1 N.Y.S. 470 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1888
The action is to recover rent of a dwelling-house rented to the defendant by a lease made in February, 1884, for the term of five years from the 1st of April following. The defense is that the building became untenantable; that he was deprived of the beneficial use of the premises by the failure of the plaintiff to repair; and that he was compelled to and did abandon them. It appears that the defendant did leave the house in December, 1886, and then sent to the plaintiff the rent up to that time, which the plaintiff declined to accept as such payment. The lease did not, by its terms, provide for any repairs; but the evidence tends to prove that it was understood that the plaintiff would put in a furnace, bath-room, water-closet upstairs, and two wash-basins, and paint and paper the house; all of which was done after the defendant went into possession. The main cause of the complaint and abandonment by the defendant was that there was an uncomfortable stench in the house, issuing, as is claimed, from the sewer with which the pipes from the house were connected; also that there was no cold-air box connected with the furnace. The evidence tends to prove that such was the condition, and for these causes the house was rendered unhealthy; and the conclusion was warranted that, as a consequence, the house, with the continuance of those causes, was untenantable. Some of the members of the defendant’s family were sick; and how far, if to any extent, their illness was caused by this condition, does not appear. The defendant says that he requested the plaintiff’s agent to remedy these defects, and told him that his doctor said the house was unfit to live in. The evidence enabled the court to determine that the causes of the condition complained of were produced by the defective plumbing and heating apparatus put in by the plaintiff after the defendant went into possession under the lease, and therefore it may be said that the building was rendered untenantable by the work of the plaintiff while the defendant was in occupation as tenant; and it is contended by his counsel that this condition came within the statute which provides that a lessee of a building which shall, without any fault or neglect on his part, “be so injured by the elements or any other cause as to be untenantable, and unfit for occupation, shall not be liable to payment” to the lessor after such injury, and may thereupon quit and surrender the possession. Laws 1860, c. 345. This statute, by its terms, seems to contemplate that, to give the tenant the means of protection against liability for rent, there should be an injury to the building which so substantially affects the enjoyment of it by the tenant as to render it untenantable; and such injuries as come within the meaning of “ordinary repairs, ” when the landlord has not by the lease assumed the obligation to make them, are not within the statute, because it does not modify the relative duties of the parties to the lease in that respect. This was all that was necessarily determined upon the facts in Suydam v. Jackson, 54 N. Y. 450; and the views expressed in the opinions then delivered, beyond that, were not required by them. The case was properly decided, as there the landlord did not undertake to make repairs, and the duty rested upon the lessee, for the protection of his enjoyment of the premises, to make ordinary repairs. It is quite questionable whether the fact that the enjoyment of the premises has become so impaired as to make them untenantable brings the case within the statute, unless the condition can in some sense be attributable to an injury to the building. The authorities upon the subject do not necessarily extend the construction of the statute so as to embrace all conditions which render the demised premises untenantable without any fault of the lessee. Vann v. Rouse, 94 N. Y. 401; Butler v. Kidder, 87 N. Y. 98; Francke v. Youmans, 17 Wkly. Dig. 252.
It is assumed, upon the evidence, that there was a stench from the sewer so deleterious to the health of the occupants as to render the building in that sit-
It is, however, contended by the plaintiff’s counsel that the cause of the uncomfortable condition in the case at bar was the clogging up of the drainage pipes by the use made of them by the occupants of the house. If the trial court had so found the fact, the plaintiff would have been entitled to recover, because the remedying of that difficulty would have been within the repairs which the tenant was required to make. And, in support of that view, the plaintiff gave evidence quite strongly tending in that direction; but it cannot be said that there was no evidence in support of the position that the difficulty and cause of the complaint was not in, and the consequence of, the defective construction of the drains. We think the evidence was such as to present a question of fact for the trial court; and in such case this court does not, upon the mere weight of evidence, reverse the judgment of the county court affirming that of the municipal court. Burnham v. Butler, 31 N. Y. 480; Wiley v. Slater, 22 Barb. 506. There appear to have been no errors in the rulings of the court, to the prejudice of the plaintiff, in the reception of evidence, made available by objection. The judgment should be affirmed.
Haight and Dwight, JJ., concur.