themselves in the municipal court. The learned judge at special term held to the contrary, and was of opinion, as shown by a memorandum accompanying his decision, that even under their general answer to the petition the plaintiffs “could litigate the executory covenant to extend their lease four years, in avoidance of the relief sought by that proceeding;” but he denied the motion to dissolve the injunction on the ground that the plaintiffs should be given the opportunity to have then-right to occupy the demised premises for four years determined in such manner as to bar further proceedings on the part of the defendants to disturb them in the occupancy of said premises, in the event that they are able to show that they are entitled to such extension.” We go with the learned judge so far, at least, as to hold that the defense here indicated might have been if it was not, and may still be, by an amendment to their answer in the summary proceedings, so stated as to constitute a complete defense to that proceeding, which may be litigated in any court in which the proceeding is taken. Here was not a mere covenant on the part of the lessor to give a new lease on demand and on certain conditions, but a covenant that the lessees might themselves, at their option, renew the lease for four years, by giving the notice required, which notice was duly given, and accepted by the defendants, and the plaintiffs continued in possession under such renewal, paying the rent reserved thereby down to the time of the commencement of the proceedings instituted to remove them summarily as tenants holding over after the expiration of their term. According to the allegations of the complaint the plaintiffs had done all that was required to be done by either party to effect a renewal of the lease for four years, provided always that the defendants have procured an extension of their lease within the meaning of the agreement, which is a fact which remains to be proved by the plaintiffs. The covenant in this case is, we believe, equivalent to a covenant that, on giving the required notice the lease should continue in force for the additional term, and in either case the effect of the notice is, of itself, to create the new term without the execution of a new lease by the lessor. Thiebaud v. Bank, 42 Ind. 212; Dix v. Atkins, 130 Mass. 171; Ranlet v. Cook, 44 N. H. 512. In Kelso v. Kelly, 1 Daly, 419, it was held that where the lease provided for a renewal at the option of the lessee, and there was no provision for notice, his holding over beyond the term was notice of his election to renew, and entitled him to hold the premises subject to the rent reserved by the original lease until the lessor performed his covenant by executing a new lease for the additional term. It seems to us very clear that the allegations of the complaint in this action indicate a complete defense to the summary proceedings in question, of which, if pleaded there, the municipal court of Buffalo must take cognizance, and that equity will not interfere to supplant the jurisdiction of that court already acquired in the proceeding. The order appealed from should be reversed, and the motion to dissolve the injunction granted. So ordered, with $10 costs and the disbursements of this appeal.  