
    Bernard Galewski, Landlord-Appellant, v. Ike Appelbaum, Tenant-Respondent.
    (Supreme Court, Appellate Term,
    July, 1900.)
    1. Summary proceedings — Invalid lease by grantor of landlord — Ratification.
    A grantee of premises is not precluded from dispossessing a tenant by the fact that a lease of the premises, purporting to have been made by the landlord’s grantor, is apparently in force, where it is shown that the latter did not authorize the making of the lease, was ignorant of its terms and had not ratified it in any manner beyond accepting rent under it under a misapprehension as to the length of the term.
    2. Same — Recital, in a deed, of an invalid lease.
    A recital in a deed of the grantor that the conveyance was accepted subject'to the rights of present tenants, “ all of which expire on or before May 1, 1902 ”, is not a recognition by the grantee of the invalid lease as valid and outstanding.
    3. Same — Termination of invalid lease in the city of New York.
    An invalid lease of real property in the city of New York terminates under the Real Property Law on the first day of May next after the occupation commenced.
    
      Appeal from a final order in favor of the defendant rendered in the Municipal Court of the city of New York, borough of Manhattan, in dispossession proceedings.
    C. L. Hoffman, for appellant.
    J. Levy, for respondent.
   Per Curiam.

The lease purporting to be made by the landlord’s grantor, to the tenant, was clearly invalid, in that it was not subscribed by the lessor, nor was there any evidence that the person who signed it in her behalf was her lawfully authorized agent. Nor is there any evidence that she ever ratified it. She certainly did not expressly ratify it, and there is no evidence that she ever saw it, or knew of its terms. The fact that it was recorded and that she accepted rent under it raises no implication of ratification. It does not appear that she knew of its recording or knew that it purported to lease the premises for more than a year. At the time the landlord acquired the property therefore the tenant was holding under an invalid lease. The recital in the deed that the conveyance was accepted “ subject nevertheless to the rights of present tenants, all of which expire on or before May 1, 1902 ”, does not amount to a recognition of the tenant’s lease as a valid outstanding lease. The deed was accepted subject to the rights of tenants, meaning thereby such rights as the tenants had, not such rights as any of them might claim to have. The recital still left it open to the grantee to dispute the validity of any rights so claimed. As has been seen the tenant here had no existing rights under his invalid lease, and consequently there was nothing to which, the recital applied, and it makes no difference whether or not the grantee knew that the tenant claimed to hold the premises for more than a year under an invalid lease. Purdy v. Coar, 109 N. Y. 448.

If the landlord’s testimony be accepted the tenant held under an oral lease from him from September, 1899, to May, 1900. If he be disbelieved, and the tenant’s story be accepted that nothing was said between himself and the landlord, then, the written lease being invalid, the tenancy ended on May 1, 1900, by virtue of section 202 of the Real Property Act (chap. 547, Laws of 1896). The final order appealed from should he reversed, with costs, and the proceeding remitted to the Municipal Court for a new trial.

Present: Truax, P. J., Scott and Dugro, JJ.

Order reversed, with costs and proceeding remitted to Municipal Court for new trial.  