4 Rob. 428 | La. | 1843
The plaintiff seeks to annul a lease for one year executed to him by the defendant, on the 1st of November, 1840, and claims damages to the amount of $6000, on two distinct grounds or allegations, to wit: 1st. That in the building rented by him, and known under the name .of the Planters’ Hotel, there are gas fixtures attached to it for the purpose of introducing gas to the bar room, and other parts of the house; that the use of these fixtures was one of the privileges transferred to him by the defendant; but that, on application repeatedly made to the Gas Light and Banking Company, they have constantly refused to supply the gas, alleging that there was due for gas by the Planter’s Hotel, a sum of $800, which amount the defendant had assumed to pay ; and that until the same was paid, they would not furnish gas to the house, without which, it is alleged to be almost impossible to carry on the business of hotel-keeping, &c. 2d. That the Planters’ Hotel, instead of being in a good tenantable condition, is entirely out of repair ; that when it rains, it is impossible to remain in the rooms in the third story, in consequence of leaks in the roof; that plaintiff, although notified of the condition of the house and of the consequences likely to follow from it, has constantly neglected and refused to make the necessary repairs ; that by the leakage of the roof the plaintiff has suffered considerable injury, and has lost many boarders who have left his house in consequence thereof. The answer denies any indebtedness on the part of the defendant to the Gas Light and Banking Company, or any engagement, or undertaking on his part, to put the plaintiff in possession of the right to obtain gas from the Company, and
I. The evidence shows, that before and after executing the lease, the plaintiff frequently applied to the Gas Light and Banking Company to light with gas the premises leased from the defendant, but that it was answered that this could not be done, because the Company had a claim for gas furnished to the Planters’ Hotel, whilst kept by a former tenant, which debt had been assumed by the defendant, and that under the rules of the institution no gas could be furnished to the house until the claim was satisfied. It further appears, that a suit is pending in the District Court in which the Company claims of the defendant the $800, but that the latter resists the claim, averring that he owes only $100, which, he says, he has always been ready and willing to pay, and which he has tendered to them. The lease speaks of no right, or privilege, transferred to the plaintiff in relation to the gas necessary for lighting the premises. It mentions as being leased, “ the Planters’ Hotel, with all the appurtenances thereto belonging, and with all the household furniture and fixtures belonging to the same, and detailed in a schedule annexed to it.” This entitled the plaintiff no doubt to call upon the Company for a supply of gas, on offering to pay for it; but nothing in the lease shows any obligation or undertaking on the part of the lessor to secure to the lessee that the Gas Company should furnish him with gas. If they improperly withhold from the plaintiff the gas which, under their charter they are bound to supply to all those who call for it, he cannot look to the defendant, who causes him no injury when he exercises his legal right of resisting a claim which he does not admit to be correct, and which the evidence in this case does not show that he actually owes.
II. In relation to the situation of the house, the evidence shows that in several rooms in the attic story, the water penetrated from the roof and occasioned dampness, and even wetness in some of them, and that these rooms could not be conveniently occupied by boarders in rainy weather. On the other hand, it is in evidence that the roof of the Planters’ Hotel, was entirely made anew in the year 1838, and was repaired a few days before the plaintiff took possession of it. That the winter of 1841, was an extremely wet
Judgment affirmed,