5 Ga. App. 773 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1909
The questions in this, case arise on a distress warrant for rent and a counter-affidavit thereto. The plaintiff rented to the defendant a storehouse in the city of Rome, to be used as a drug store. Part of this storehouse consisted of a large plate-glass window, which was used by the tenant to display and advertise goods. This show-window fronted on Second avenue and had been a part of the storehouse for years. The contract of rental stipulates the amount of rent to be paid as $115 per month. It is silent as to the duty of making repairs. The distress-warrant
In this State it is well settled that the landlord must keep the-premises in repair, in the absence of any covenant on that subject. -Civil Code, §3123. The statute is so explicit that citation of au-' thority is hardly deemed necessary. The Supreme Court has in many cases held that the landlord was bound to keep the premises in repair, in the absence of an agreement to the contrary. A few of the many cases so holding are: Lewis v. Chisholm, 68 Ga. 40; Veal v. Hanlon, 123 Ga. 642 (51 S. E. 579); Mayer v. Morehead, 106 Ga. 435 (32 S. E. 349); Stack v. Harris, 111 Ga. 150 (36 S. E. 615); Henley v. Brockman, 124 Ga. 1061 (53 S. E. 672). In the case of Lewis v. Chisholm, supra, it is held that
While recognizing the duty of the landlord to make repairs, it is insisted by counsel for the plaintiff in error that the facts in this case show a ease of improvement and not of repair, and that the landlord is only responsible for improvements placed upon his property by his consent. The words “keep in repair,” as used in §3123 of the Civil Code, are not technical words, but are used in their ordinary sense. To repair is, to mend; to restore to a sound state whatever has been partially destroyed; to make good an existing thing; restoration after decay, injury, or partial destruction. Mayer v. Morehead, supra; 7 Words and Phrases Judicially Defined, 6096. An improvement is a valuable and useful addition, something more than a mere repair or restoration to the original condition. The facts in this case leave no room to doubt that the restoration of the window was a repair, and not an improvement. Even if the new window when put in was some improvement on the old one that was broken, this fact would not destroy its character as a repair. If the new window cost somewhat more than the window cost originally, or the materials were not precisely the same as formerly used, this would make no difference. The cost of the materials may have increased, or they may have been of a better quality. The question is, did the ten
Again, learned counsel insists that the tenant’s remed3, when the landlord neglects to make the repairs after due notice and a reasonable time, if the building for lack of needed repairs becomes untenantable or causes damage and injury to the tenant, is to sue the landlord for damages. True, this is one of the tenant’s remedies. lie has his option to make the repairs and recover from the landlord the reasonable expense incurred, or he may omit to make the repairs himself and seek compensation by an- action for ■damages. But in some cases this latter remedy would be neither .adequate compensation to the tenant nor just to the landlord. In this case the window was used for the purpose of displaying the tenant’s goods and drawing purchasers. The broken window could not be used for this purpose, and the resultant damages would be difficult to calculate, and the repair by the tenant would, in -some cases, reduce the damage to the landlord; in which event, it might be the duty of the tenant to repair, so as to minimize the ■.damages.
■Counsel further contends that the landlord was not asked by the tenant to repair the window, and there was no evidence that the landlord had reasonable time in which to make the repair and had failed to do so. Under the law requiring the landlord to make repairs, it was not necessary for the tenant to demand that he perform his legal duty. It is only necessary for the tenant to give the landlord notice of the defective condition of the property; and if the landlord knows of the defect, even the notice is not necessary. White v. Montgomery, 58 Ga. 204; Guthman v. Castleberry, 49 Ga. 272. Indeed, we can easily imagine cases where the exigency of the occasion would fully warrant the tenant in properly making repairs without waiting to give the landlord notice. The interest of both landlord and tenant would warrant, if it did not demand, immediate action on the part of the tenant, without notice to the landlord. In this case it is admitted by the
The evidence demanded.the verdict directed by the court.
Judgment affirmed.