Avery v. House

1 Ohio Cir. Dec. 468
CourtLake County Circuit Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 Ohio Cir. Dec. 468 (Avery v. House) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lake County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Avery v. House, 1 Ohio Cir. Dec. 468 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1887).

Opinion

Frazier, J.

This is a petition in error, and the record is quite voluminous, and counsel have submitted the case upon some óf the questions arising during the trial. Our attention has neither been ' called, nor have we looked to the whole record, as it is submitted, as we understand, upon questions that will be decisive of the several questions made in the case.

[469]*469Matilda C. Avery, a married woman, was the owner of about eleven acres of land, situated within the village of Painesville. She, with her husband, joined in a lease, properly executed and- acknowledged under the ■ provisions of our statute, by which she leased .to Drs. House & Marshall the premises described, as about eleven acres of land and known as A very Place, for the purposes of a private sanitarium. It appears from the petition that a month’s rent is due, one hundred dollars, and suit is brought to recover the rent. The copy of the lease is annexed to and filed with the petition — properly, under our rules of pleading, not made a part of the petition. The defendants, House & Marshall, by their answer set up that the premises were rented, as I have said, for a private sanitarium, and that after they had entered into the occupancy of the premises, .the house was burned, and they claim that underand by virtue of the provisions of sec. 4113, Rev. Stat., they are released from their covenants in the lease.

Section 4113, provides that, “The lessee of any building which, without any fault or negligence on his part, is destroyed or so injured by the elements, or other cause, as to be unfit for occupancy, shall not be liable to pay rent to the lessor or owner thereof, after such destruction or injury, unless otherwise expressly provided by written agreement or covenant; and the lessee shall there upon surrender possession of the premises so leased.” This is a substantial transcript of the statute that had been enacted and was in existence at the time of the revision of the statutes, and we are referred to that statute; and our supreme court commission, in commenting upon this statute, say that it is a transcript of the New York statute upon the subject, and that it should receive the construction which was given to it by the state from which it was adopted, and prior to its adoption as part of the legislation of this state. An examination, however, of the New York authorities does not disclose a decision or corn strucdon of that statute in the particular involved in the first or main proposition in this case. I mean by that, what would pass by the term “building” where there are no other words used in the statute, or in the grant.

So far as we have been al.le to ascertain, or so far as counsel have referred us to authorities, we are unable to find any question arising under a statute similiar to .this, where the statute has received a construction; hence the common law is the only aid which we have, and which we conceive to be an aid as to determining what would pass under the grant of the building. It will be remembered that the statute provides for the lessees of buildings — not as they might have provided, for the lessees of any premises upon which there was a building; and I have assumed, for such was conceded in the argument to be the case and such is the undoubted law as it stood at common law, that under a lease, even though the building was wholly destroyed, although it might have been a lease of a building only, or a room in a building, the lessee would have been bound, by his covenant, to have paid rent to the end ot the term unless his contract otherwise specially provided.

During the progress of the trial questions were made as to the admissibility of evidence; and charges were asked and charges given upon both sides. The court charged the jury; and exceptions are taken, not only to the refusal to give the charges upon the one side, but to their being given upon the other side; and also exceptions to certain specific parts of the general charge.

It is contended, upon the part of the plaintiff in error, that as the lease, by its terms, shows, upon its face, that the premises described contained certain other buildings and premises, and eleven acres ot land, that it shows that the plaintiff was entitled to recover. As I have said, counsel did not read the whole of this record, nor have we read this record ourselves; but I have looked at the index, and I am unable to find from the index, as to the evidence admitted, that this lease was given in evidence, or was before the court or jury in the determination of the case, although a copy was annexed to the petition and marked “Exhibit A;” nor was there so far as the requests are concerned, by plaintiff in error, any request for the court to interpret the contract, as a [470]*470court is sometimes required to construe and interpret a written instrument. The issues then, as made by the pleadings upon the one side and upon the other, are the issues made. Evidence was given, first by Dr. Marshall, one of the defendants in error, who gives a description of the premises (and I may say that this was given against the exception of the plaintiff); also, afterward, and after this evidence was admitted, and against the objection of the defendants, Charles A. Avery, when called as a witness, described these premises; and he gave a rental value to each of the several remaining portions of the premises, and from the evidence in the case it would appear, substantially, that the rental value would be $265. The whole rental, I may remark, was, for the three first years, $1,200 a year, or $100 per month. With these issues and this evidence the defendants below requested the court to charge the jury, and the court did charge the jury by the first and second requests made by the defendants below: “And we say to you as a matter of law, that the benefits of this statute are not to be confined or limited to those who merely lease buildings alone without any land whatever being included in the lease; but its provisions are to be extended to that class of cases where the building so injured or destroyed, constitutes the real motive and consideration which induced the tenant to lease the premises, and where whatever land'or outbuildings there may be upon the premises, are but mere incidents to the house for its more perfect and complete enjoyment.”

Now, was the rule given by the court the correct rule, or what rule should have been given by the court? The authorities say, that where a house is demised without any other description, bounded upon the public street, the lessee by implication and as an incident to the estate acquires the exclusive right to the use of all land in front of the house; an exclusive right, except so far as it is qualified, to the reasonable use, if the title thereto be in his landlord. And again it is said there are some words which signify more than at first sight seems to import. By a demise of a house a garden will pass, as considered to be an incident of a house, together with a shed or privy at the further end thereof. The demise passes all of the garden, and therefore, the lessor cannot build on the garden. Again, it is said the demise of a house, or a barn, without other words to extend its meaning, will pass no more land than is necessary for its complete enjoyment, and it is also laid down by the authorities, as to the quantity of land that may pass, that it may be different in populous cities, as in London, from what it would ue in a more sparsely inhabited section of the country.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Ohio Cir. Dec. 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/avery-v-house-ohcirctlake-1887.