The characteristic difference between an assignment of his lease and an under-letting by the original tenant resides in the inquiry whether as a result of the transaction the primary lessee has transferred his whole and entire estate and completely parted with his title, or has retained in himself some fragment or shred of his estate, either substantial or even formal and technical. An under-letting implies a constituted relation of landlord and tenant between the parties contracting; and that, in turn, the existence in the landlord of an estate superior to the leasehold and out of which the latter is carved; for there can be no tenure held of one whose title is utterly destroyed. This rule prevails even over the apparent intention, not because that intention ceases to be the test and standard of interpretation, but because an impossible intention is never presumed in preference to one possible and operative between the parties. The rule in its origin under the feudal system had a substantial and beneficial force. To the superior lord a service of fealty was due from the tenant in virtue of his tenure, and if the lessee could part with his whole estate to one holding only under him, the service of fealty was gone, and so, in that case, the new tenant was deemed to hold under the paramount title as an assignee of the lease, put in the place and room of the original tenant, and bound by his covenants to render his service. Of course, that useful result has gone *Page 618 out of the doctrine, and it remains with us simply a rule of legal logic, much less deserving the power to override and pervert the discovered intention of the parties. As a consequence, a plain tendency to enforce that intention, even upon very narrow and technical grounds, has been developed. Originally, a reversion in the primary lessee of some fragment of his estate was needful to support a sub-lease. It was said that it might be for a day, an hour, or even a minute, but must nevertheless be, and leave in the primary lessee a reversion having a tangible existence. But that reversion now may be purely technical, and the product of reasoning rather than of substantial fact. It has been held that where the original tenant transferred for the identical term of his own lease, but the transferee covenanted to surrender to him, a reversion was implied from that fact, although no man can measure it as a tangible thing, since both surrenders, that of the sub-tenant to the primary lessee, and that of the latter to the original landlord, are due under the contracts at the same precise moment of time. (Collins v. Hasbrouck, 56 N.Y. 157; Ganson v.Tifft, 71 id. 48.)
Indeed, the cases cited seem to go further than that, and to hold that the reservation of a right of re-entry for breach of condition, and even the reservation of a new rent, makes the instrument a sub-lease. The case cited as to the effect of a re-entry (Doe, ex dem. v. Bateman, 2 Barn. Ald. 168), so far from holding that a reserved right of re-entry necessarily implies a reversion, appears to me to hold the exact contrary, and to determine that such right may, and often does, exist by pure force of the contract and without the shadow of a reversion in the land. It is not necessary, however, to say whether the cases in our own State are in every respect soundly reasoned. It is quite obvious that they mean this at least; that the contract of the parties, construed according to their plain intention as expressed by it, shall prevail where upon such construction that contract is a possible one and can be rendered effective in subordination to established legal rules; and that where a sub-lease is manifestly intended, the court will search diligently and even closely for some trace of a reversion to support it. *Page 619 And this result of the cases in our own court is fully sustained in the case of Henry John Porter v. French (9 Irish L.R. 514), in which the English cases were carefully reviewed, and it was held among other things: "It has been argued and found that the court in construing this instrument should have special regard to its form; I mean to the circumstance that it is in the ordinary form of a lease, and that we are bound to give effect to the manifest intention of the parties themselves; a principle which I fully admit, subject, however, to the consideration that there are certain known rules and principles of law which it is not competent to individuals to set aside or overturn at their pleasure." So that we may proceed on the assured basis that what was intended as a lease must be construed as a lease unless some inexorable legal necessity prevents.
