145 Mo. App. 484 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1909
Frederick C. Bonsack leased to the. St. Louis Radiator Manufacturing Company by an instrument dated February 17, 1896, a tract of land with buildings on it in the city of St. Louis, which tract fronted 335 feet on the west side of Talmadge avenue where it intersected the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company’s tracks, and had a depth of 146 feet along the north line of said railroad. On the premises stood a brick foundry and warehouse building which were included in the leasehold. The term was to run nine years and seven months and expire September 24, 1905, and the rental was to be $235 a month, payable in advance. The lessor Bonsack had erected the warehouse building for the use of the lessee and in accordance with its plans and specifications. One of the clauses of the lease was as follows:
“And it is hereby covenanted that at the expiration of this lease the said premises are to be surrendered to said lessor, his heirs, assigns or successors, in the condition received, only excepting natural wear and decay or the effects of accidental fire; and it is hereby covenanted that said second party will, from time to time, repair, at its own expense and to the satisfaction of said lessor, any damage done to the said buildings, by negligence of its employees, careless usage or from any other cause whatever; and upon failure to do so, then it is agreed that said lessor, his heirs or assigns shall or may repair or remedy the same and the amount expended for the performance thereof, shall be repaid to him or them on demand.”
The St. Louis Radiator Manufacturing Company assigned the lease on February 1, 1889, to Robert F. Hall, and the latter assigned it on February 31, 1899, to defendant, the American Radiator Manufacturing Company. These assignments were assented to by the lessor Bonsack by an instrument signed by him, by the original lessee, the St. Louis Radiator Manufacturing Company,
“It is further agreed and understood that all of the remaining covenants and agreements in said lease contained, be and remain in full force and effect, except as herein modified, during the term thus extended.”
Afterwards, on September 8, 1905, and while the original lease was still in force, plaintiff and defendant entered into articles of agreement by which plaintiff leased to defendant for three years from January 1, 1906, the premises let in the original lease, and at the same rental of $235 a month. The term created by the last agreement was for three years with a privilege to the lessee (defendant) to cancel the lease at the end of the second year by giving four months’ written notice of its intention to do so. The lessor (plaintiff) was also allowed to cancel the lease at the end of the second year by giving four months’ notice. Defendant exercised its option to cancel the lease by giving notice, and in consequence thereof the term ended December 31, 1906, and defendant removed from the premises. Among other terms of the last lease, to-wit, the one executed September 8, 1905, between plaintiff and defendant, were the following:
*489 “And finally, at the end of its term it {i. e., defendant) will surrender to said Charles Herboth, his heirs or assigns, the peaceable possession of the said houses and premises, with all the keys, bolts, latches and repairs, if any, in as good condition as it received the same, the usual wear, use and providential destruction, or destruction by fire excepted. The said lessee and all holding under it, hereby engage to pay the rent above reserved, and double rent for every day it or any one else in its name shall hold on to the whole or any part of said tenement after the expiration of this lease, or its forfeiture for non-payment of rent, etc.
“It is further agreed that the lessor shall not be liable for any damage done or occasioned by or from plumbing, gas, water, or. other pipes, or sewer age in, above, upon or about said buildings or premises, nor from any damage arising from acts or neglect of co-tenants or other occupants of the same building, or from any owners or occupants of adjacent or contiguous property.
“Lessee takes building and premises in their present condition and does all repairs at his own expense, lessor, however, pays the taxes, general and special, and the insurance.”
While defendant and its predecessor, the St. Louis Radiator Manufacturing Company, occupied the premises, alterations were made in the buildings to adapt them better to the purposes of the lessees. These alterations consisted of bricking up some of the windows, the removal of one room of a building, putting a second story on the west part of one structure, and perhaps there were some other changes. We understand these changes were made after the assignment of the lease to defendant and while it was in occupancy. Proof of the changes was not admitted by the court, though it was offered, and the exclusion of the evidence is one of the errors assigned. Evidence was offered to show, too, the roof had fallen into bad repair and was leaky, the down
It should be premised that the excluded' evidence tended to show some, if not all, the alterations of the buildings on the leased premises, were made by defendant itself while it was in possession as assignee of the original lease and prior to September 24, 1905, the date of the expiration provided for in said lease and, of course, prior to September 8, 1905, the date of the new lease. The evidence tended to prove the leaky and decayed state of the roof and guttering and the other phases of decay and bad repair of the buildings existed before said dates.
In our opinion plaintiff’s right to redress for any default of defendant in respect of making repairs in conformity to the stipulation in the first lease, and his right to redress on account of defendant’s not restoring the premises to their original condition and turning
Turning next to the new lease executed on September 8, 1905, and during the currency of the tenancy created bv the prior one, we find no stipulation in the new one by which plaintiff undertook to relinquish any cause of action or discharge defendant from any liabili
Plaintiff’s other item of damage is for defendant’s refusal to restore the altered buildings to the state they were in when the original lease Avas granted, and turn them over, after the cessation of occupancy, in that state. The main damages asked were for the expense which would be entailed on plaintiff in putting the altered buildings back to their original form by realtering them. One stipulation in the first lease bound the lessee to surrender the premises at the expiration of the term to the lessor, his heirs, assigns or successors, in the condition received, only excepting natural wear apd decay, or the effect of accidental fire. This covenant, like the one to repair, ran Avith the land, and if no other contract in relation to the premises had been made, defendant, as assignee of the leasehold, would have been bound by the covenant. [1 Underhill, sec. 387.] But the second lease granted on September 8, 1905, for a term to begin January 1, 1906, contains
This doctrine has been accepted as the rule of decision in cases like the one at bar, the courts holding a second lease of the same property entered into between the same parties, supersedes and abrogates ■ the first one, though, as said, it will not destroy liabilities already incurred under the first, unless the intention to do so appears. [Ely v. Ely, 80 Ill. 532; Hoag v. Carpenter, 18 Ill. App. 555; Densten v. Mettag, 105 Wis. 459; Engeart v. Davis, 17 Neb. 228, 236; Harmon v. Harmon, 51 Fed. 113.] It cannot he said any cause of action had accrued on the first lease in respect of restoring the buildings and premises to the condition they were in when received under that lease, at the time the second lease was given. This was true because the lessee, or defendant as assignee of the original lessee, had until the end of the original term in which to restore the buildings to their first state. Now while this obligation was still executory and further time existed for its performance, plaintiff executed a new lease which recited defendant accepted the premises in the condition they were in at the date of the new lease and bound itself to return them in the condition they were at said time; an obligation wholly inconsistent with the duty to return them in the condition they Avere at the date of the first lease. This will be apparent upon reflecting that the first lease bound the lessee to surrender the premises without any alterations and changes which Avere afterAvards made by the lessee, whereas the second lease bound defendant to restore the premises in their then condition; i. e., with the buildings in their altered state. As said supra, the covenant to return the buildings in their original state had not been broken, because defendant had until the end of the original term to do that. Therefore plaintiff waived perform
The judgment is affirmed.