55 Pa. Super. 243 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1913
Opinion by
The real and controlling issues between the parties were issues of fact. The plaintiff affirmed the existence not only of a contract of lease, creating the relation of landlord and tenant between the parties, but also of a covenant of guaranty or warranty by the defendant inducing the execution of the lease. The alleged breach
The learned trial judge further instructed the jury that, even if such covenant had been made, it would be effective only to the extent of a reasonable use of the building by the plaintiff; that if the breaking down of
There was still another issue of fact about which the testimony was in conflict, and this too the learned judge properly submitted to the jury. The defendant alleged that the term of the lease, which was in parol, was three years and that the plaintiff, having vacated the demised premises during the term, was responsible for the rent for the entire period. This sum he claimed, under the defalcation act, to have allowed by the jury in the pending action. The answering testimony tended to show that whatever may have been the original intent of the parties as to the term of the lease, they had both reached the conclusion that it should terminate at or about the time the plaintiff company vacated the premises. There was testimony from the correspondence between the parties corroborating this view, and the jury determined this issue as it did the others in favor of the plaintiff.
The legal positions taken by the defendant, both at the trial and at the argument of the appeal here, rested on the theory that the plaintiff’s remedies were confined to those given by the law to a tenant. His points submitted in the court below were affirmed and the jury were instructed accordingly, on the condition plainly kept before their eyes, that their finding on the all-important question of fact should be favorable to the contention of the defendant. We are unable to see wherein the learned judge below fell into any error, either in the answers to such points or in the general instructions given to the jury. As already stated, the controlling issues of fact were fairly submitted with intelligent instructions and the verdict of the jury upholds at every point the contentions of the plaintiff.
Judgment affirmed.’