50 N.J.L. 167 | N.J. | 1887
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This suit is an action upon a covenant for the payment of rent. The lease is dated June 1st, 1886. The premises demised were a house, with the furniture therein, situate at Spring Lake, a seaside resort. The letting was for the term of five months, beginning June 1st, and for the rent of $325, payable in advance.
The defendant took possession June 3d, 1886, and after ten days’ occupation quit possession, giving notice thereof in writing. He justified the abandonment of the premises, and made defence against the recovery of the rent on the ground
The agreement for the lease was made by the defendant with one Potter, the agent of the plaintiff. There was no proof that either the plaintiff or his agent had knowledge of the condition of the cellar when the lease was made. Before the lease was signed the defendant inspected the house, but did not examine the cellar, although he might have examined it if he had chosen. There is no pretence that there was a false representation or fraudulent concealment with respect to the condition of the cellar. The only ground on which the defence can be maintained is that on the letting of a furnished house there is a condition implied that the premises shall be reasonably fit for habitation.
The trial judge overruled the defence and directed a verdict ' for the plaintiff.
The general 'doctrine of the law is that on a demise of a house or lands there is no contract or condition implied that the premises shall be fit and suitable for the use for which the lessee requires them, whether for habitation, occupation or cultivation, and consequently their unfitness for such a purpose will not .justify the tenant in abandoning the premises, and on such grounds making defence to an action for rent. Sutton v. Temple, 12 M. & W. 52; Hart v. Windsor, Id. 68; Manchester Bonded Warehouse v. Carr, 5 C. P. Div. 507, 510; Foster v. Peyser, 9 Cush. 242; Naumberg v. Young, 15 Vroom 331, 344; 1 Addison on Contracts (8th ed.) 228.
In all cases where a tenant has been allowed upon suggestions of this kind to withdraw from the tenancy and refuse the payment of rent, there will be found to have been a fraudulent misrepresentation or concealment as to the state of the premises which were the subject of the letting, or else the premises proved 'to be uninhabitable by some wrongful act or default of the landlord himself. 1 Taylor’s Landlord and Tenant, § 382. The contention is that where the premises
Smith v. Marrable was an action for the use and occupation of a furnished house. At the trial it appeared that when the tenant took possession, the beds in the house were infested with bugs. He quit the premises and sent the key to the plaintiffs. Lord Abinger admitted the defence, and the defendant had a verdict. On motion for a new trial in the ■Court of Exchequer, the verdict was sustained. Baron Parke, in delivering the opinion of the court, stated the question to be whether in point of law a person who lets a house must be taken to let it in a state fit for decent and comfortable habitation, and whether the tenant is at liberty to throw it up when he makes the discovery that it is not so; and on the .■authority of two Nisi Prius cases — Edwards v. Etherington, Ry. & M. 268, and Collins v. Barrow, 1 M. & Rob. 112—held that where the demised premises are encumbered with a nuisance of so serious a nature that a person could not reasonably be expected to live in them, the tenant is at liberty to •abandon them. The learned judge put his conclusion not on the ground of a contract on the part of the landlord that the premises were free from a nuisance. He expressly disclaimed the idea that there was such a contract, and rested his opinion upon the implied condition of law that there was an undertaking to let them in a habitable condition.
