18 N.Y.S. 376 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1892
This cause is before us on exceptions ordered to be heard in the first instance at the general term. There are four causes of action set forth in the complaint. At the trial the third was virtually withdrawn from consideration, but as to the others a verdict was directed in favor of the plaintiff, and the amount of the verdict was arrived at after deducting a counterclaim admitted to be properly chargeable against the plaintiffs. The first cause of action was for rent accrued under a lease. As we look at the record, it is clear the defendant was liable for that rent. His covenant is plain. While it is true that two other instruments were executed contemporaneously (the difference of a day in their respective dates is not material, as it is perfectly clear they formed a part of one transaction) with the lease, and we may consider them together, it is apparent that the defendant not only covenanted in form, but that he intended to be liable for the rent of the dock property, and that he understood and knew that he was to be a principal, and not an agent. Whatever caused his introduction to the matter,—whether it was to find in him a plaintiff who could bring a suit in the United States circuit court or any other reason,—when he did make his covenant he became bound by it, and was directly liable to the lessors for the performance of all the terms and requirements of the lease incumbent upon the lessee, except so far as they may have "been modified by the provisions of the other instruments, but nothing contained in those other instruments relieved him from the payment of rent.
The principal question involved in the discussion before us arises out of the second cause of action set forth in the complaint. The facts, so far as they are material, relating to it, may be briefly stated. The premises in question, consisting of certain dock property on the East river front of the city of New York, between Forty-Ninth and Fiftieth streets, were leased on the 1st day of Becember, 1880, by the plaintiffs, as trustees of the estate of James W. Beekman, deceased, to the defendant, for a term of years, and that term was to and did begin about 20 days before the date of the lease. One of its provisions was that the defendant, “at the expiration of the said term, will quit and surrender the premises hereby demised in as good state and condition as reasonable use and wear thereof will permit, damage by the elements excepted, without demanding compensation for any improvements on said premises made by said party of the second part.” From the beginning of
But, to constitute this particular kind of waste, there must have been neglect, omission, sufferance, or permission of the tenant. The presumption referred to is not conclusive. It may be rebutted by proof. The most ordinary kind of permissive waste is suffering buildings to fall into decay from neglect. If the defendant, in an action brought under such circumstances, should prove that he exercised all diligence, and fully discharged his duty to
Mr. Gibbons, in his treatise on Dilapidations, says, on the authority of Coke: “It may be inferred that the tenant is liable only for such acts of waste by a stranger as do not exceed a civil trespass, and which he might have reasonably resisted.” If he has done all he could do to resist the acts of a department of a municipal government, acting under actual or colorable authority of law, he has striven to protect the property, and has neither permitted the trespass nor negligently suffered it, and, as the recourse against him would only be in an action of trespass on the case, and the gravamen of that action being either permission or negligence, as applied to this case, the plaintiff could not recover. The defendant was not in fault. There is not a case to be found in this state where the defendant was held liable for permissive or negligent waste when he resorted to all proper and lawful means to prevent a stranger or intruder from doing damage to the reversion, and we certainly will not extend the rule of liability in a case of this kind. The learned judge in the court below directed the jury to find a general verdict for the plaintiff for $11,186.82, which was the result of a diminution of $12,586.82, less $1,400 on a counter-claim. As this balance was made up, we think the direction was erroneous, and that the exceptions should be sustained, and a new trial ordered, with costs to abide the event.
Van Brunt, F. J., concurs in this opinion, so far as it relates to liability for waste, and in result arrived at.
O’Brien, J., concurs.