We are now to consider the application of this doctrine to the facts developed in the case at bar. The contract of Stewart with the Central Railroad Company of Long Island was made in January of 1873. That contract begins with a recital that Stewart has built a first-class railroad from his Hempstead Plains purchase to Farmingdale at a cost which has been adjusted between the parties at the sum of $393,000, upon lands partly owned by him and partly obtained by the Central Company under the statute, but which last were paid for by Stewart; and that it is intended by the party of the first part to lease the constructed line to the party of the second part. The contract then "in consideration of the rents, covenants and agreements" thereinafter mentioned proceeds to "grant, demise and to farm-let" the property, describing it, together with "the railroad track, side tracks, depots, water tanks, gravel banks and all buildings thereon and appurtenances thereto belonging" for the term of fifty years, the railroad company paying therefor annually, for the first three years, "the yearly rent or sum" of seven per cent upon the agreed cost, and for the remaining forty-seven years ten per cent upon such cost. The contract further provides that if Stewart should expend further sums in the completion or equipment of the line, or for a double track, this expense should be added to the principal *Page 620 sum upon which the rental percentage was to be computed; that the lessee should pay all taxes, assessments and charges upon the property; that such company should run daily trains for passengers and freight, and that for a violation of this covenant, or of that to pay rent, Stewart should be at liberty to re-enter; and that on the last day of the term the lessee would surrender the property to the lessor "subject, however, as hereinafter provided." That limitation upon the duty of surrender appears in a following agreement of purchase and sale, by which the railroad company covenants at the end of the fifty years to pay to Stewart the principal sum by him expended, upon which the rental percentage has been computed, upon which payment the lessee shall not surrender, but shall be vested with the fee and the contract be deemed a sufficient deed of conveyance. An additional contract between the parties specified what work was to be done upon tracks connecting with Garden City under an agreement with Poppenhusen, of which the railroad company had become owner, and added that expenditure to the principal drawing the rental percentage, and provided for an accounting to adjust the amount of such principal. In June, 1874, the Central Company consolidated with the Flushing, North Shore and Central Railroad Company, and to it the Stewart contract was assigned. In May, 1876, that company made a contract with the defendant, the legal effect of which is here in question. By that instrument the Flushing Company leased to the Long Island Company the whole of its railroad from Long Island City to Babylon, including all its rolling stock, tools and machinery and all its branch lines, among which were those constructed by Stewart, for a term of ninety-nine years and a gross rent beginning with over $200,000, and increasing year by year for six years until a final rental of $351,000, became permanently fixed. This rental agreement provided for the protection of the lessee that it might withhold the stipulated payments of rent to the amount of the Flushing Company's interest upon its bonded debt and of its incumbering rents, and apply its payments upon them as so much cash paid to the lessor, but such interest and rents were not to exceed *Page 621 the yearly maximum agreed upon. Further provisions determined the order of application of the lessee's gross earnings; for subrogation to the rights of the bondholders if it should pay the lessor's bonds; for a re-entry upon breach of covenants; and a surrender to the lessor at the end of the term. The question now comes, whether this instrument relatively to the Stewart lines, was a lease or an assignment of the Stewart contract, so far as that was itself a lease.
Of that contract two views may be taken. It may be treated as one complete agreement, establishing relations in accordance with all its terms as they act and react upon each other, or as two separate and independent agreements, having no necessary connection save that they happen to be written on one and the same paper. The last is the appellant's contention. Her counsel divide the contract into its component parts, and argue that it consists, first, of a lease for fifty years, and then of a contract for the sale and purchase of the railroad; and that the two agreements are so free from any dependence upon each other that they might just as well have been contained in separate instruments. Let us suppose that they had been. The supposition at once disturbs the theory of relative independence, since we discover that to make two instruments we are required to change the covenant to surrender in the lease, "subject, however, as hereinafter provided," to one "subject to the provisions of an agreement of purchase and sale made concurrently herewith;" and are further compelled to add to the terms of the sale contract, which is conditioned for a conveyance upon the prior payment of the rent reserved, a clause referring to the lease as a means of identifying the amount and times of payment of the rent intended. The integrity of the surrender covenant in the lease contract can only be preserved by a reference to the sale contract; and the integrity of the sale agreement can only be saved by a reference to the lease to determine the rent payable as a condition, and we should be required to read the two instruments, thus mutually referring to each other, made at the same time, and relating to the same property, together and as if they were one, the inquiry *Page 622 being what agreed relations subsisted. So that the question would recur whether the two instruments established two separate and distinct relations, or one single relation as the joint product of the two agreements. We may solve that problem by aid of the inquiry whether at one and the same time the two separate relations could co-exist without affecting or modifying each other. Under what is called the lease, the Central Railroad Company was a tenant for years, having merely a leasehold estate, the main and vital characteristic of which was a surrender of possession to Stewart at the close of the term. Under the contract of purchase, the railroad company was the equitable owner in