Berger Properties, Inc. v. Kay Jewelry Co.

147 Misc. 173, 263 N.Y.S. 576, 1933 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1055
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 147 Misc. 173 (Berger Properties, Inc. v. Kay Jewelry Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berger Properties, Inc. v. Kay Jewelry Co., 147 Misc. 173, 263 N.Y.S. 576, 1933 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1055 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1933).

Opinion

Charles B. Wheeler,

Official Referee. The plaintiff in this action seeks to restrain the defendant, its tenant and occupant of a store and basement known as No. 568 Main street, Buffalo, N. Y., from interfering with and impeding the use of a part of the heating equipment in the leased premises and a right of way for the conveyance of fuel to boilers designed and used to heat the entire building. The lease is dated April 2, 1924, and is for the term of fifteen years, to commence May 1, 1924. The lease states the premises is to be used as a jewelry store.

The store leased comprises a part of a building consisting of two stores known as 568 and 570 Main street. Above the stores the building is used as a hotel. A corridor or hallway divides the stores and leads to an elevator, extending from the basement to the top story of the building.

There is a basement under each of the stores. Immediately in front of the basement wall and under the sidewalk on Main street there is a vault, having a manhole through the stone sidewalk secured by trap doors. In the rear of the basement wall is another vault where there is installed a boiler for heating the premises. The basement beneath the store is separated by partitions. The basement beneath the store leased to the defendant, at the time of letting, had three partitions, one at the northeast corner, from whence a stairway leads to the corridor of the hotel; another partition extended along the north side in which was housed the water heater and a boiler; the third partition was on the south side and was used by the defendant for storage purposes. The boiler equipment consisted of a large boiler in the vault in the rear, which was used [175]*175to generate steam for heating the two stores and the hotel. The water heater in the basement was used to supply hot water to the stores and the hotel. There was also in the basement of the store at No. 568 an auxiliary coal boiler employed to heat hot water in seasons of severe weather.

There was an arched entrance leading from the basement of the store at No. 568 to the vault under the sidewalk and another entrance through a fire door to the boiler vault.

The boilers and heaters described were located where they are prior to 1892 and since that time have been used for the purposes stated.

For such purposes it was the practice” to deliver coal into the vault under the sidewalk through the manhole, and from thence the coal was wheeled in barrows through the arched opening to and through the fee door in the rear and fed to the boiler in the boiler vault. When the auxiliary boiler was used coal was taken through the arched opening to it. The water heater was fueled by gas.

The plaintiff had leased the hotel and covenanted to furnish heat at its own expense to the entire building “ from the present radiation.”

In the lease with the plaintiff to the defendant it was provided as follows: “ 19. The lessor agrees to furnish heat to said premises, from the present radiation when reasonably required; and it is agreed that he shall not be hable for any loss or damage arising from failure of the heating plant to operate due to any cause beyond his control.”

In this connection it should be noticed that in and by the lease in question the lessee agreed as follows: The lessee hereby agrees not to- make any alteration or additions to said premises, or any part thereof or to remove any part thereof, nor suffer or allow the same to be done without the written consent of the lessor first obtained in each and every case.”

The defendant went into the occupation of the leased premises and from that time up to shortly prior to the commencement of this action in the summer of 1931 the basement and heating plant described were used in the way and manner above stated by the storing of coal and conveying it to the boilers without any objection or protest on the part of the defendant. This covers a period of upwards of seven years of such use.

The defendant now contends it desired the use of the basemen-under its store for the purpose of extending its business, and proposed carrying a stock of radios and other articles. Thereupon' the defendant closed the arched doorway leading to the vault under the sidewalk and this prevented the use of the vault for storage of [176]*176coal and conveying it to the boilers. With this arched entrance closed the only way by which coal can be supplied to the boilers is by bringing it to the boiler vault through an alley leading from Pearl street in the rear of the premises. The defendant contends this may be done. The plaintiff on the other hand contends the alley in question is a private and not a public alley, and it had no right to the use of the alley save by procuring the permit of its owners to such use. In any event if the plaintiff can use the alley in question coal to be burned in the auxiliary boiler can only be delivered to it by wheeling it through the basement from the boiler room to this boiler.

It is true the lease in question contains no express mention of the vault under the sidewalk or of the boiler room in the rear and makes no mention of a right to wheel and convey coal from the vault under the sidewalk to the boilers as had been done in the past and continued up to the time the arched doorway was closed. The plaintiff contends this practice was necessarily contemplated and provided for by the terms of the lease, and the lease should be so construed. The referee deems this to be the main question presented in this case.

In construing written contracts the surrounding facts and circumstances may be shown and considered. (Williston Cont. 1198, 1214; Becker v. Frasse & Co., 255 N. Y. 10, 14; Griffiths v. Hardenbergh, 41 id. 464; Gillet v. Bank of America, 160 id. 549; Brokaw v. Lage, 203 App. Div. 155; Columbus Spa, Inc., v. Star Co., 216 id: 218;.Halperin v. McCrory Stores Corp., 207 id. 448; Times S. Imp. Co., Inc., v. Fleischmann V. M. B., Inc., 173 id. 633.)

By the lease the landlord agreed to supply heat to the defendants’ store by the “ present radiation.” The defendant contends that this only applied to the piping and radiators installed in the store and rooms of the building and has no application to the boilers in the basement by which the heat was generated.

The referee cannot agree with this contention. We are of the opinion that when the words “ present radiation ” were used it was intended to include all the apparatus and plant then employed for that purpose.

The entire plant was essential. The reading of section 19 of the lease discloses that the plant as well as the radiators in rooms was contemplated, for in immediate connection with the words “ present radiation ” was added that the landlord should “ not be hable for any loss or damage arising from failure of the heating plant due to any cause beyond his control.” The “ plant ” itself was plainly deemed a part of the radiation ” and we think the lease must be so construed. It was an essential, if not the essential part of the system.

[177]*177In addition we must also consider the agreement in the lease that the lessee is “ not to make any alteration to said premises without the lessor’s consent.”

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Bluebook (online)
147 Misc. 173, 263 N.Y.S. 576, 1933 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1055, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berger-properties-inc-v-kay-jewelry-co-nysupct-1933.