The respondents in this action are the owners of a two-story and basement building at 519 Mission Street in San Francisco. On March 12, 1948, they executed a lease of the entire second floor of the building to the appellant for a term of seven years for the purpose of operating on the premises blueprinting, photo copying and kindred lines of business. The term of the lease is fixed as commencing on April 1, 1948, and the leased property is described as “That certain second story space designated as No. 519 Mission Street being the entire upper floor of that certain two story and basement building situated on the Southerly line of Mission Street between First and Second Streets together with the exclusive use of the vestibule and entrance to said floor as well as the exclusive use of the elevator leading from said vestibule and being adjacent to the Mission Street front.”
After the appellant took over the property, and on January 19,1949, the Division of Industrial Safety made an inspection of the elevator and served notice on the appellant that it was defective and that certain safety requirements would have to be met. Neither of the parties had any knowledge that the elevator did not come up to safety requirements until this notice was served although the appellant had made a full inspection of the premises before the lease was executed. Upon the notice being served appellant immediately made demand upon the respondents that they make the changes and installations designated. This the respondents refused to do. Appellant then commenced this action to have the rights and duties of .the parties under the lease determined. The respondents cross-complained asking that the cost of making the alterations *151 and installations required by the Division of Industrial Safety be ascertained, and that the appellant be required to make them, or, in the alternative, to pay to respondents the cost of having the required work done. The trial court found it to be the duty of the lessee to make the required installations and fixed the cost thereof at $1,490. Judgment was entered accordingly and the plaintiff appealed.
The requirements specified by the Division of Industrial Safety as necessary to bring the elevator within the safety regulations of the state are: Install a capacity sign on the car enclosure; extend the car enclosure up to car top at counterweights ; install standard hoistway gates 66" in height on all floors; install approved contact locks on all hoistway gates; provide a sequence device in connection with gate locks and control circuit; replace the present open type limit switch with approved type; install a light and light switch in penthouse ; install an approved type disconnecting switch in penthouse; install an externally operated disconnect switch in the machine room; install standard bumpers in the pit; attach a seal on the governor so that adjustment cannot be made without breaking the seal; install a light switch in machine room located no more than 18 inches from the loekside of machine room door; provide safe access to penthouse.
The following provisions of the lease are pertinent to the issues involved here:
“Fifth: That the lessee will, at his sole cost and expense, comply with all of the requirements of all Municipal, State and Federal authorities now in force, or which may hereafter be in force, pertaining to the said premises, occasioned by or affecting the use to which said premises have been, are being, or are to be put by the lessee, and will faithfully observe in the use of the premises all Municipal ordinances and State and Federal statutes now in force or which may hereafter be in force.”
‘1 Sixth : That the lessee will, at his sole cost and expense, keep and maintain the said premises and every part thereof, except the roof and sidewalls, (which the lessor agrees to repair) but including glazing and the interior of the premises, in good and sanitary order, condition and repair, hereby waiving all right to make repairs at the expense of the lessor. ...”
“Eighth: That the lessee, during the entire term of this lease, shall, at his own cost and expense, keep all elevators in *152 or upon the demised premises in good order, condition and repair, and also during said time, at his own cost and expense, keep all elevators insured against injury to persons. . . .”
We are presented with no question of a deteriorated or dilapidated elevator needing repair or rebuilding, but are only called upon to decide whether the lessor or the lessee under this particular lease is required to make the safety installations required by the Division of Industrial Safety in an elevator otherwise in good condition.
In the absence of fraud or concealment no duty is owed by a landlord to make repairs or to prepare the premises for the use of the tenant. As is said in
Davis
v.
Stewart,
A lease presents the aspects of a contract, and also that of a conveyance. It has two sets of rights and obligations— those arising from the relation of landlord and tenant and which are based on privity of estate, and those growing out of express stipulations and which are based on privity of contract. It is a contract, not only on the part of the lessor, but also on the part of the lessee. And, on a breach of its contractual obligations, a cause of action accrues to the injured party as upon the breach of any other contract. (15 Cal.Jur. p. 614.)
Where doubt arises as to what the rights, duties and obligations of the parties are under the terms of a lease, the statutory rules for the interpretation of contracts apply.
(Knox
v.
Wolfe,
In paragraph “Sixth” the appellant agrees to keep every part of the premises, including the interior, excepting the roof and sidewalls, in good condition and repair, and in paragraph “Eighth” she expressly stipulates that she will at her own cost and expense “keep all elevators in or upon the demised premises in good order, and condition.” This language is clear and explicit and when considered in its ordinary and popular sense, it binds the appellant to maintain the elevator in a safe and sound condition so that it may be used for the purpose for which it was designed, namely, to transfer persons and property from one floor to another in the building without danger.
This construction is wholly consistent with the provisions of paragraph “Fifth,” wherein appellant in clear and explicit language covenants at her “sole cost and expense” to “comply with all of the requirements of all Municipal, State and Federal authorities pertaining to said premises, ... or affecting the use to which said premises are being put by the lessee, and will faithfully observe in the use of the premises all Municipal ordinances and State and Federal statutes. . . .” In other words she covenants to make lawful use of the premises only.
A lease containing provisions similar to those before us was before the court in the case of
Baker
v.
Moran,
As in the Massachusetts ease, the lessee here covenanted to make only lawful use of the premises. By so stipulating she obligated herself to comply with the reasonable requirements of the Division of Industrial Safety, and she is bound by her obligation.
Appellant’s point that the elevator does not come under the terms of the lease is without merit. It is held in
Osborn
v.
Henry Cowell Lime etc. Co.,
It is clear that the appellant undertook, at her own expense, to keep the elevator in good order and condition and to use it only in a lawful manner. Having assumed this obligation, *155 the duty rests upon her to make the reasonable changes and installations required by the Division of Industrial Safety for the safe operation of the elevator.
The judgment is affirmed.
Nourse, P. J., and Goodell, J., concurred.
