100 A. 549 | N.H. | 1917
The defendants were guarantors for one Higgins upon his liability to the plaintiffs to pay rent under a written lease of real estate in Springfield, Massachusetts. The property consisted of a hotel at the corner of Main and Cross streets, and land in the rear, fronting on Cross street and enclosed by a board fence. During the term of the lease, the plaintiffs executed a conveyance or release to the city as follows:
". . . if the said city shall lay out said Cross street . . . we will pay to the said city upon the completion of the work the sum of three thousand dollars ($3,000.00) as betterments. . . . The said city shall pay to us for the strip of land to be taken from our said real estate on the northerly side of said Cross street, according to the lines shown on said plan, at the rate of $1,500 per front foot as measured on the easterly line of said Main street. . . . Said land to include all now owned by us on the northerly side of said Cross street that lies southerly of the proposed northerly line as shown on said plan. Said payment to be made to us . . . on or before the first day of April, 1913. Also on the further condition that the present building now standing on said premises shall be allowed to remain as at present until the expiration of a lease for the premises, which expires April 30, 1915.
"We hereby agree to and do release the said city from all liability to us by reason of the acceptance of said Cross street. . . ." *344
Thereafter the city tore down the fence and occupied the land included in the above description, but did not disturb the building, except a veranda at the rear. Higgins rebuilt the fence on the new line and continued to occupy the balance of the premises for some months. During this time he failed to pay the rent.
The lease was a Massachusetts contract, and the rights of the parties are determined by the law of that commonwealth. The question presented is whether, under that law, there is evidence in the case from which it could be found that the taking of the land under the plaintiffs' agreement with the city did not amount to an eviction.
It is argued that because the lease is referred to in the agreement therefore the city had notice of the tenant's rights which were protected because of such notice. But the question here is not whether the tenant might have resisted the attempted eviction. It is rather whether he was put out of possession by the landlord "or by its authority." McCall v. Insurance Company,
It is also said that the final abandonment of the premises by the lessee was not because of the eviction, but because he could not pay his rent. The facts as to this matter are immaterial in this suit. This is not an action to recover for the reasonable value of the part of the premises the tenant continued to occupy (Meredith Mechanic Association v. Company,
"This action cannot be maintained if the defendant proves that he has been evicted from a part of the demised premises by the plaintiff. In such case, no recovery can be had on the covenant to pay rent, because the defendant has been deprived of the beneficial *345
enjoyment of a portion of the estate by the tortious act of the lessor, and the covenant being entire cannot be severed or apportioned so as to allow the plaintiff to recover a part of the rent reserved by the lease. Shumway v. Collins, 6 Gray, 232." Leishman v. White, 1 Allen, 489. "His eviction by the landlord from a part of the premises suspends the entire rent, because the landlord `shall not so apportion his own wrong as to enforce the lessee to pay anything for the residue.' Hale, C. J., in Hodgkins v. Robson, 1 Ventr. 276, 277." Royce v. Guggenheim,
These authorities dispose of the plaintiffs' contention that the tenant was still liable for the rent because he remained in possession. He did not remain in possession of the whole premises. The cases holding that the tenant is still liable, are those where the attempted ouster is resisted, and the tenant still holds the property in spite of the landlord's illegal efforts to retake it. They have no application to the situation created by an actual eviction from a part of the premises.
The argument that the agreement with the city can be construed to reserve all the tenant's rights under the lease is not well founded. The document is in terms a conveyance of a right to enter at once, and the express condition that the building shall be allowed to remain as at present until the expiration of the lease, negatives any implied reservation of other rights.
It is also claimed that it could have been found that the land taken from the lessee was not a substantial part of the premises, and therefore there was no eviction. The cases discussing what is a substantial interference with the tenant's enjoyment of the premises are those where the eviction is constructive. But assuming that the same rule would apply to a case like the present one, where the landlord, or those acting by his authority, took actual physical possession of a part of the premises, and turned the tenant out, it must still be held that there was an eviction. The lot in the rear of the buildings was used for storage and other purposes to a greater or less extent. It contained between 2,000 and 3,000 square feet of land and about one fifth of this was taken. It was located in the thickly settled part of the city, and was paid for by the city at the rate of something like $10 a square foot. No reasonable man could find that such a taking did not deprive the tenant of a substantial part of what he had hired. Upon such facts, the eviction is established as a matter of law, and there is nothing for the jury to pass upon. Smith v. Tennyson,
There was no error in the ruling of the superior court directing verdict for the defendants.
Exception overruled.
All concurred.