141 Iowa 540 | Iowa | 1909
In May, 1903, and for some time prior thereto, the plaintiff and D. S. Chamberlain, at
The defendant, admitting plaintiff’s title to the property subject to his lease, denies that he has in any manner or form violated the terms of his tenancy. He admits that he has from the exhaust steam of the boiler on the leased premises furnished heat to certain rooms
If the complainant had leased the premises expressly and exclusively to be used for a particular purpose or in a particular manner, and there was a continuing breach or disregard of the stipulation, a court of equity would perhaps interfere and enforce the restriction by compelling the lessees to use them for their business. The insuperable difficulty in this case is that there is no express covenant not to use the buildings except for cabinet warerooms. The clause in the lease is that the buildings were to be used as cabinet warerooms without the words of restriction. It appears that there is another clause in the lease that no cabinetware should be manufactured in the buildings, and probably this express prohibition would have been enforced had the lessee entered upon the business of manufacturing cabinetware. The counsel for the complainant contends that the clause in the lease that the premises were to be used as cabinet warerooms amounts to a direct covenant to use them as such, and for no other purpose whatever. We are unable to concur in this construction of the lease. Of course the intention of the parties, as that intention is gathered from the whole lease, must control in the case, and, looking at the language of this clause, as well as of other clauses, we do- not feel authorized in saying that the sense and meaning of the words employed show that it was the intention of the parties to restrict the use of the buildings to cabinet ware-rooms and prohibit the use of them for any other purpose. We think such a construction is forced and ought- not to be adopted. As already observed, there is an express covenant against manufacturing cabinetware in the buildings, and it seems but fair to presume that, if the parties intended restraining the use thereof to cabinet warerooms, they would have distinctly and expressly stipulated to that effect. It is obviously inconsistent with the principles upon which courts of equity act to raise- by implication a covenant in restraint of a beneficial use of the property.
To the same effect, see Shumway v. Collins, 6 Gray
The case of Kraft v. Welch, 112 Iowa, 695, relied upon by appellant, is not inconsistent with- these holdings, for in that case the property was not only “let for creamery purposes,” but expressly enumerated • what additional buildings might be placed thereon by the tenant, and it was a violation of this provision by him in erecting a building not so .authorized which we held would be enjoined by the court.
Again, as we have seen, the lease before us contains an express covenant that appellee will not suffer any waste or any unlawful, improper, or offensive use of the premises, and, as suggested in the Brugman case, supra, it is not an unreasonable argument that the express mention of these certain restrictions carries with it at least a slight implication that none other was intended. There is another familiar rule applicable to eases of this kind that, if the meaning and effect of the lease be fairly capable of two constructions, that will be adopted which is most favorable •to the lessee. Schmol v. Fiddick, 34 Ill. App. 190; Klingle v. Ritter, 54 Ill., 140; 18 Am. & Eng. Encyc. Law (2d Ed.) 617.
Applying these tests to the lease in controversy, we discover no reason for giving to it any narrower or more restricted effect than would ordinarily be inferred from a lease in which ho express restrictive terms are employed. On the contrary, the circumstances under which the lease was made and the conduct of the parties with reference thereto go far to bear out the appellee’s contention.
Taking the record as a whole, there is no escape from the conclusion that the appellee’s use of the property violates none of the express or fairly implied terms of the lease and is, moreover, in strict accord with the construction which was placed upon the agreement from the beginning by both Chamberlain and appellee.
To what extent appellant is hound by the acts of D.
Other questions argued are governed by the findings hereinbefore stated, and we need not give them our consideration.
The decree of the district court appears to be right, and it is .affirmed.