(dissenting). The defendant appeals from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $406.75. The trial was before the court without a jury on an agreed statement of facts. The question litigated was whether the defendant was obligated to pay rent to the plaintiff for the months of June, July and August, 1926. The decision depends upon the construction which is to be given to a notice sent by the defendant to the plaintiff on June 19, 1925. That doubtless which led to the sending of the notice was a clause in the lease numbered 14th, which read as follows: “ It is further understood and agreed that in the event that the tenant wishes to vacate the premises at the expiration of the term herein mentioned [namely, September 30, 1925] then the tenant must send a written notice to that effect by United States registered mail, three months prior to the expiration of the term of this lease. However, if the tenant fails to send such written notice to the landlord, then this lease shall become automatically renewed for an additional term of one year at the same terms and conditions as stated herein.” (Italics are mine.)
On June 19, 1925, more than three months before the expiration of the term, the tenant sent and the landlord received the following notice: “ This will inform you to cancel the lease made the 15th day of September, 1924, by Klamer Realty Corporation to Joseph Danerhirsch for Apt. 3-E, 690 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y.” (Italics are again mine.)
The tenant did not vacate the premises on September 30, 1925, but remained thereafter and removed on May 29, 1926. The landlord made no response to the notice of June 19, 1925. The defendant on August 12, 1925, sent and the landlord received the following written notice: “ * * * I will be a monthly tenant beginning October 1, 1925, for Apt. 3-E, 690 Riverside Drive.” The landlord made no answer to this second notice. It will be .seen that the defendant, appellant, the tenant, did not notify the *650landlord that he wished to vacate the premises. He merely notified the landlord that he, the tenant, had determined to cancel the lease. If the tenant had vacated the premises on September 30, 1925, in the light of his conduct, a construction could be placed upon the notice that it was intended to express the tenant’s wish to vacate the premises at the expiration of the term. The tenant by conduct has, however, precluded the giving to this notice of this construction. His conduct shows that he did not wish to vacate the premises, but on the contrary wanted to remain in them but under a new form of letting. The construction which he has thus put by conduct upon his own ambiguous notice makes it an insufficient notice to fulfill the requirements of clause 14 of the lease. Being an insufficient notice it was as a matter of law no notice, and the tenant, who is the defendant, appellant, stands in the position that he would have been in had he sent no notice whatever. That position by virtue of the last clause of paragraph 14 of the lease was that of a tenant who had automatically renewed for an additional year a written lease. The rent recovered was for the last three months of this additional year. No error was committed by the court below and the judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.