
    Solomon L. Pakas, Respondent, v. Frank C. Hurley, Appellant.
    (Supreme Court, Appellate Term,
    December, 1908.)
    Forcible entry and detainer — Nature and elements of offense — What constitutes a forcible detainer.
    Where the owner of a hotel employs one to manage the business temporarily with a view to his taking a lease of the property, but no lease is made and the owner subsequently discharges the manager and seeks to recover possession of the premises, the manager’s acts in refusing to vacate the premises upon the owner’s request and, after an altercation with the owner, declaring that he means to stay, and that the owner is not big enough a man to put him out, and being ready to fight with two or three men sitting there to help him, and on a subsequent day refusing the owner admission to the office and finally pushing him out of the hotel with the aid of men who came from upstairs are sufficient to constitute a forcible detainer within the provisions of section 2233 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
    Appeal by the defendant from a final order of the Municipal Court of the city of New York, fifth district, borough of Manhattan, made in a summary proceeding and awarding possession of certain premises to the petitioner after a trial had before the court, without a jury.
    Meyer Greenberg (Henry Greenberg, on brief), for appellant.
    Kurzman & Frankenheimer (John Frankenheimer and H. L. Gutman, of counsel), for respondent.
   Giegerich, J.

These proceedings were brought under section 2235 of the Code of Civil Procedure by the owner-respondent to recover the possession of certain premises known by the street number 100' West Eightieth street in the borough of Manhattan, Hew York city, and being a hotel known as the “ Orleans,” of which he claims the appellant forcibly withheld possession from him.

The answer denied the forcible withholding of possession, and by way of separate defense alleged that the appellant was in possession under a lease.

The respondent, upon the trial, gave testimony to the effect 'that the appellant went into possession of the hotel in the month of April, 1908, under an arrangement with him, the owner of the same, by which the appellant was to manage the business temporarily and with a view to taking a lease if he found that the enterprise could be profitably conducted, and if it turned out that the parties could agree upon the terms of a lease; that on June 30th he discharged the appellant and ordered him to leave the premises, which he refused to do, and that the appellant forcibly withheld possession of the same from him, as hereinafter more fully shown.

The appellant, on the other hand, claimed that on June first an oral agreement was entered into between the respondent and himself by which he agreed to lease the premises for one year from the first day of July following with an option of a further term of fourteen years, and that the petitioner agreed so to let the premises to him upon terms fully agreed upon.

Kb written lease was ever executed.

The appellant denied that the respondent discharged him, and that either he or any one in his behalf used any force to oust the respondent from the hotel.

The trial justice awarded to the respondent the delivery of the possession of the premises, and the appellant has appealed to this court.

It will be noted that the proceedings were not brought under subdivision 1 of section 2231 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which confers- the right to institute summary proceedings upon the grounds, among others, that the period during which the servant was permitted to occupy the premises had expired, or that the relation of master and servant was lawfully terminated before the expiration of such term or permission; but they were instituted under section 2235, which permits an application, as provided in title II of chapter 17 of the Code, to be made by the person forcibly put out or kept out ” of the premises, n

¡Section 2345 of the Oode of Civil Procedure provides: “ Where the application is founded upon an ‘allegation of forcible entry or forcible holding out, the petitioner must allege and prove that he was peaceably in actual possession of the property, at the time of a forcible entry, or in constructive possession, at the time of a forcible holding out; and the adveise party must either deny 'the forcible entry, or the forcible holding out, or allege, in his defense, that he, or his ancestor, or those whose interest he claims, had been in quiet possession of the property, for three years together next before the alleged forcible entry or detainer; and that his interest is not ended or determined at the time of the trial.”

It will be seen from the foregoing provisions that only two defenses can be interposed on a proceeding for a forcible holding out. Lowman v. Sprague, 73 Hun, 408.

The answer in the present proceeding, as already seen, contains but one of such defenses, viz.: a denial of the allegations as to a forcible holding out.

We are thus limited to the consideration of the issue arising with respect to -the alleged forcible holding out, the sufficiency of the evidence relating thereto being challenged by the appellant.

In order to pass upon the question so presented, it may be well tv consider the statutory provisions pertaining thereto and the decision thereunder.

Section 2233 of the Oode of Civil Procedure, so far as applicable, provides that: “A person * * * who, having peaceably entered upon real property, holds the possession thereof by force ” may be removed therefrom as provided in said title II.

It was shown upon the trial that the respondent was the owner in fee of the premises in question and there was sufficient evidence adduced to warr&pt the finding that he was in constructive possession of the same at the time of the alleged forcible holding out. Code Civ. Pro., § 2245; Lowman v. Sprague, supra; Town of Oyster Bay v. Jacob, 109 App. Div. 613, 619; 13 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2d ed.) 751.

