51 Minn. 53 | Minn. | 1892
The plaintiff leased to the defendant certain rooms in the .eighth story of a building or block for the term of one year
The plaintiff was not entitled to judgment on the pleadings. It may be conceded that the answer, in effect, admitted that the continued tenancy after the first year became a tenancy from year to year, so that the defendant could not terminate it, at his mere election, before the end of the year. But it was well averred, and constituted a defense, that he surrendered the possession to the plaintiff on the 28th of February, 1891, and that the latter accepted the same.
The defendant further alleged in defense an agreement in the lease, on the part of the lessor, that the lessor should provide adequate steam heat for the warming of the premises, and that the only practicable and reasonably convenient means of access to these rooms was by means of elevators in the building, controlled and operated by the lessor; that such steam heat and elevator service were essential to the comfortable occupancy or enjoyment of such rooms, but that “for a long time prior to the 28th day of February, 1891,” the plaintiff failed to adequately warm the premises, as agreed, and failed to so operate the elevators as to afford reasonably convenient facilities of access to the same; that “for many months prior to said 28th day of February” the plaintiff so negligently and carelessly maintained and operated the elevators, and so failed to supply heat, that its acts and negligence “amount to a constructive eviction of this defendant from said premises, and for the reasons aforesaid it became and was necessary for this defendant, in order to preserve his business interests, to abandon the same.”
We do not understand from the brief of the appellant (although some of the assignments of error are of wider scope) that it calls in question the sufficiency of the defense last referred to, except on the-ground that the right to make such a defense was waived by reason
The two defenses were not inconsistent. It was quite possible for the defendant to have abandoned or surrendered the premises because of their untenantable condition, and for the landlord to have accepted the surrender and to have resumed possession. Probably the idea that there was any inconsistency in the defenses arose from the applicability and use of the legal term constructive eviction, in connection with the neglect referred to.
There was no exception to the refusal of the court to instruct the jury as requested at the end of the case. Folio 388.
Matters referred to in the assignments of error, but not alluded to in the brief, are not considered. Judgment affirmed.
(■Opinion published 52 N. W. Rep. 9S6.)