46 P. 70 | Ariz. | 1896
G. H. Wadleigh, on April 18, 1890, leased to C. A. Stevens certain lands in Pima County, for the full term of five years, for the sum of three thousand dollars, to be paid in installments of fifty dollars per month on the first day of each month, in advance; and for the faithful performance of the conditions of said lease on his part said Stevens executed a bond, in the sum of fifteen hundred dollars, with A. Y. Grossette and Yr. S. Read as sureties. Said lease and bond were assigned to Abie E. Wadleigh, the appellee. The lands leased are arid, and water to irrigate the same was received through a certain ditch and its laterals, called the “Farmers’ Ditch.” Said ditch was what is commonly called a “community ditch.” It was owned by those having lands to be irrigated by the water flowing through it, and was kept up and maintained by the labor of the landowners, each owner of the lands being entitled to a certain part of the water, in the proportion that the number of acres he owned bore to the number of acres watered from the said ditch. The lands leased were, at the date of the lease, entitled to that proportion of the water. The lease contained the following: “And the said lessor hereby agrees and binds himself, his executors and assigns and administrators, to warrant and defend the said lessee, his heirs, administrators, and assigns, in the peaceable and quiet possession of the said premises, and every part thereof, during the term of this lease; and in default thereof the said lessor . . . and assigns will and shall pay unto the said lessee ... all damages that the said lessee shall sustain by the said failure to defend and warrant the said lease, not exceeding the sum [of] fifteen hundred ($1,500) dollars. ...” Stevens failing to pay the rent from and after the first day of March, 1893, in May, 1894, Mrs. Abie E. Wadleigh filed her complaint, as plaintiff, against Stevens and his sureties, A. Y. Grossette and W. ,S. Read, on the said bond, for six hundred and fifty dollars, the amount of rent due on the first day of May, 1894. To the complaint defendants answered, and among other things said Stevens alleged, in effect, that plaintiff had failed to deliver the water to irrigate the lands. In consequence of such failure, he had lost one crop in 1892, and had been greatly damaged, and had to abandon said property, for the reason that he could get no water to irrigate said lands, and did abandon said premises in
Under the allegations in the pleadings, the terms of the lease, and the facts adduced on the trial, we hold that the lease carried with it, for the term of the lease, all the water which could be obtained through the Farmers’ Ditch, and that the lessee, by the terms of the lease, had for that period the same rights which the lessor would have had and was under the same obligations to pay for the use and distribution of the water, and to maintain said ditch for the period, as the lessor would have been had he remained in possession,—i. e. that the lessee for that period succeeded to all the rights and obligations that would have belonged to and rested upon the lessor, had he remained in possession; that, for the term of the lease, said interest in the water of said ditch attached to the lands, whether it be under the name of an “appurtenance,” or under some other name or appellation. The part of the lease quoted was only a covenant of quiet enjoyment of the lands leased, since there was no eviction. The said covenant was to the extent only that the lessor had a good title,- and could give a free, unencumbered lease for the time specified. 1 Washburn on Real Property, 3d ed., p. 428, sec. 2a; Gazzolo v. Chambers, 73 Ill. 75. Aside from an express covenant to that effect, a landlord is not bound to keep the leased premises in repair, nor is he responsible in damages to his tenant for injuries resulting to the latter from the non-repairs
Baker, C. J., and Hawkins, J., concur.'