117 N.Y.S. 18 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1909
On the 9th day of July, 1903, the defendant either owned or was in possession — the record does not disclose which — of premises Ho. 96 Sheriff street, borough of Manhattan, Hew York, upon-which then stood, a tenement house consisting of a basement or a cellar, store on the ground floor and four stories above, with four apartments on each floor. Each tenant heated his own apartment and the cellar was so subdivided that each tenant had a separate bin for coal. The entire cellar was used for the storage of coal for the tenants of the building, with the exception of about one-quarter of .the space which was rented to one Liebling, who used the same,
• This1 action- is. brought, among other- things, to enjoin the defendant from converting the cellar into a pool .room during the term :of the- lease, and from' interfering with the plaintiff in the enjoyment of his rights secured by the -lease, including the right to use the cel
The extension in the yard to which reference is made in the lease was a separate one-story building, fourteen by twenty feet, which evidently had been constructed for and was used only for the storage of vegetables and provisions in connection with the restaurant. There is no merit in the claim that the plaintiff might have used this building for the storage of coal. It appears that it was never used for that purpose and that it would have been inconvenient and expensive to have carried the coal to it. Moreover, it appears that the defendant, by excavations made in the yard, had undermined this extension, so called, so that one wall had fallen in. The practical construction of the parties placed on this lease during nearly four years of the term is entitled to great -weight, and we are of opinion that the fair construction of the lease, in view of the practical construction placed upon it by the parties, is that the tenant was to be entitled to use the cellar for the storage of coal for use in the restaurant.
The term “ appurtenances ” in a lease includes everything “ which is necessary and essential to the beneficial use and enjoyment of the thing leased or granted.” (Stevens v. Taylor, 111 App. Div. 561.) It was essential to the enjoyment of the lease that the tenant should have a suitable and convenient place for storing coal. It appears that the business required .the consumption of about two tons of coal each month. It would be absolutely unreasonable to expect the tenant to store the coal in- the restaurant or in the yard or to buy it daily by the sack at a much higher rate than by the ton. It was evidently contemplated that he should store it where it had been stored and he was entitled to an injunction to prevént
It follows, therefore, that the1 judgment should be reversed' and . a new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide -the event.
Patterson, P. McLaughlin, Houghton and Scott,. JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant; to abide event. - -