fee, and not bound to surrender possession at all, and in terms relieved from that duty. This assertion involves the character of the possession taken by the original vendee and lessee, which, in one view of the case, is the pivotal and determining inquiry. The complaint alleges that the Central Company went in under what is denominated the "indenture of lease and supplementary agreement." The meaning of that phrase, as used in the pleading, is shown by a later averment, where it is said that the Flushing Company assigned "said indenture of lease and supplementary agreement to this defendant, a copy of which instrument is hereto annexed, marked A." And the assignment of the whole contract which was made by the Central Company to the Flushing Company upon the consolidation is described as "the said indenture of lease and supplementary agreement." So that the allegation is not that the Central Company went in under the lease as a part or fragment of the contract, or under one of its branches, but under the contract as a whole. The answer discloses that understanding of the complaint, and admits the allegation thus: "That under and pursuant to said instruments," the Central Company went into possession. The parties thus agreeing upon the fact of possession under the contract, no proof was given or offered to the contrary, or to establish an intention to give or take possession under one branch of it alone. We are bound, therefore, to assume that the Central Company was in *Page 623 possession under the contract as a whole, and both as lessee and vendee — a result not only compelled by the pleadings, but indicated by a marked characteristic of the contract that under both of its branches there was to be one continuous and unchanging possession. It was not stipulated that the Central Company should hold possession as tenant for fifty years, and then surrender that possession to the landlord and take a new one as vendee, but that at the end of the term it should not surrender at all the possession already taken. That the Central Company was in both as lessee and vendee is further unmistakably indicated by a provision of the supplementary agreement which modifies the annual payments to be made. The language used is: "The lease bearing even date herewith is modified, and its conditions temporarily made to conform to this instrument, so that no rent or interest shall begin to accrue to the party of the first part until July 1, 1873, and the first quarter's rentor interest shall be and become payable three months" thereafter. The dual character of the payments to be made is thus clearly recognized; they are rent and they are also interest; and are one or the other interchangeably by reason of the dual character of the possession; for if the Central Company was in only as tenant, it was nonsense to speak of its rents as synonymous with interest. And beyond the admission of the pleadings, and the obvious intent of the parties indicated by their written stipulations, it is further true that a possession taken generally and not in terms specially limited to some character or right is measured by, and under the protection of, the entire right belonging to the possessor, and cannot be driven out from its shelter and placed under a mere fragment or component part of such right.
The rule goes so far as this. Where one takes a lease for a number of years and during the term enters into a contract of purchase with his landlord of the same property, his possession, which was taken as tenant, operates as notice to one dealing with the landlord in respect to the land, not merely of his right as tenant, but of his right to the inheritance. The possession although taken as tenant becomes also a possession as *Page 624 purchaser, protecting him as such to the extent of his entire right. (Daniels v. Davison, 16 Ves. 253.)
So that it becomes manifest that if we suppose the one contract to have been divided into two separate papers, not only would they require to be read together as mutually dependent upon each other, neither alone fixing the rights of the contractors, but possession under each, under one as lessee and under the other as vendee, would stand admitted. That ends all practical result from a supposed separation of the two branches of the one contract, and we may drop the supposition and reason upon the contract as it stands.
The possession of the Central Company as purchaser under the contract gave it at once, upon the execution of that instrument, an equitable estate in fee. (Champion v. Brown, 6 Johns. Ch. 398; Hay's Adm'r v. Miller, 6 Hun, 320; affirmed, 70 N.Y. 112; Pelton v. Westchester Fire Ins. Co., 77 id. 605.) Had the company been an individual its interest under the contract, springing at once upon its execution, would have been real estate, descendible to his heirs and devisable as such. (Hathaway v. Payne, 34 N.Y. 92.) In equity the vendor simply holds the legal title as trustee for the vendee. The Central Company, therefore, under the contract, had two estates; one legal and the other equitable; a legal estate as tenant for years and an equitable estate as owner of the fee; the former a chattel real, the latter equivalent to a freehold; and these were concurrent and not consecutive, if we assume that no merger was possible or intended. There is no difficulty in thus treating them. In case of non-payment of the rent, the Central Company would forfeit its right of possession both as lessee and vendee, since that payment is the condition of both estates: it is equally rent and interest, and so described. And as to remedies Stewart might bring ejectment or proceed summarily under the Landlord and Tenant Act, since the Central Company could not deny its tenancy and its landlord's title, or defend its possession as owner under a contract broken and forfeited. If any doubt surrounded the summary remedy, as sufficiently effective, ejectment would give redress. But if *Page 625 there is difficulty in so treating them, if as concurrent, separate estates they seem inharmonious and inconsistent, it will merely result that the equitable estate of inheritance will draw after it the term. (Cassel v. Girdler, 9 Ves. 509.) In the case cited the MASTER OF THE ROLLS said: "I thought it had long been established, that, where the same person has the inheritance and the term in himself, though he has in one the equitable interest, and the legal estate in the other, the inheritance draws to itself the term and makes that dependent upon it;" and after citing several cases he added: "I did not apprehend that it was open to dispute."
