23 N.Y.S. 17 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1893
The defense to the action for rent of the apartments occupied was that, the premises being untenantable for certain reasons set out in the answer, it was agreed between him and the plaintiff that he should surrender possession, and indemnify for any com
In Tallman v. Murphy, 120 N. Y. 345, 24 N. E. Rep. 716, which was an action to recover rent of an apartment such as the defendant here occupied, it appeared that there was an odor of coal gas in the apartment, which made the tenant sick; that the gas, with smoke, came through the flues from the rooms occupied by other tenants; that there were loud explosions day and night, which alarmed the tenants so that they left the premises, and that the explosions came from the water tank on the roof. It was held that the evidence sustained the claim of an eviction, and justified the abandonment of the premises under the act of 1860, (chapter 345,) which authorizes the lessee of a building which shall without fault or negligence on his part be so injured by the elements or other causes as to be untenantable to quit and surrender possession, and discharge him from the rent. The decision was placed upon the ground that the landlord in the apartment house in question retained charge and control of the heating of the premises, sanitary arrangements, supplied the water, etc., and that it was his duty to the tenant to see that all such matters and appliances were kept in proper order, and that any discomfort Dr apparent peril arising from a breach of such duty was a nuisance of his creation. The building in which this defendant was a tenant was an apartment house, so arranged that several rooms on one floor should constitute an apartment, and intended to furnish therein complete arrangements for the occupation of one family. The plaintiff occupied the apartment nearest Fifth avenue, on the first floor. The owner retained charge of and control over everything that was common to the whole building, of which each person had the use or the beneficial enjoyment, such as the hallways, elevators,- heating apparatus, etc. If during the term of the defendant’s lease any of these .matters were mismanaged by the agent of the plaintiff so as to cause the premises to become untenantable, the tenant would be justified in abandoning them. A smell as of burning wood, so continuous and marked as to cause apprehensions of fire, would justify an abandonment. The apparent peril was not greater than that caused by loud explosions, the source of which could not be ascertained. In neither case was the tenant- bound to remain in the premises at the risk, possibly, of his life and the lives of those under his care. He had no right or authority to alter the construction of the premises, or make repairs, as he would have in the case of the demise of an entire dwelling house. He could not remedy any defects in the elevator, or control the management, or prevent the use, by other tenants, of the premises under a license granted by the landlord. It was the duty of the latter, so far as the matters which he had retained under his exclusive control were concerned, to see that the beneficial enjoyment of the premises by the tenant was not interfered with. If he failed to perform that duty,