
    (89 Hun, 65.)
    LEWIS v. ANGERMILLER.
    (Supreme Court, General Term, Second Department.
    July 26, 1895.)
    Lease—Surrender.
    One in possession under a lease providing for weekly payments of rent made a contract for purchase of the premises, part of the price being paid on execution of the contract, the agreement providing for execution of a deed on payment of the balance. Thereafter, for over 18 months, and until refusal to pay the balance of the purchase price unless the title was perfected, no demand was made for rent, and none was paid. Held, that there was a surrender of the lease, and the relation of landlord and tenant ceased.
    Appeal from order of Orange county special judge.
    
      Proceeding by Mary B. Lewis against Charles Angermilier to remove defendant from possession of real estate. From a final order of the special county judge dismissing the petition, petitioner appeals. Affirmed.
    Argued before BROWN, P. J., and DYKMAN and PRATT, JJ.
    George W. McElroy, for appellant.
    John J. Beattie, for respondent.
   BROWN, P. J.

This proceeding was instituted to remove the defendant from the possession of real estate for nonpayment of rent. It appeared that on April 1, 1892, one Robert B. Van Vleck leased certain real estate in the town of-Warwick to the defendant for the term of three years, terminating on April 1, 1895; that the rent reserved was 25 per cent, of the gross receipts of the business to be carried on upon the property, to be paid weekly. Provision was made in the lease for the employment of a cashier, and the ascertainment and determination of the weekly receipts.

On August 29, 1892, Van Vleck and defendant entered into a contract for the sale and purchase of the demised property. The purchase price was $8,000, $500 of which was paid upon the execution of the contract, $2,000 of the balance was to be paid in cash, and for the remainder defendant was to give his bond, secured by a mortgage upon the property; and, upon receiving payment in such manner, Van Vleck agreed to execute and deliver to the defendant a warranty deed for the property, free from all incumbrances. About December 12,1892, the defendant refused to take the title on account of an incumbrance on the property, but he testified upon the trial that he was ready to pay the purchase price when the title was perfected. On April 30, 1894, Van Vleck conveyed the land to the plaintiff, and on May 8,1894, assigned to her the lease. Thereafter, the plaintiff demanded of the defendant that he comply with the terms of said lease, and pay to her one-quarter of the weekly gross receipts, and in November, 1894, no rent having been paid, she commenced this proceeding.

Upon the trial the defendant and his wife testified without contradiction that, at the time of the execution of the contract of sale, it was ágreed with Van Vleck that, after September 1st, the defendant was not to pay rent under the lease. The special county judge correctly decided that the lease was surrendered, and that the relation of landlord and tenant did not exist between the parties. A surrender exists by act or operation of law when the parties, without any express surrender, do some act so inconsistent with the subsisting relation of landlord and tenant as to imply that they have both agreed to consider the surrender as made. Such an implication arises from the facts of this case. The relation of vendor and vendee was created, and there was a payment to the vendor of a part of the purchase money, and an agreement on his part to execute and deliver a warranty deed on receipt of the balance; and what is conclusive to my mind as to the intent of the parties in relation to the lease is that after the execution of the contract of sale there was no payment of rent by the defendant, and no demand therefor by Van Vleck. The omission to make any demand or request of the weekly payments of rent for a period of upwards of 18 months shows conclusively that Van Vleck recognized the possession of the defendant as that of a vendee, and not as that of a tenant, and the conclusion is irresistible that the lease was regarded by both parties as surrendered. The case of Burnett v. Scribner, 16 Barb. 621, is quite like the case before us, and sustains the ruling of the county judge.

The order must be affirmed, with costs. All concur.  