116 N.Y.S. 510 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1909
The learned counsel for the defendants claims that there was evidence of a “ constructive eviction ” which should have been submitted to the jury. He bases this on section 197 of the Real Property Law (Laws of 1896, ch. 547). But that provision has nothing to do with the law of eviction. It only changes a hard rule of the common law by giving a tenant the right or option to “ quit and surrender possession of the leasehold premises and thereby release himself for rent accruing after such surrender, where the “ building which is leased or occupied is destroyed or so injured by the elements, or any other cause, as to be untenantable and Unfit for occupancy ”, etc. In place of enlarging the law of eviction it does not provide for an eviction, but only confers an option to' quit and surrender on such injury or destruction of the building. Instead of being evicted, the tenant still has possession of the leased property, and it may be to his profit to continue to hold it. Now all that happened here was that a water pipe, in the leased premises burst from freezing, and the landlord refused to repair it, although there was a provision in the lease that the landlord should do the: inside repairs,. “including the plumbing”. The said statute does not cover such a case, nor does the law of eviction; nor was the keeping of the covenant to repair a condition to the covenant to pay-rent (Huber v. Ryan, 26 Misc. Rep. 428).
The defendants were not entitled to counterclaim the damage to their goods (Reiner v. Jones, 38 App. Div. 441; Weinberg v. Ely, 114 id. 857).
The judgment should be reversed.
Woodward, Jenks, Burr and Rich, JJ., concurred
Judgment and order of the Municipal Court reversed and new trial ordered, costs to abide the event.