The question arises here as to the force and effect of a judgment in a summary proceeding. This is an action for rent, and the plaintiff’s case rests principally upon the papers in a summary proceeding between the same parties as are now in court, which papers are in evidence in this action.
The petition in the summary proceeding sets forth (among other things) that the landlord and the tenant made an agreement “on or about the 27th day of July, 1917,” whereby “ the said tenant hired from the *316said landlord the said premises before described, for the term of one day and undertook and promised to pay the said landlord the sum of $3.00 a day payable daily in advance from the said date thereafter during occupancy, for the use and occupation thereof, and did thereupon enter into the occupation of said premises.” The answer in the summary proceeding puts in issue practically all the material allegations of the petition and on the trial the tenant produced proof to show that the agreement in question thereon was not a lease, but an agreement for the storage of certain goods. The judgment is in the usual form and finds that $261.50 rent was due and unpaid, and awards the possession of the premises to the landlord.
The plaintiff claims it is entitled to $485.10 and the defendant asserts that all the proof would show would be three dollars for one day’s rent, or nominal damages amounting to six cents.
The doctrine of res ad judicata is stated in Moore v. City of Albany, 98 N. Y. 396, 410, as' follows: “A judgment as to all matters decided thereby, and as to all matters necessarily involved in the litigation leading thereto, binds and estops all the parties thereto, and their privies in all cases where the same matters are again brought in question. ’ ’
The matters involved in a summary proceeding are those which are required to be determined therein and those which are required to be made the basis thereof, and its gravamen is as to the possession of real property. The only object and effect of a judgment in a summary proceeding is the determination as to which of the parties has the right to the possession of the premises in question. Posson v. Dean, 8 Civ. Pro. 177. The matters which must necessarily be established in a summary proceeding such as the one in question, are found to be stated in section 2235 of *317the Code of Civil Procedure, and are: (1) a description of the premises, (2) the petitioner’s interest therein, (3) the facts authorizing the removal of the tenant, and (4) the name, or designation of the tenant. Respecting the requirement number (3) above mentioned, it is further necessary to set forth that the relation of landlord and tenant existed (Code Civ. Pro. § 2231, subd. 2), namely, that there is a holding over “ after default in the payment of rent, pursuant to the agreement under which the demised premises are held, ’ ’ etc. And now we come to the crucial question, namely, to what extent as to “the agreement under which the demised premises are held ’ ’ is the judgment in the landlord’s favor binding in this action? Is it an adjudication of the single fact that a lease existed, or does it go further and adjudge the lease to be the one set forth in the petition so as to establish all of its provisions as alleged?
It was not necessary to allege any more about the lease than that the conventional relation of landlord and tenant existed. Reich v. Cochran, 201 N. Y. 450-455; People ex rel. Hughes v. Lamb, 10 Hun, 348. The latter ease was decided under the provisions of 2 Revised Sthtutes, 512, section 28, subdivision 2, which are the same as Code of Civil Procedure, section 2231, subdivision 2, and is directly in point. The law is well settled that a summary proceeding is not conclusive as to the amount of rent due — it establishes only that as to that matter, some rent is due, whether the point be uncontested in the summary proceeding (Jarvis v. Driggs, 69 N. Y. 143; Gross v. Salzman, 61 Misc. Rep. 630-633), or contested therein (Sheldon v. Testera, 21 id. 477) and even though the inconclusiveness of the finding as to rent due embarrass the tenant who desires to pay the rent so as to effect a stay of the warrant. Sheldon v. Testera, supra.
*318Thus, if we follow the reasoning respecting the amount of rent involved it would seem, at least on the surface, that because it is not necessary to litigate any point respecting the lease except its existence, the judgment is not conclusive as to its provisions whether disputed or not. Does this conclusion oppose the rule in Reich v. Cochran, 151 N. Y. 122-127, that the proceeding involves “ every question relating to the validity of the lease and the relation between the parties; ” or the decision in Nemetty v. Naylor, 100 N. Y. 562-566, that the judgment settles “ the facts as to the tenancy existing between the plaintiff and defendants;” or the rule in Meyerhoffer v. Baker, 51 Misc. Rep. 598, which holds that “ To establish this relation of landlord and tenant between the parties, and to entitle the defendant herein to a judgment in the summary proceedings, the existence of a valid lease upon which rent was due from this plaintiff to this defendant was necessary? ” It may be urged that in order to determine the relation of landlord and tenant the court must decide as to the existence of a specified lease, that such point is involved in the determination as to whether there was any lease at all. In the proceeding in question here the landlord’s evidence showed the existence of the lease described in the petition, and the tenant’s evidence showed that there was no lease at all, and the court decided that issue in the landlord’s favor; thereupon the argument is strong that the decision established the very lease (and its provisions) as alleged and proved in the proceeding. That is a forceful argument and I am strongly influenced by it, but the answer to it seems to be that the provisions of the lease are not necessarily involved in the matter any more than the actual amowit of the rent is involved, even though in order to prove that some rent is due, the evidence must show *319a specified amount to be due. This would seem illogical, but it . is not really so because we must not lose sight of the fact that all a summary proceeding, actually decides is as to the possession of the premises. Since the adjudication is that some rent is due, it follows that the adjudication is also' only that a lease existed. I believe the weight of authority points that way. It is well to remember that the doctrine of res adjudicata relates not to the reasons for a judgment, but its object, and that it controls only those matters which were necessarily involved in the litigation, especially in a matter such as a summary proceeding, which, being in derogation of the common law, is bound by rules of strict construction against the landlord.
The plaintiff has proved only that there was a lease and that some rent was due thereunder. Therefore it is entitled to nominal damages only.
Judgment accordingly.