Had there been no license given to the defendants to do the acts of which the plaintiff complains, the injuries done to the property would have been, apparently, acts of waste, for which the plaintiff could, by the rules of the common law, have brought an action on the case in the nature of waste. (2 R. S., 384; Taylor on Landlord and Tenant, § 348, and cases.)
The right which the tenant has is to make use of the property. The power of making an alteration does not arise out of a mere right of user; it is, therefore, incompatible with his interest for a tenant to make any alteration, unless he is justified by the express permission of his landlord. (Taylor, § 348.) Holroyd, J., in Farrant v. Thompson (5 B. & Ald., 826) defines the extent of a lessee’s rights. By a lease, the use, not the dominion of the property demised, is conferred. If a tenant exercises an act of ownership, he is no longer protected by his tenancy. The defendants claim that these rules do not apply to the act of taking down partitions, citing Year Book 10, Henry VII, folio 2, placita 3. The following expressions are quoted : “ If there be partitions between certain chambers it is lawful for the termor to destroy them, and make a union of all the chambers.” This proposition was overruled by a later decision in the same case. (Keilway, 37 b, note 10; Doe v. Jones, 4 B. & Ad., 126.)
*608
Ho such right can he claimed from the mere relation of landlord and tenant. If it exist at all, it must depend on an agreement, and where that is sufficiently clear the proposition is indisputable. In the. absence of an agreement, the effect' of the acts must be submitted to a jury.
(Jackson
v.
Tibbetts,
The defendants justify the commission of the acts of which the plaintiff complains, on the ground that the lease of which they are assignees provides, that the lessee shall have the light to make inside alterations to said premises, as he may think propel1, provided that the same do not injure the premises. At first thought, it might seem that this clause was without significance, and was but little more than a provision that a person might commit waste if it did not amount to waste. Such seems to have been the opinion of Lord Hardwioke in a somewhat similar case. (Garth v. Cotton, 1 Vesey, Sr., 524, 546; 1 Dick., 183.) In that case the language was, that the tenant’s estate was without “ impeachment of waste,” voluntary waste excepted. The court substantially held, that the exception was inconsistent with the provision in the tenant’s favor, and that it practically nullified it, and he could commit no waste. The better construction would seem to be that enforced in Vincent v. Spicer (22 Beav., 380). The language in that case was, that the tenant’s estate was without impeachment of waste, save and except spoil and destruction, voluntary or permissive waste, etc. The court declining to follow the rule in Garth v. Cotton, and deciding that some sensible signification, if- possible, should be given to all the words, construed *609 them as meaning that the tenant must act with due regard to his present interest, and to the permanent advantage of the estate, as a prudent owner would act in a due course of management.
Hasty v. Wheeler (12 Maine [3 Fairfield], 434) is very near. to the present case. There was a covenant in the lease not to commit waste, and yet the lessee was to have the right to “ repair, alter and improve the premises in such a manner as should be for his use and benefit.” The court held that) in construing both covenants together, the lessee might make such improvements as would not injure the premises, though they might be technically waste.
Doe v. Jones (4 Barn. & Ad., 126) proceeded on the same principle, though the license in that case was much more unqualified. There was simply a covenant, on the part of the lessee, to repair, and, at the same time, a license to him to make improvements and additions. The court held, that the covenant to repair was the ordinary covenant “ against wear and tear; ” and that, accordingly, the license was' so far unqualified as to authorize the act of stopping up a doorway, and making a new one in an internal partition — an act which, it was conceded, would have been waste without the special authorization.
On these authorities, as well as upon principle, it must be held that the clause in the lease in question confers 'upon the lessee more power to make alterations than he would have had if it had not been inserted : it may be supposed to allow acts which, in point of law, and technically are waste, and yet are not accompanied by actual injury to the jiremises. It plainly gives only a qualified right to make alterations. The lessee’s will is limited- by the fact that the alterations are to cause no injury to the premises. A further reasonable limitation is, that the acts of alteration are not to be wanton or capricious, but must be made with a purpose to facilitate the transaction of the lessee’s business. The terms of the lease show that it was expected that some kind of business would be carried on in the premises which might require the applica *610 tian of steam-power. The clause concerning the right to make alterations must be supposed, to have been inserted with the view of enabling the lessee to adapt the premises to such business as might happen to be carried on there.
The alterations which were made by the lessees were quite extehsive in their character. They principally consisted in the taking down of partitions and in the removal of a large number of chandeliers, and in the destruction of plumbing work. These were all a part of the “ premises.” Whether the acts which the defendants did really caused injury, or whether they were reasonably required for the enjoyment of the premises according to the business which they carried on, cannot be determined as a question of law, but is rather a matter of fact. It depends upon the character of the building, its position upon a principal street in the city of Hew York, the nature and requirements of the business of the defendants as carried on in that city, or of other business to which the building might be adapted, the extent of the alterations and their effect upon the property, whether permanent or transitory. The circumstances to be taken into account are so various that the case is one which is peculiarly fit for the consideration of a jury. The meaning of a written instrument, free from ambiguity, is undoubtedly a question of law; the action of parties under it may, as in the present case, raise a question of fact. It is held that the question, whether an alleged act is a permanent injury to the estate, is a question of fact for a jury.
(McCoy
v.
Wait,
A similar rule prevails in the courts of equity. In
Morris
v.
Morris
(4 Lond. Jur. [N. S.], 964) equitable waste was made to depend on the special circumstances of the case, and was held to be a fit question for a jury in
Ex parte Hastings
(L. R. [10 Eq.], 465). So in
Turner
v.