The purchaser, therefore, under this contract could have conveyed the fee and put its grantee in possession as owner. It could, as it did, carve out of its fee an estate for ninety-nine years, stretching beyond the term of its lease, and ending with a surrender day and a reversion in fee in itself. Was that lease in any respect void beyond the fifty years, and after having cut the Stewart contract into two instruments must we also sever the defendant's lease into halves, and give him one landlord for the fifty years and another for the forty-nine succeeding? Is it possible that the immediate lessor, making one complete lease for one entire term, had no remedies of a landlord against a tenant for the first half of the term, but got them new-born at the beginning of the last half? For that is the inevitable result of the appellant's theory. During the fifty years the Flushing Company, on the basis asserted, could not dispossess the defendant under the Landlord and Tenant Act, for that remedy depends upon the existence of the conventional relation of landlord and tenant between the parties, and where there is not an under-letting there is no such relation, and it is precisely for the reason that no such relation does or can exist that the construction of an assignment prevails. How could the Flushing Company make affidavit that such relation existed? Stewart alone could do that for he becomes the sole landlord. This difficulty is not answered by the cases which hold that even where there is an assignment the assignor may collect an excess of rent beyond what is due *Page 626 under the original lease, for such actions rest upon the express promise to pay, and not on an extinguished tenancy, and what is recovered is really not rent but purchase-price of the lease sold and assigned. In what character or capacity did the immediate lessor of the defendant make the lease for ninety-nine years? Certainly not in the character or capacity of a lessee of Mrs. Stewart, for as such it had no power to do as it did do, and as such the lease to defendant would neither have been given nor accepted. It is true that a lessee for ten years cannot by a lease for eleven years clothe himself with a reversion and so make his contract a sub-lease, but that is because he has no reversion beyond the ten years, and cannot gain one by his own wrong; but here there is no wrong, since there is an existing reversion in fee upon which the sub-lease is founded. It can stand upon it. Why should it not? It was so meant and intended. Why should we do violence to the intention when no legal necessity compels? The lessee under the Stewart contract and by virtue of its terms was something more than a mere lessee for years during even the first fifty years, for its equitable estate began at the same moment with its legal estate and existed through the whole term of the latter. It did not assign its whole estate to the defendant which it derived from Stewart, and that is conceded. Nobody claims that the equitable fee passed to the defendant. But a transfer is an assignment only when the person transferring parts with the whole estate derived from the original lessor. If that estate be a fee, he must transfer a fee. (Van Rensselaer v. Gallup, 5 Denio, 454.) The case is not at all like that of Langford v. Selmes (3 Kay John. 220), to which we are referred as authority for the proposition that the covenant of sale added to the lease does not prevent a transfer of the leased estate from being an assignment. In the contract in that case there was merely an option to purchase, which could only be exercised at the end of the term. There the lessee had under the contract no estate beyond his term. He had a legal estate, but no equitable one. Whether he would have the latter or not remained uncertain until he exercised his option at the specified time. Meanwhile and during *Page 627 the leasehold estate he had only the leasehold estate and no other in the land, and when the learned English Vice Chancellor said "there is no authority for the proposition" he referred to the argument which he states, "that on the subsequent acquisition of the fee-simple by the original lessee an estoppel arose by which, on the expiration of the original lease, thesupposed under-lessee will hold of the under-lessor who hadaffected to demise to him at a rent of six pounds for a termgreater than he was possessed of at the date of theunder-lease." Here, on the contrary, the under-lessor did not demise for a term "greater than he was possessed of," for it had the fee and carved out of it a lesser estate. The case ofBostwick v. Frankfield (74 N.Y. 207) presented a similar feature, though in a different form. Two distinct estates, one a leasehold, and the other an equitable fee, were claimed to have been created at different times, but the latter was in substance, though not in form, a mere option, since the effect of non-performance by the vendee was stipulated to make the contract of purchase null and void. It must be remembered that the present is not so much a question of merger resulting from the meeting in one ownership of two distinct estates, but whether two estates were created at all, and if they were, whether the two taken together and constituting the complete right of the lessee and vendee did not leave in it such a reversion as made possible the relation of landlord and tenant between it and its alleged and intended lessee. It is not clear that two estates were created. Substantially it is possible to say there was but one, and that growing out of the contract of purchase and sale. What is called rent may be deemed for the first three years but legal interest upon the agreed cost to Stewart, and for forty-seven years that interest, with three per cent additional, to be added to the cost in making up the full purchase-price. While the agreed percentage is called rent it is substantially interest and in part purchase money, and is called the "rent or interest." If, however, in view of its language, notwithstanding that but one possession was to be taken under it, and that to be continuous and forever, we must still say that there were two estates, separate but succeeding *Page 628 each other