Are the individual defendants, Schreiber and Foreman, hereinafter called defendants, liable for rent due after a certain date under a lease, in which they were named lessees, or a subsequent modification agreement ? The lease was for a term of 10 years and contained a covenant by defendants to pay the specified rental therefor and to refrain from assigning without lessor’s written consent, except that:
“Lessees may assign to a corporation, of which they are principal stockholders, but shall remain individually liable for the performance of terms hereof during the first 3 years hereof.”
Plaintiff acquired lessor’s interest and entered into the modification agreement with defendants, which provided for reduction of monthly rental payments for a limited period and that the lease, as “specifically modified and amended shall continue in full force and effect and each of the parties hereto *486 does hereby agree to carry out and perform the covenants and obligations thereof.” Later, when the lease had fun 28 months, defendants assigned their interest to defendant corporation, of which they were principal stockholders, and it assumed the lessees’ obligations under the lease. When the lease had run for 3 years defendants contended that, under the quotéd provision of the lease (“Lessees may assign * * * but shall remain individually liable * * * during the first 3 years hereof.”), they were no longer individually liable for rent thereafter falling due.
Plaintiff contends that defendants’ construction of the 3-year provision of the lease is violative of CL 1948,' § 565.5 (Stat Ann 1953 Rev § 26.524), that:
“No covenant shall be implied in any conveyance of real estate.”
Resort to inference or covenant by implication is not necessary to defendants’ position. The quoted language of the lease expressed not only the extent of, but also the limit upon, the liability imposed upon defendants. In prescribing the period during which liability should continue it fixed the time when liability should end. The lease’s express permission of the assignment as here made, coupled with its equally express limitation that defendants should, despite such assignment, remain individually liable during the first 3' years of the lease, constituted an express provision that, upon such assignment, defendants should not be individually liable after the first 3 years of the lease. The words “remain liable the first 3 years” mean precisely what they say. The addition of words “and no longer” or other words of similar import, to emphasize the meaning already expressed, would have amounted to utter redundancy. Defendants’ position does not run afoul of thé statute.
*487 Plaintiff says that adoption of defendants’ theory, giving effect to the 3-year provision, would result in a lack of mutuality of obligation after the 3-year period, causing the lease to fail. If plaintiff discerns therein an infirmity fatal to the lease, it scarcely affords comfort to an attempt to hold defendants liable under the lease.
Plaintiff urges that the 3-year provision of the lease, as interpreted by defendants, is repugnant to its preceding habendum clause fixing the .term of the lease at 10 years, and, in that connection, directs attention to the rules of construction that: (1) when an instrument contains 2 conflicting provisions the first controls;
Klever
v.
Klever,
Plaintiff further contends that the modification agreement signed by defendants constituted a new and separate undertaking by them, rendering them liable for rent for the entire remainder of the 10-
*489
year term, regardless of the 3-year provision of the lease, citing
Detroit Trust Co. v. Howenstein,
There is no support for plaintiff’s position in
S. S. Kresge Co.
v.
Sears
(CCA), 87 F2d 135 (
Suit was begun July 3, 1953, and trial was had on September 23d. The rent having been paid up to June 15th, the end of the 3-year period, judgment of no cause for action was entered in- favor of the individual defendants, and judgment for $325, representing unpaid rent for the last half of the month of June, plus interest of $12.48, was entered in favor of plaintiff against the corporate defendant. Plaintiff’s right to recover, in this suit, against the corporate defendant for rent for the months of July, August and September is not seriously urged here nor is the question properly before us; decision below was without prejudice to plaintiff’s right to *491 maintain an action therefor against the corporate defendant.
Affirmed, with costs to defendants.