Wright
(2 De Gex, F. & J., 234), equitable waste was defined to be that which a prudent man would not do in the management of his own affairs. This definition must, in many cases, leave the question of reasonable prudence open to be considered as a matter of fact.
(Poler
v.
N. Y. Central R. R.,
It is, however, claimed by the defendants, and it was so held by the court below, that the present action was prematurely brought. This construction is inadmissible, provided that the *612 alteration did in fact injure the premises. The most that can be urged for the defendants is, that their right resembled the old clause in leases, “ without impeachment of waste; ” though qualified by the provision that the premises must not be injured. This clause has always been carefully watched by the courts, and whenever the tenant has gone beyond the - powers conceded by the lease, he has either been restrained by injunction or compelled at once to make satisfaction or to restore the premises to the condition in which he found them. There has been no case in which the landlord was required to wait until the end of the lease to see whether the premises might be restored'by the tenant to their original condition. If the waste committed went beyond the license an immediate wrong was done, which was at once the subject of redress in a court either of law or of equity. Of course, the bringing of an action which was to ascertain whether damage had been done beyond the license given could not be premature.
Some of the authorities establishing this point will now be referred to.
In Packington v. Packington (3 Atkyns, 215) a suit was commenced in equity to restrain a tenant for life, without impeachment of waste, from cutting timber which was not of proper growth to be felled. An injunction was granted. Here the sole ground of action was whether the tenant complied with the restrictions in the lease.
In Rolt v. Lord Somerville (2 Ab. Eq., 759) a tenant for life, without impeachment of waste, pulled down several houses and outbuildings and sold them, took up lead pipes and cut down ornamental trees. A suit was commenced to compel the tenant to put the property in the same condition as it was before as to the houses and lead pipes. A demurrer to the relief prayed for was overruled.
The same result was reached in Aston v. Aston (1 Vesey, Sr., 264), where there was' a demand both for an' injunction and for satisfaction for injuries already done. Other cases to *613 the same effect are Strathmore v. Bowes (2 Bro. Ch., 88); Piers v. Piers (1 Ves., Sr., 521; Dickens, 188).
It is well settled that a tenant for life, without impeachment of waste, is, notwithstanding, obliged to keep tenants’ houses in repair, and is not allowed to suffer them to run to ruin. (Parteriche v. Powlet, 2 Atkyns, 383.)
In Marker v. Marker (4 Eng. Law and Equity, 95) the tenant was required to restore the premises to their original condition.
The cases in which partial powers to commit waste have been granted are still more closely analogous. In Hewit v. Hewit (Ambler, 508) lands were devised to a person for life, with power to cut down such trees as four persons named in the will should allow, in writing. It was held, that notwithstanding the four persons named were dead, the court would preserve the check on the tenant by directing a master to see what trees were fit to be cut down. (See, also, Chamberlyne v. Dummer, 1 Bro. Ch., 166; 3 id., 549.) These restrictions are as operative against tenants for years as for life. (1 Washburn on Real Property, 120, § 51; Pyne v. Don, 1 Term, 56; Cholmeley v. Paxton, 3 Bing., 207; Tudor’s Cases, 67.)
The result of the cases is, that the action for' injury will lie during the continuance of the tenancy. Any other rule would be subversive of public justice, as the tenant might be insolvent at the end of the lease and unable to restore the premises to their original condition.
It is not argued in the present discussion that the license in the case at bar is an equivalent to the clause “ without impeachment of waste,” either in its absolute or qualified form. One result of that clause is to give the tenant the property, timber, minerals, etc., which he lawfully severs from the land, so that the owner, for a transgression of the authority, may be driven to an action in a court of equity.
(Bowles' case,
11 Co., 79;
Kane
v.
Vandenburgh, 1 J.
Ch., 11, 12;
Kidd
v.
Dennison,
The real inquiry in all cases is, whether there is damage done which injures the reversion.
(Jackson
v.
Pesked,
1 M. & S., 234;
McCullough
v.
Irvine's Exrs.,
13 Penn. St., 438.) This injury may be immediate, though the enjoyment of the reversion is postponed. The value of the property may be so much diminished that it will not bring the price in market that it would previously have commanded. This is a sufficient injury.
(Jesser
v.
Gifford,
4 Burrow, 2141.) Good faith on the part of the tenant is no defence where the act, on general principles of law, amounts to. waste.
(Clark
v.
Holden,
It is, in general, no justification for an act of waste that a party will, at some future time, put the premises in the same condition as they were when the lease was made. The question is, whether the tenant, at the time the wrongful act was done, caused an injury which then affected the plaintiff as to his reversion. How can it be known, as matter of law, that a tenant will retrace his steps and repair an injury which he has deliberately caused
%
The landlord has a .right to a continuance of the state of things as they existed when the injury was done. The tenant has .no right to exercise an act of ownership,
(Clark
v.
Holden, supra.)
The injury in the present case appears to have been serious. It was estimated by witnesses at $8,000. It was held in
Town of Hamden
v.
Rice
(
Schieffelin
v.
Carpenter
(
Winship
v.
Pitts
(
On the whole, the judge at the trial erred in not submitting the case to the jury, and for this error the judgment should be. Reversed.
If, however, I am wrong in this view and the question as to the injury is matter of law, the result is the same. There has been shown by the acts of the defendants such an abuse of the license granted to make alterations as would, in my judgment, entitle the plaintiff to recover, and the motion to dismiss the complaint should have been denied.
On either view of the-case the judgment is erroneous and should be reversed.
For reversal, Dwight, Earl and Reynolds, CC.
For affirmance, Lott, Ch. C., and Gray, C.
Judgment reversed.
