128 Mo. App. 156 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1907
This1 action was instituted to recover rent alleged to he due under a Avritten lease. So far as the record advises us the terms of the contract were that defendant leased the premises for two years from October 1, 1904 at a monthly rental of $55, payable in advance. The lessor was the Majorie Realty Company and the lessee was the defendant. Plaintiff French became the OAvner of the premises and the landlord, March 15, 1905. The leasehold was a suite of rooms in an apartment house in the city of St. Louis on the northAvest corner of Olive street and Newstead avenue. The building is known as the “Alexandria” and is a large structure Avith a frontage of more than a hundred feet on Olive street and running back northwardly 150 feet along the west line of Newstead. It is three stories high and was constructed for occupancy by many tenants. The first or ground floor, on Olive street, was fitted up for storerooms and there was a bowling alley in the basement near the Olive street front and extending across the building. The bowling alley was without windows or openings except a door reached by a stairway which descended from the west store room on Olive and another door hear Newstead avenue, connected with the portion of the basement, which was used as a cafe. The cafe rooms in the basement were entered only from. Newstead avenue about one hundred feet north of Olive. The cafe Avas therefore far toAvard the rear of the basement and about 175 feet distant from the entrance to defendant’s third-story apartment. The noise of bowling in the basement annoyed defendant and disturbed her slumber to some extent; but she testified she was disturbed too by the street cars along Olive street and could not say her loss of sleep was due exclusively to the bowling. Meals and liquors of various kinds were served in the
In a previous case we declined to attempt to frame a rule of general application by which to determine what amounts to the constructive eviction of a tenant. [Delmar Inv. Co. v. Blumenfeld, 118 Mo. App. 308, 94 S. W. 823.] The decisions dealing with the subject are cautious about stating broadly when an eviction may occur in consequence of acts of a landlord not amounting to actual expulsion of the teuant from the leasehold premises, but we do not hesitate to say that nothing resembling a constructive eviction was established by the evidence in the present case. Disorderly conduct and language
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.