Appellant-tenants entered into an original commercial lease agreement with appellee-landlords for a five-year term. Prior to the expiration of the term, appellants elected not to renew the lease of the original premises but to rent different space in the same building. Appellees’ leasing agent showed appellants several potential sites in the building to which their business offices might relocate. On appellant Levine’s initial visit to the new premises which were subsequently leased on the sixteenth floor of appellees’ building, he inquired about a locked door which opened onto the public hallway of that floor. Appellees’ leasing agent replied that a “storage room” lay behind that locked door. Appellants made several visits to the sixteenth floor during the course of negotiating the new lease and prior to relocating their business. The written lease of the new premises contained the following provisions: “SERVICES . . . Landlord . .. will furnish elevator service ... Landlord shall not be liable for any damages directly or indirectly resulting from the installation, use, or interruption of use of any equipment in connection with the furnishing of services referred to in this paragraph . .. ENTIRE AGREEMENT . . . This lease contains the entire agreement of the parties and no representation or agreements, oral or otherwise, between the parties not embodied herein shall be of any force or effect.. . .”
After moving into their new premises, appellants discovered that the locked door off the sixteenth floor hallway in fact led not to a storage room but to the elevator control room. Appellant Levine’s new office and the elevator control room shared a common wall and noises from the latter were audible in the former, resulting in an environment in the office which was “very distracting and quite unpleasant.” Appellees were contacted about the situation and gave appellants the option of relocating their offices to other premises in the building. Appellants rejected that option, elected to retain the premises on the sixteenth floor and demanded that the noise condition be remedied. Apparently, appellees began to take steps toward correcting the situation. When these efforts proved unsatisfactory to appellants, they instituted the instant action against appellees. The allegations of the complaint asserted that *104 appellants had been fraudulently induced into entering the lease by appellees’ leasing agent and that the maintenance of the elevator control room was a nuisance. At the close of appellants’ evidence the trial court directed a verdict for appellees. It is from this order that the appellants appeal.
1. Insofar as appellants rely upon the theory that the pre-lease statement of appellees’ leasing agent that the locked door led to a “storage room” was an actionable misrepresentation of fact which induced the subsequent agreement, it was not error to direct a verdict for appellees. Even assuming that the evidence would otherwise authorize a finding of fact that the agent’s statement was an actionable misrepresentation, it is clear that, under the terms of the “ENTIRE AGREEMENT” provision of the subsequently executed lease agreement quoted above, appellants are “precluded from setting up fraud in procuring the contract through such misrepresentations.”
Alpha Kappa Psi Bldg. Corp. v.
Kennedy,
Likewise, to the extent that appellants rely upon the appellees’ “concealment” of both the existence of the neighboring elevator control room and the resultant noise in the leased premises, it was not error to grant appellees a directed verdict. “Mere concealment of such a fact, unless done in such a manner as to deceive and mislead, will not support an action. In all cases of deceit, knowledge of the falsehood constitutes an essential element.” Code Ann. § 105-302. There is absolutely no evidence that appellees actively “concealed” the existence of the elevator control room or the fact that its existence resulted in a noisy condition in the adjoining premises. See
Lively v. Garnick,
2. With regard to appellants’ theory of recovery predicated upon the law of nuisance, appellee asserts and the trial court agreed, that appellants are barred by the language of the lease to the effect that “[l]andlord shall not be liable for any damages
directly or indirectly
resulting from the installation, [or] use ... of any equipment in connection with the furnishing of [elevator] services .. . .” (Emphasis supplied.) It is clear that clauses in residential and commercial leases purporting to exculpate landlords from liability to tenants for the result of the landlord’s own negligence, defective construction or failure to repair are void.
Country Club Apts. v. Scott,
Judgment affirmed.
