Johnson v. Oppenheim

10 N.Y. 280
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 16, 1873
StatusPublished

This text of 10 N.Y. 280 (Johnson v. Oppenheim) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Oppenheim, 10 N.Y. 280 (N.Y. 1873).

Opinion

Allen, J.

The defendants claim exemption from the payment of rent, and the performance of the other covenants of their lease, under the provisions of chapter 345 of the Laws of 1860, which, as its title indicates, was designed to declaré the mutual rights and liabilities of owners and lessees, and of lessors and occupants of buildings upon a destruction thereof, or their becoming untenantable, in cases in which express provision should not be made by written agreement or covenant.

[285]*285It is a remedial statute in this, that it relieves the tenant from the rigorous rule of the common law, which holds him to the payment of rent notwithstanding the building rented may be destroyed or become untenantable, and permits him, upon the happening of such event, to quit and surrender possession of the demised premises. It gives to the tenant the option, when the demised premises are no longer capable of beneficial enjoyment, to terminate and annul the lease, and by a surrender of the premises leave the parties, in respect to the future use and occupation of the same, as if no lease had ever been made. This right of the tenant, by the terms of the act, is dependent upon the condition that the destruction of or injury to the rented building is without fault or neglect on his part. If the act or neglect of the tenant causes or contributes to the injury, he is not entitled to the benefit of the act, but is held to> the terms of his lease as at common law. Although the defendants and their clerk were ignorant of and unable to surmise the cause of the settling of the floors, the falling away of the staircases, the crumbling of the walls and the general dilapidation of the building, the .fact is placed beyond dispute, by more intelligent witnesses, that the entire injury resulted from the excavations on the adjoining lot, preparatory to the erection of a building thereon, and the want of the proper shoring up and support of the building. This is proved by the builder, an expert called by the defendants, and was not controverted. He testified that if the building had been properly shored up and secured, there would have been no settling, and that, as a builder, he would have had no difficulty in doing that. That the injury could have been prevented was not disputed.

The right of the owner of the adjacent lot to excavate to any extent he desired was unquestionable, and, at common law, he would have been under no obligations to regard the safety or care for the support of buildings and structures upon adjoining lots. In the cities of Hew York and Brooklyn, however, this common-law right is modified by chapter [286]*2866 of the Laws of 1855, by which it is provided that whenever excavations in either of those cities shall be intended to be carried to the depth of more than ten feet below the curb, and there shall be any party or other wall, wholly or partly on adjoining land and standing upon or near the boundary lines of such lot, the person causing such excavation to be made, if afforded the necessary license to enter on the adjoining land, and not otherwise, shall at all times until the completion of such excavations, at his own expense, preserve such wall from injury, and so support the same by a proper foundation that it shall remain as stable as before such excavations were commenced The obligation as well as the right of the party making the excavation to enter upon the premises occupied by the defendants, to protect the building against harm and injury from the work in progress, depended upon the license of the occupants. If license and permission was withholden, the parties stood upon their common-law rights, and the owner of the adjacent lot was absolved from all obligation to protect the walls or foundation of the defendant’s building; and without the license and permission of the defendants such adjacent proprietor could not lawfully have entered upon, the premises for the purpose of preserving the walls and supporting the same, and would have been a trespasser had he done so.

The first complaint of any damage to or settling of the building, so far as appears, was by letter, from the defendants to the plaintiffs, under date of August 24, 1869, in which they say: This morning, from some cause unknown to us, the front, or store floor, of 475 Broadway gave way and settled down, and the premises by reason thereof became untenantable and unsafe for us to remain; ” and they gave notice that they would be compelled speedily to vacate the premises and surrender the possession thereof, etc.

As early as June preceding, and not long after the commencement of the improvement of the adjacent lot, the defendants were applied to for permission to Mr. Bhinelander, [287]*287who was making the excavation, to come in and shore up, and thus protect and preserve the buildings, and permission was refused. Charles J. Oppenheim, one of the defendants, was asked the question, “ Do you remember an interview with Hr. Johnson, in June, when he came and asked you to permit Hr. Bhinelander’s people to come in and shore up the buildings, and you refused? ” and the answer was “yes, sir.” On a re-examination, he sought to qualify this answer, by saying, “ I said I had no consent to withhold, and none to give; that I stood upon the rights of my lease; ” and farther on he testified, that he responded to the request, “ I have no consent to withhold and none to give;” and that he always spoke those words. He testified that he made the same response to the plaintiff’s application and offer, on the 28th of August, to enter upon the premises and shore the building up, and put it in proper repair and safe condition. The first answer of the witness was technically accurate. He did refuse the permission asked, and, in the language of the act, the party making the excavation was not “afforded the necessary license to enter in ” the demised premises for the purpose of preserving the building from injury, and was, therefore, absolved from all obligation to protect the building, and from all responsibility for damages to the building resulting from his excavations. The refusal of the license in June was not put upon the ground that the work proposed to be done would interfere with the business of the defendants or damage their goods. It was in August, after the serious injury to the building necessitating extensive repairs, that this position was taken. If it should be assumed that the shoring up and supporting the building by a proper foundation would have slightly inconvenienced the defendants, and temporarily interfered with their business, that would not have justified the refusal of the license asked. It is a slight inconvenience to which the occupants of buildings in the city of Hew York and Brooklyn may submit, at their election, rather than subject their property to greater evils and themselves to more serious loss. It is optional with the occupant to forbid an entry for [288]*288the purpose of protecting the building, but if he does so, and harm and loss ensue, it is the result of his voluntary action, and he must abide the consequences. The maxim volenti non fit mjiuria applies in all its force not only in favor of the party making the excavation, and by whose acts, in withdrawing the lateral supports of the building, the injury is more directly caused, but in behalf of all directly or indirectly liable to suffer .injury from the same cause.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 N.Y. 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-oppenheim-ny-1873.