221 Mich. 70 | Mich. | 1922
Plaintiff owned certain premises on Warren avenue in the city of Detroit. On October 6, 1920, she gave one Earl W. Hannan a lease of the same for five years. Later Hannan assigned the lease to
“The said party of the first part, in consideration of the rents and covenants herein specified, does hereby let and lease to the said party of the second part, the following described premises, situated and being in the city of Detroit, county of Wayne and State of Michigan, to-wit: Store and flat above and garage in rear of said store, said store being now used as a hardware, tinning, automobile accessories, place of business, and the upstairs as a residence, and a small garage in rear of said store for storing a car, known as 1364 Warren avenue, west, for the term of five years from and after the 6th day of October, 1920, on terms and conditions” etc.
Plaintiff had judgment of restitution in the commissioner’s court and, on appeal in the circuit court, the judgment was affirmed. The jury, under direction of the court, determined the amount of rent due at $1,000.
The principal defense interposed was that defendants had been partially evicted from the demised premises by plaintiff and, therefore, no suit could be maintained for possession of the premises on account of nonpayment of rent. The trial court was of the opinion that that defense could not be made in a summary proceedings case. In view of this, defendants offered to show the partial eviction by the landlord in removing the garage from the demised premises and appropriating a portion of his lot to erect thereon a heating plant for a garage on the adjoining lot.
Counsel assigns error because he was not permitted to show the details of the partial eviction. We are impressed that the trial court was in error in rejecting the testimony. In an action to recover rent we have held that a partial eviction by the landlord was a defense. Kuschinsky v. Flanigan, 170 Mich.
In the case of Royce v. Guggenheimer, supra, it was said:
“The eviction of a tenant from the demised premises, either by the landlord or by title paramount, is a bar to any demand for rent, because it deprives him of the whole consideration for which rent was to be paid. Gilbert on Rents, p. 145; Morse v. Goddard, 13 Metc. (Mass.) 177 (46 Am. Dec. 728). And his eviction by the landlord from part of the premises suspends the entire rent, because the landlord ‘shall not so apportion his own wrong as to enforce the lessee to pay anything for the residue.’ Hale, C. J., in Hodgkins v. Robson, 1 Ventr. 276, 277; Page v. Parr, Style, 432; Shumway v. Collins, 6 Gray (Mass.), 227; Leishman v. White, 1 Allen (Mass.), 489.”
In Morris v. Kettle, supra, it was observed:
“The tenant may continue in possession of the remainder of the term, and his possession will not be construed as consent to the eviction; nor will the subsequent payment of rent according to the terms of the*73 lease as a voluntary act operate as a waiver. Nothing but a new contract by the tenant to pay rent, in substitution for the original lease, will renew his obligation to pay.”
The Michigan case of Pridgeon v. Boat Club, supra, is in accord with these holdings.
There are other questions discussed but we do not deem them important; they were mostly questions of fact which were within the province of the jury.
The judgment is reversed and a new trial ordered. Defendants will recover their costs in this court.