49 Misc. 47 | New York County Courts | 1905
The lease upon which this action for rent is based demised to the defendant for the period of ten years from Hay 1, 1902, “ the five story and basement brick factory 'building situated at the south-east corner of Hudson Avenue and Concord Street, City of Hew York, Borough of Brooklyn; dimensions about seventy-five feet by about sixty-five feet, with steam engine, boiler elevator and steam heat at the yearly rental of twenty-eight hundred dollars, with an allowance of two hundred dollars per year for repairs to the building.”
Hothing else is stated in the lease about repairs, except the tenant’s covenant to surrender at the end of the term in good state and condition.
After the tenant had continued in possession under the lease and, in September, 1903, the engine, part qf the premises demised, “through usual and ordinary wear ánd tear became worn out and of no use,” as alleged in the answer. It broke down and could not be repaired, whereupon the tenant, after notifying the landlord and waiting a reasonable time, ordered and installed a new engine at a cost of over $700.
The tenant did not vacate the premises, but has continued in possession up to this day.
However, in this action to recover the rent due under the lease for the months of January to Hay, 1904, the tenant has counterclaimed for the amount he expended for the new engine.
It is elemental, needing no other reference than the text books on the subject, as, for instance, HcAdam on Landlord and Tenant, chap. 37 that the landlord is not bound to repair when the lease contains no covenant or agreement to do so; neither is the landlord liable for repairs done by the tenant upon the demised premises unless on his special agreement to pay for them. Clancy v. Byrne, 56 N. Y. 133; Trustees of Canandaigua v. Foster, 156 id. 360; Franklin v. Brown, 118 id. 113; Meserole v. Hoyt, 162 id. 62.
If this engine, a substantial and material part of the leased premises, suddenly collapsed and became useless, I do not say that the tenant would have been bound to replace it;
After reading the lease very carefully I can not see how any agreement to repair or replace the engine can be found in it. There is, of course, no express agreement,, and from the reading and from any reasonable construction no such undertaking on the part of the landlord can be implied.
The lessor having expressly allowed two hundred dollars per annum from the rent reserved for the repairs of the building, it is the legal inference that this was the extent of the obligation which he assumed.
The case of Ducker v. Del-Genovese, 93 App. Div. 575, referred to by the defendant, is not in point. There the landlord tried to hold the tenant to an agreement which the court said did hot by its terms and covenants cover rebuilding.
This lease in question was made between the defendant and John Gray, who died previous to the trouble out of which this action has arisen.
The defendant had been a tenant of John Gray for some years previous to the making of this lease and no doubt relied largely on previous treatment in executing a lease, not so full and complete in details as it might have been; also when the engine broke down so that he could not conduct his business and he had notified the estate of John Gray and, receiving no answer, replaced it with an engine similar in character and affixed it to the realty, he likewise, no doubt, relied upon the fact that landlords frequently do things they are not bound to do for good tenants, but these are matters which the courts cannot take into consideration, for rights are governed by the agreements which the parties have made and not by such as they might have made; neither can unforeseen hardship, inconvenience or necessity modify such contracts.
Judgment for plaintiffs.