without break or altered possession; we are obliged to change the beginning of the equitable estate from the date of the contract to the end of the fifty years; a construction which violates the legal effect of the instrument and postpones the equitable estate unduly. If, however, we do that and compelled by seeming difficulties, say that the original lessee had a legal estate for years, and at its close an equitable estate in fee, then for the first time upspringing, so that the two estates were in no manner concurrent but strictly successive, I doubt whether even then the rule which makes an intended lease an assignment of a prior one would have any just application. If one has a lease for five years and then afterward takes an additional lease for five years more to commence at the end of the first one, may he not make a valid sub-lease for nine years? Would we hesitate to do as the lessor did, and add the consecutive estates together, in determining whether such a reversion existed as would support the nine-year lease as a whole and during its entire term in accord with the plain purpose of the parties; or would we feel bound to cut the new lease into fragments, and make it give two landlords instead of one, and split it into two leases, especially where the amounts and modes of payment for the term were different and conflicting? And ought we to apply the rule here invoked to any case where a lawful reversion of any kind, legal or equitable, survives the end of the original lease and remains in the primary lessee? The substantial bearing of these inquiries, even if we admit the theory of independent successive estates, which we have sought to show is unsound, is apparent in the present case. The defendant reserved the right to pay its rent by paying the Flushing Company's rents and bond interest. It did not agree to do so, but lest the permission should be misconstrued, it expressly provided that such rents and interest should not exceed its own maximum of rent. If for the first fifty years it is bound to pay all the Flushing Company's rents for leased lines, those sums added to the bonded interest may exceed its maximum rent, and it may be forced to make default on the bonds, and bear a foreclosure, or pay a greater rent than it stipulated, and find its *Page 629 quarterly payments falling due at times different from its own stipulations. It seems to us, therefore, that the courts below were right in their determination that the defendant's contract was a single, complete lease, and not an assignment of one lease and a creation of another and shorter one. No equity of the plaintiff compels us to a different conclusion. Her rights remain undisturbed precisely as they were originally fixed. Simply she does not acquire a second new and unexpected tenant after having already acquired a first one by operation of law.
It is argued, in view of the difficulties we have suggested, that this lease may be treated as such between the parties to it, and as an assignment relatively to the rights of Stewart. There seems to be some authority for that doctrine, though it is said to be exceptional. (Wood's Landl. and Ten., § 347.) If it be conceded, it goes upon an effort to preserve unbroken the intention and the rights of the parties, and should not apply where it would or might substantially change or affect them. We have seen that such might be the result in the case at bar, by compelling payment of a greater rent than that reserved, through the peril of a default on the mortgage bonds. We do not know how the fact is, but that such a possibility was contemplated is apparent from the provision in the lease intended to protect the defendant in just that emergency. Probably the doctrine referred to goes no further than in case of an assignment to preserve to the assignor some of his contract rights, but does not make him at the same time a landlord and not a landlord.
The final result of the argument may be thus stated: The intention of the parties, plainly disclosed to make a lease, is not to be thwarted except in a case where, for want of a reversion, such a lease under the logic of the law is impossible; and wherever such a reversion exists sufficient to support a lease, and whether legal or equitable, the intention of the parties can be carried out, and should, therefore, be enforced.
The contrary conclusion plants itself upon a venerable fiction which has outlived its usefulness. A fiction in the law is *Page 630 never to be admired, though it may sometimes be endured; but a needless and harmful fiction should go the way of its numerous fellows which have fallen before the preference for truth. The contract of lease which the parties make, which they intended to make, and to which alone they bound themselves, may, perhaps, be resolved into a different contract involving new liabilities and to a party unknown to the original agreement, where some pressing need or some strong justice compels; but where there is no such compulsion, where the contract can stand as it was made, and so ought to stand as it was made, and neither necessity nor justice requires it to be thwarted or modified, I doubt the wisdom of summoning to that work an antiquated fiction which the authorities in this State have been slowly stripping of its possessions and preparing for burial. The cases of Collins v.Hasbrouck and Ganson v. Tifft (supra) denied its application where there was any reversion in the sub-lessor; where there was a right of re-entry reserved in the under-lease, and where its rental terms differed from those of the primary letting. Only where it was immaterial to the new tenant under which lease he paid the same rent and possessed the same rights, was the fiction of an assignment tolerated. But in the present decision it regains its old power and begins a new reign. The doctrine which I thought should be dethroned invites to its coronation. I must be permitted to decline. Agreeing with the courts below, that the instrument in question is a sub-lease and not an assignment, I must vote for an affirmance of the judgment.
All concur with RAPALLO, J., except FINCH, J., dissenting, and RUGER, Ch. J., and MILLER, J., not voting.
Judgment reversed.