65 N.Y.S. 745 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
This is an action for rent of certain apartments in the Hotel Majestic under a letting for a year. The defendant interposes as a defense that the premises became uninhabitable by reason of tile breaking out of an epidemic of scarlet fever. It was not claimed
The statute does not seem to cover the case. By virtue of its terms the premises demised must be either destroyed or so materially injured by the elements, or other cause, as to be rendered uninhabitable and untit for occupancy. The statute evidently contemplates a physical destruction. The occasion for its passage was to relieve tenants from the payment of rent where the premises were physically destroyed by the action of the elements. (Suydam, v. Jackson, 54 N. Y. 450.) The rule of this case has been somewhat extended by attaching additional force to the words “ or any other cause,” and it is now held that gradual deterioration, rendering the premises uninhabitable, can be availed of to defeat a recovery for rent. (Tallman v. Murphy, 120 N. Y. 345 ; Meserole v. Sinn, 34 App. Div. 33; affd. on appeal, 161 N. Y. 59.) But the injury must still be the result of physical causes and produce physical injury rendering the premises uninhabitable, or it does not fall within the statute. There is not even a pretense of physical injury to these apartments rendering them uninhabitable. The exemption, therefore, created by the statute may not avail to avoid the recovery. To constitute an eviction there must be possession by paramount
Of the cases relied upon to justify the removal, that of Sully v. Schmitt (147 N. Y. 248) is as favorable to the defendant’s contention as is any to be found in the reported cases; but in that case there was a series of affirmative acts upon the part of the landlord which made occupancy of the premises dangerous to life and health. It is not, however, necessary that there should be affirmative acts of the landlord to work an eviction. We doubt not that if the landlord was guilty of affirmative negligence, or negligently suffered acts to be done by which a contagious disease was introduced into a thickly-populated hotel or tenement house, or upon the breaking out of a contagious disease upon the premises he, retaining and exercising a general control over the public parts of the house, should negligently omit to take precautions to prevent the spread of the epidemic, or otherwise to protect the tenants from contagion when the means lay within his power so to do, a case might be made which would avail as a justification for the surrender of the premises. But such a case must be clearly established, and must be founded in positive neglect upon the part of the landlord, whereby, as a result, continuing to remain upon the premises would be clearly dangerous to life and health. In such a case the negligence of the landlord would be counted as an affirmative act, and in principle the case would find support in Tallman v. Murphy and Sully v. Schmitt (supra). In the present case, however, there is nothing that appears which would justify a finding of. negligence upon the part of the landlord, in introducing the epidemic, or in preventing its spread after it made its appearance in the hotel. On the contrary, every precaution which science or the board of1 health suggested was adopted. The finding of the learned referee has settled such questions, and it is abundantly supported by undisputed evidence. There is, therefore, no eviction, either actual or constructive, to be spelled out of the facts of this case, and, therefore, there is no defense in this claim.
Van Brunt, P. J., Rumsey, Patterson and O’Brien, JJ., concurred.
• Judgment affirmed, with costs.