Appellants pretermit in their brief the second and fifth assigned errors.
II. The third alleged error objects to the action of the court below in permitting witness, Simpson, to state the "general acts оf the defendants to protect the property from fire from the time they took possession until its destruction; and the fourth, assigned error objects to the evidence of this witness that the defendants also lost property by the fire.
This testimony was admissible, under the issue of negligence, as a circumstance tending to prove the exercise of care upon the part of the defendants for the preservation of the property.
III. The seventh assigned error, and which presents the main question in the case, is:
“That the court erred in construing thе instrument sued on as containing no covenant or agreement on the part of the defendants to replace and rebuild said property, and to restore the same to plaintiffs in good running order at the expiration of said lease in case it was destroyed, or, in default thereof, to pay plaintiffs the value thereof and damages thereto; and in ruling the law to be, and in instructing the jury, that the suit was brought by the plaintiffs to recover damages of the defendants for culpable negligence of defendants in the destruction of said property, when in fact said suit was brought as well to recover on the covenant and agreement of defendants to replace and to rebuild, and to deliver said property to plaintiffs in good running order.”
The covenant is, that “the said Morris, Ragsdale & Simpson agree to give the said Miller, Billups & Co. peaceable possession of the said shops, oxen, wagon, houses, mill and gin in as good condition as when delivered to them; that is to say, in good running order, ordinary wear and tear excepted.”
The importance of the question will justify a brief rеview of some of the leading authorities upon1 this subject, to aid us in arriving at a proper construction of this covenant.
In Nave v. Berry,
In Maggart v. Hansbarger,
In Wainscott v. Silvers,
In Warner v. Hitchins, the covenant was to surrender up the possession of the premises, at the expiration of the lease, in the same condition they were in at the date of the lease, natural wear and tear excepted. The building was destroyed by fire. In an elaborate opinion the leading cases in both England and this country were reviewed, and it was held that the covenant did not amount to one to repair, and that the tenants were not bound to rebuild.
In Howeth v. Anderson,
Levey v. Dyess,
The breach assigned was non-delivery at the expiration of the lease. To which the defendants pleaded the casual destruction of the property by fire, without their act, fault or negligence. To this plea a demurrer was sustained. After an elaborate and learned opinion by Simrall, J., in which many of the leading cases were reviewed, the court deduced from the authorities the following propositions:
1. That the lessee was not responsible tо the lessor for the accidental casual destruction by fire of the property demised, unless by his covenants he has made himself so.
2. In construing the covenants, the cardinal rule is the intention of the parties; and the courts- will not ex*422 tend or enlarge the obligations of the lessee beyond the plain meaning and intention of the parties. If there is not an express stipulation to restore edifices and structures destroyed by casualty, or some covenant which is equivalent thereto, such as a covenant “to uphold and repair,” or “to repair,” then the loss must fall upon the reversioner. . . .
3. A covenant to redeliver or restore to the lessor, in the same plight and condition, usual wear and tear exceptеd (or other words of like import), does not bind the covenantor to rebuild in case of casual destruction by fire, or impose the burden of the loss on him.
4. The contemplation of thе parties to such a covenant, applied to a house, sawmill, machinery and appliances, is that the lessee will take ordinary reasonable care of the property, according to its nature, and that he will surrender possession when his right to enjoy has expired. That it is not within the intendment and according to general understanding, that such stipulation imposes on the tenant the responsibility of insurer. If that greater risk is assumed, it must be clearly and explicitly set forth in the contract. . . .
We indorse these propositions as sound both on prinсiple and authority.
Construed in the light of the above authorities, the covenant under consideration did not. bind the defendants to rebuild in case of casual destruction of the proрerty by fire, or impose the burden of the loss on them, the jury having found that the fire was not occasioned by their negligence. Hence it would follow that the seventh assigned error is not well taken.
This view of the case dispenses with the further consideration of the other errors assigned.
Judgment affirmed.
[Opinion delivered October 14, 1881.]