The principle underlying proceedings for recovery of possession of real property for forcible detainer is thus stated by Judge McAdam in his treatise on Landlord and Tenant (Vol. 3, 3d ed., p. 189) : “ The detainer should be with such numbers of persons and show of force as is calculated ■to deter the rightful owner from attempting to re-enter (Milner v. Manlean, 2 Car. & P. 17; Watson v. Whitney, 23 Cal. 376; Harrow v. Baker, 2 Greene (Iowa) R. 201).

“ The main object of the statute wias to preserve the public peace 'and prevent parties from asserting their rights by force or violence, though by gradual additions the remedy has become in effect a private as well as a public one.”

In some of the earlier cases cited with approval by Judge McAdam, we find that slight evidence was sufficient to present the question to the jury. Thus, in People v. Rickert, 8 Cow. 226, the defendant, having entered peaceably, told the former possessor that it would not be well for him if he ever came on the premises again by day or night.

It was left to the jury to say whether this was a threat of personal violence and consequently a forcible detainer within the statute. The jury found it was and a new trial was denied.

In the recent case of Town of Oyster Bay v. Jacob, 109 App. Div. 613, there were no expressed threats of personal violence. Mr. Justice Jenks, who spoke for the court in a well considered and scholarly opinion said (p. 618) that “ there may be a menace without words ” and, in discussing the matter of violence, he said, at page 617: “ It is not necessary that the occupant should resist until he compel the doing of an overt act in breach of the peace.” In Bach v. New, 23 App. Div. 548; Tischler v. Knick, 26 Misc. Rep. 738, and Vallauri v. Loftus & Co., Id. 760, cited by the appellant, there was a mere demand of possession and no threats were made nor was any violence of any kind offered. Those cases are therefore analogous.

Let us now consider whether the alleged forcible holding out was established.

The respondent testified that on June 30, 1908, he visited the premises and ordered the appellant to leave, but that the latter claimed a lease, refused to vacate, and an altercation ensued; that on the next day he went to the premises again and said to the appellant “Are you still here?” and the later replied “ Yes, and I mean to stay here.” The record continues: “And I told him again ‘1 told you yesterday you should get out.’ He says ‘Yes, but I am still here and I mean to stay here.’ Some hard words passed there and I called him some names. I told him he was a liar, etc., and other names. He said ‘ You are not big enough a man to put me out,’ and I said ‘ If I am not big enough you will hear from me later on,’ and I went away. I did not want to fight there; it looked like a fight was coming and I didn’t want to fight there and I went away. * * * He said ‘ I will put you out. I got a lease here.’ He was ready to fight; he had two or three men sitting there to help him.”

The respondent also testified to a further visit to the premises on or about July twenty-second in company with the witness Frank and another person, when he and his companions were refused admission to the office "by the man at the desk and were finally pushed out of the hotel by men who came from upstairs. This was corroborated by the witness Frank, who further testified that on the occasion of this visit to the premises he had spoken to the appellant over the house telephone, had told him that he had come with Hr. Pakas to take possession of the hotel and that the appellant had said that he would be down in a minute, and that it was some little time after this that he and his companions were put out by the men who came from upstairs—one of them wearing a porter’s blouse.

The appellant corroborated the witness Frank with regard to the telephone conversation at the hotel. He testified that on June thirtieth he did not tell the respondent that he would “ break his head,” nor throw him out of the hotel; that the respondent did not say “he wants possession of this house on the 30th of June; ” that he did not throw the respondent out of the building on July second nor on July twenty-second, and that he did not “ at any time instruct anybody to throw Hr. Pakas out.”

The testimony so given by the appellant falls far short of a denial of the above testimony adduced in behalf of the respondent that the appellant forcibly kept him out of the hotel in suit.

The evidence was, therefore, sufficient to warrant a finding that there was a forcible detainer and the ease clearly comes within the above stated provisions of section 2233 of the Code.

The acts of the persons at the desk and on the premises who refused respondent admission to the office and ejected him from the premises on July twenty-second were, under all the circumstances, prima facie, chargeable to the appellant, who testified that he was liviqg in the hotel at the time, paying all the employees and running the house as any hotel proprietor would run it. Svenson v. Atlantic Mail S. Co., 57 N. Y. 108, 111; Leslie v. Knickerbocker L. I. Co., 63 id. 27, 35; Hughes v. N. Y. & N. H. R. Co., 36 N. Y. Super. Ct. 222, 225; McConn v. N. Y. Central R. R. Co., 66 Barb. 338, 339; Morris v. Kohler, 41 N. Y. 42.

It was not, therefore, error to receive the testimony of the witness Frank as to certain conversations had with an employee of the appellant named Fitzhughes and acts of force on the part of the latter at the hotel in question on July twenty-second. They were simply narrations of actual oeeurances including conversations had with ‘an employee of the appellant.

The final order should, therefore, be affirmed with costs.

Hendrick and Ford, JJ., concur.

Order affirmed, with costs.  