41 N.Y.S. 825 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
Lead Opinion
I am not able to concur in the opinion of Mr. Justice Ingraham. It inverts both the legal and contract relations of the parties, and throws upon the lessors the burden of performance or the consequences of the non-performance of the covenants of the lessee. There are two elements, entering into the consideration upon which the lease was made by the lessors: First, the covenant of the lessee to pay rent as such, and, second$ the covenant of the lessee to make
It is further claimed by the defendant (appellant) that the action was prematurely brought, and that no cause of action accrued while he remained in possession paying rent or until the lease was ended by expiration of the term or re-entry of the lessors. In Ganson v. Tifft (71 N. Y. 48) the question arose in an action for damages for failure to rebuild pursuant to a covenant by which the lessor stipulated that if a certain elevator were destroyed by fire he would rebuild it within six months. A fire occurred, the elevator was destroyed, the lessor did not rebuild within the allotted time, and the court said that the lessee’s remedy for damages was complete upon the failure to rebuild the elevator. Agate v. Lowenbein (57 N. Y. 604) and Chamberlain v. Parker (45 id. 569) recognized the right of the lessor to sue for a breach of covenant of lessee as soon as the covenant is broken, and without waiting for the expiration of the tenancy, provided injury has happened in consequence of the breach.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Williams and O’Brien, JJ., concurred; Van Brunt, P. J., and Ingraham, J., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
The sole question in this case arises upon the thud cause of action alleged in the complaint, the referee having reported that after the commencement of the action the defendant paid to the plaintiffs the amount demanded by the first cause of action, and paid to the proper authorities the amount of the Croton water tax mentioned and set forth in the second cause of action. These payments by the defendant were proved and allowed under a supplemental answer, served by permission of the court, by which the defendant pleaded payment of the amounts claimed in the first and second causes of action. Having been satisfied prior to the decision, no cause of action existed thereon against the defendant.
The third cause of action was to recover damages for a breach of a contract made by the defendant, which was contained in a lease executed between the plaintiffs as trustees and the defendant, by which the defendant agreed that he would “ within ninety days after the commencement of said term, at his own proper cost and expense, make and complete the alterations and repairs provided for by the plans and specifications submitted to and approved by the parties of the first part on the 18th day of April, 1894.” The supplemental agreement was executed between the parties on the same day. It was called a “Memorandum of alterations to be made by Francis A. Clark in the building situate on the southeast corner of Eighth avenue and 49th st., in the city of Hew York.” By this supplemental agreement Francis A. Clark agreed to make certain
The regulations as to buildings in the city of blew York and the powers and duties of the building department are regulated by the Consolidation Act (Chap. 410, Laws of 1882). By section 503 of the act, as amended by chapter 275 of the Laws of 1892, it is provided that “ before the erection, construction or alteration of any building or part of any building * * * in the city of Mew York is commenced, the owner or his agent or architect shall submit to the superintendent of buildings a detailed statement in writing of the specifications and a full and complete copy of the plans of such proposed work, * * * and the erection, construction or alteration of said building, * * * or any part thereof, snail not be commenced or proceeded with until said statements and plan shall have been so filed and approved by tlie superintendent of buildings.” And by section 505, as amended by chapter 275 of the Laws of 1892, it is provided that the owner or owners of any buildings or parts thereof, or any architect, builder, carpenter or mason who may be employed thereon in the commission of any violation of these, provisions, shall, for each and every violation and non-compliance, be subject to -a penalty. We think it clear that this contract, subject as it was to the rules and regulations of
There is nothing in the contract itself which throws upon the defendant the burden of obtaining the approval of the department ■of buildings of these plans and specifications. His obligation was to make the alterations within ninety days after the commencement of the term, subject to the rules and regulations of the building department. The law required the owner, before the commencement of such alterations, to submit the plans and specifications to the department and obtain its approval; and while provision is made in the section above referred to for a person other than the owner presenting such plans and specifications to the department, without an expressed covenant on his part as between the owner and the contractor that the contractor will present the pilans and specifications to the department for approval, it is difficult to see upon what principle the contractor who has agreed to erect the building is liable for a failure promptly to present such plans and specifications to the department and obtain its approval. The piarties who contracted must be presumed to have understood the pirovisions of the law relating to the department, and the obligation of the owner, as well as of the contractor, to refrain from commencing any alterations until the department has approved the plans and specifications of such alterations. It will be presumed that neither of the parties to this agreement intended to make these alterations in violation of the law, and for the defendant to have commenced the alterations under the agreement, without the approval of the department, would have been of no possible advantage to the plaintiffs, but, on the contrary,
It appeared from the' evidence that at the time of the commencement of this action not only had such approval not been obtained, but neither the plans nor specifications had been submitted to the department, and the evidence seems to have been uncontradicted that the plans and specifications referred to in the agreement itself never were approved by the department, but that subsequently the department refused its approval, and that, in consequence of such refusal, the contract by its very terms became impossible of performance.
Neither of the parties has cited any authority exactly in point. It is, however, a general rule applicable to all contracts that “ if the subject-matter of an agreement be such that the performance of it would either consist in doing a forbidden act, or be so connected therewith as to be in substance part of the same transaction, the law cannot command the parties to perform that agreement.” (See 3 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 8G9, and cases cited.) To have complied with this contract according to its terms, without the consent of the department, would have been to do an act contrary to the express provisions of a statute of this State, and in such a case the court will give no assistance to either of the parties to the agreement. In the absence of an express covenant on the part of the defendant to obtain the approval of the building department of the plans and specifications upon which the work was to be done, there can be, we think, no breach of such contract until the law has been complied with, and the plans and specifications approved by the proper authorities.
concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.