15 Daly 431 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1889
ISTo objection was made to the admission in evidence of the-report made by the sanitary inspector to the board of health, and therefore-we are not called on to express any opinion as to the right of the defendant to use documents of that description in maintaining his defense. That this case was wrongly decided by the justice admits of no doubt whatever. The landlord was not bound to repair. So fraud or deceit is charged. It is conceded that the defects in- the plumbing, whatever they were, were not known to the-landlord. The defendant was told before the lease was made that “the landlord was very stiff, and was determined not to put in anything new.” It is-clear that the defects were not patent, for it is proved that the olfactories of' the defendant and his family were not unpleasantly assailed till some time-after they had become occupants of the house. If a foul smell had been perceptible to any one who entered the building, the defendant must have discovered it in making his examination of the house with a view to hiring. The ease, therefore, is a simple and familiar one. A tenant hires an unfurnished house, and soon after moving in discovers that the plumbing is defective. Thereupon he quits the house, and declares the lease to be null and void. Can he lawfully do so? The justice decided that he may. That decision is in violation of the well-settled law of this state. Such a decision .would never have been dreamed of if the defect in the house had been anywhere .else than in the plumbing. The two words “sewer gas” have not
Nor is there any reason for the contention that the tenant was evicted, either actually or constructively. He left of his own free will, though no act of the landlord interfered with his enjoyment of the premises. The landlord, instead of preventing him from the full enjoyment of the dwelling, went beyond the line of duty marked out by the law, and volunteered to remove the defects in the plumbing. No delay or procrastination could be complained of, for such was the promptitude of the landlord’s action that the tenant’s wife pleaded for delay. It is not pretended that the landlord in any way invaded the demised premises, and excluded the tenant from the possession or enjoyment of any part of the thing demised. It is plain, therefore, that there was no actual eviction. It is quite as clear that there was no constructive eviction. It has been held that there is a constructive eviction where the landlord maintains, upon his own premises, a nuisance that seriously interferes with the tenant’s enjoyment of the demised premises, when all are under the same roof. The entertainment of prostitutes upon his own premises by the landlord, (Dyett v. Pendleton, 8 Cow. 727,) and the keeping of the waste-pipes in the landlord’s premises in so defective a condition that foul’ odors from them penetrated the tenant’s apartments, and made them uninhabitable, (Bradley v. De Goicouria, 12 Daly, 397,) were cases in which the act charged upon the landlord was the maintenance of a nuisance on his own premises that deprived the tenant of the enjoyment of the demised premises. This case is not of that description. Here there is no complaint that the maintenance by the landlord of a nuisance interfered with the tenant’s possession, but it was the landlord’s nuisance that led to the decision in Bradley v. De Goicouria, supra, a case that seems to have been greatly misunderstood, though the point decided is clearly stated in the opinion of the chief justice, from which we quote: “If a tenant is deprived, by the wrongful act of the landlord, of the beneficial use of the premises, and is compelled thereby to quit and abandon them, it amounts to what has been called a ‘ constructive eviction.’ ” What wrongful act of this landlord deprived this tenant of the beneficial use of these premises. Evidently, Bradley v. De Goicouria gives no support to the defense. The case of Lawrence v. Burrell, 17 Abb. N. C. 312, was decided in the city court, and is so palpably erroneous that no time need be spent in exposing its errors. The case of Wilson v. FinchHatton, L. R. 2 Exch. Div. 336, upon which the tenant relies, has no bearing upon the point in controversy. That case was decided with special reference to its own peculiar circumstances, and it was not intended to disturb the settled rules of law governing demises of real property. Sir Eitzroy Kelly, C. B., said: “The question we have to determine is whether, on an agreement of this nature, which is an agreement for the letting and hiring of a house in what is considered a fashionable district, at a high rent, for three months at the height of the season, if the house prove not merely not habitable, and not reasonably fit for occupation, but in some respects so unsuitable for the accommodation of those who intend to occupy it that they could not reside in it, even for one night, without danger to their health, * * * the hirer of that house is at liberty to consider the agreement at an end, * * *