Smith v. Marrable was decided in January, 1843. In November of the same year the question was again in the same court in Sutton v. Temple, 12 M. & W. 52. The demise was of the use of certain pasture land and the eatage of grass thereon growing. The tenant took possession and put his cattle on the premises. In consequence of the spread of manure in the preceding spring, in which there was a quantity of refuse paint, particles of the paint had been deposited among the grass, from the effects of which some of the tenant's cattle died. He refused to stock the pasture any longer and gave the landlord notice. In an action for the rent the de
In February, 1844, Smith v. Marrable was again under discussion in the Court of Exchequer, in Hart v. Windsor, 12 M. & W. 68. That was an action for rent, upon a lease under seal. The premises demised were “a messuage or tenement, or garden ground.” In fact, the messuage demised was an unfurnished dwelling-house which the defendant leased for the purpose of habitation. The plea, which was-fully proved, was that the said messuage or tenement was not in a proper state for habitation or dwelling therein; that the same was, at the time of the demise, in that state and condition that the defendant could not reasonably inhabit or dwell therein, and so continued, &c., by reason of the same being-greatly infested, swarmed and overrun with bugs, by reason whereof the defendant quitted the premises, and gave notice, &c. The defendant on this plea had a verdict, but the court in bano ordered judgment for the plaintiff non obstante veredicto on the ground that the facts stated in the plea were no> defence to the action. The opinion of the court was delivered by Baron Parke, and of course brought under consideration his judgment in Smith v. Marrable. On this subject the learned judge declared that the decision in that case could not be supported on the ground on which he had rested his judgment. He said that it was not necessary to decide in the case in hand whether Smith v. Marrable be law or not • that it was distinguishable from the present case on the ground it was put by Lord Abinger in Sutton v. Temple. But he declared it to be the unanimous opinion of the court that there is no contract, still less a condition, implied by law on the demise of real property, only that it is fit for the purpose for which it is let. He added that “ the principles of the common law do not warrant such a position; and though in the case of a dwelling-house taken for habitation there is no apparent
Mr. Addison, commenting on Smith v. Marrable, says that ■contracts for the letting and hiring of ready-fuimished houses and apartments are contracts of a mixed nature, partaking partly of the nature of a demise of realty and partly of a ■contract for the letting and hiring of movable chattels, and that the lessor is therefore, in contracts of this description, ■clothed with the duties and responsibilities resulting from •contracts for the letting and hiring of chattels as well as those flowing from demises of realty simply.' 1 Addison on Contracts (8th ed.) 293. If the dual nature of the duties of the lessor under such a letting be conceded, it is clear that upon principle the liability of the lessor in the transaction must be restricted to breaches in respect to such of the property let •whereof the law implies the warranty. On a sale of chattels in possession a warranty of title is implied. On a sale of realty the law raises no such undertaking. If the transaction be a sale of realty and personalty combined, and for a gross .sum, if title to the personalty should fail, the party might rescind the sale on the ground that the contract of purchase was entire. But it is inconceivable that by the association of personal property with realty a warranty would be implied for title to the realty, which the law never implies with respect to property of that description. Suppose a lease of a farm with the implements of husbandry upon it, or of a factory with the tools and implements used in it, it could not rationally be contended that because on the letting of chattels a warranty of fitness was implied, there would therefore arise a warranty that the farm was reasonably fit for cultivation or the factory suitable for the uses for which it was demised.
Wilson v. Finch, 2 Fxch. Div. 336, is more directly in point with the circumstances of this case. The demise was of a furnished house in town from May 7th to July 31st, 1875. When) the tenant was about to take possession it was discovered that the drains and cesspools were out of repair, from which noxious-odors were emitted into the house. The tenant refused to occupy, and made the condition of the premises a defence to an action for rent. The Court of Exchequer sustained the defence.. TherO was evidence in the case that pending the negotiations for the lease the tenant wrote to the landlord’s agent making inquiries as to the state of the drains, and that the agent replied that the landlord believed the drainage to be in perfect order. This circumstance was adverted to in the opinions of Kelly, C. B., and Pollock, B.; and Pollock, B., seemed inclined to rest his judgment on the ground that the defect was latent, and that the tenant might be held to have relied! with reason on the assurance of the lessor as to the condition of the house. But all the judges placed the judgment actually given on the ground that where the letting was of a furnished house, the law implied that the house should in every respect be fit for habitation.
The judgment in Wilson v. Finch has no support from Smith v. Marrable, as explained by Lord Abinger in Sutton v. Temple. Its value as a precedent in exposition of the common law will depend upon the reasoning on which the judgment was rested. Chief Baron Kelly placed his judgment on the ground that both parties contemplated that the house should be ready for the tenant’s occupation; that both parties intended that the house should be fit for occupation; that is, that it should be reasonably healthy, and not dangerous to the lives
The defence was properly overruled, and the judgment ¡should be affirmed.