Dodd v. Ozburn
This text of 57 S.E. 701 (Dodd v. Ozburn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
(After stating the facts.)
The rate of insurance on the building has been advanced approximately two per cent., because of the establishment of a garage therein, and it is insisted that this increase of insurance tariff seriously affects the property. If the common law controlled this subtenacy, the lease would not be vacated nor the subtenant’s use of the premises as a garage be enjoined. For there is nothing in the evidence to justify the conclusion that such a use is either a nuisance or injures the inheritance. In other words, the use was lawful, and the landlord was bound to contract against any specific lawful use to which he did not wish the demised premises put. The landlord’s consent in this case gives the tenant substantially the same right as to subletting which a tenant had at common law, with the restrictive covenant against using the premises for a saloon. We think that the stipulation that the subletting must not affect the property, considered by itself or in connection with the circumstances attending the execution of the lease, meant that the use must not affect the physical condition of the property. It could not have referred to the character of the tenant, because there was a stipulation on that point; nor could it have referred to the character of [383]*383"the business, since the landlord, in making a restriction as to the ■use to which it might be put, limited the restriction to a saloon. “When we look to the negotiations which led up to the lease, wherein "the tenant informed the landlord that he was undecided to what use the premises might be put, and suggested several businesses which might be conducted in the building, some of which would inurease the insurance rate, and no restriction as to use was inserted in the lease, we may easily conclude that the rate of insurance was not a factor in determining whether any particular lawful business would aifeet the property. This is rendered more certain when it is ■considered that the prior use of the building had been for storage, and the rent promised in this lease was largely in excess of what had been previously received.
Judgment affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
57 S.E. 701, 128 Ga. 380, 1907 Ga. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dodd-v-ozburn-ga-1907.