Jones v. Millsaps

71 Miss. 10
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 71 Miss. 10 (Jones v. Millsaps) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Millsaps, 71 Miss. 10 (Mich. 1893).

Opinion

Woods, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court. .

While the declaration, in some of its allegations, is somewhat indefinite or uncertain, yet.wé do not think it so indefinite or uncertain, as a whole, as that the precise nature of the complaint is not apparent. While parts of the language employed are involved or obscure, the pleading does, nevertheless, contain a statement of the facts constituting the cause of action, in ordinary language.

Our statutes are designed to obviate the necessity for, and the use of all technicalities in all pleadings, and to enable every litigant to have his complaint entertained and heard on his stating the facts constituting his cause of action in ordinary and concise language. If irrelevant or redundant matter is inserted in the pleading, the opposite party should move to strike out such matter. If the allegations of the pleadings are so indefinite or uncertain that the precise nature of the complaint is not apparent, on motion of the opposite party the court will cause the same to be made definite and certain, or, this failing, will strike the pleading from the files. Code 1892, §704.

On this branch of the case, and beyond these general observations, we think it proper only to add two particularizations, viz.: 1. The first special cause of demurrer is not well taken. On examination. of the written contract, we find that the lessee — the plaintiff below — covenants to make certain specific repairs and alterations in and upon the leased store-room, and for other repairs ^that may be necessary, or changes which he may deem requisite. That all the repairs and alterations covenanted for on the lessee’s part are limited to the leased store-room is quite manifest. 2. The eighth [15]*15special ground of demurrer is not maintainable. Reference to the transcript before us shows that it is the “ cost and carriage and value of the goods” damaged which the schedule-filed with the declaration contains, but this schedule was unnecessary, and this part of the declaration maybe treated as surplusage. With this useless matter disregarded, we still find a distinct averment of the pleading that the plaintiff is injured and damaged to the value of four hundred dollars.

We come now to the consideration of the real contention between the parties, presented in the last special cause of demurrer; and that is, to state it fairly and fully, can the lessor, in this particular case of the leasing of the lower story to the plaintiff, with retention of the upper story in his own possession and use, be held liable for necessary repairs, in the absence of any covenants to keep in repair imposed upon him by the written contract of lease, and in the. absence of deceit, misrepresentation or fraud ?

The general rule that a landlord, in the absence of express covenants in the contract of lease, and in the absence of deceit or misrepresentation, cannot be held liable on any implied warranty on his part for repairs, is not called in controversy by counsel for appellant, as we understand his-argument. The correctness and the universality of the rule, as stated, are admitted; but the lease of a lower story by a. landlord, retaining the other parts of the building in his own possession and use, presents a case exceptional to the general rule, it is contended. This position rests, as it appears to us, upon one of two grounds : 1. Either upon an implied covenant for repair’s on the lessor’s part, springing Out of the written contract itself; or, 2, upon the relationship of the-parties to each other and to the leased premises. The subject is not free from difficulty, nor is there wanting eminent, authority for both of the grounds just mentioned of fixing liability upon the lessor. Let us examine these in order, and in the light of the authorities cited in support of them.

The first proposition is to 'fix liability for repairs upon the-[16]*16lessor, in the absence of any express covenants in the written contract of lease, on an implied covenant growing out of the lessee’s express covenants to repair the leased store-room. In the case at bar, there are two ready answers to the contention. 1. The repairs and alterations covenanted for by the lessee are not to be supposed to refer to repairs of ordinary wear and tear. These were imposed by law, and needed no sanction of covenant. They are, as is plainly to be seen in the contract, covenants for extraordinary repairs or alterations to be made for the peculiar accommodation of the lessee’s business; and, 2, and conclusively, to raise this implied covenant to repair by the lessor, would be to introduce into the written contract of the parties a most important condition, which they did not incorporate in it themselves when they reduced their agreement to writing. It would .amount to an essential modification, by parol, of a written contract. It would be, not the explanation by parol of an •obscurity on the face of the contract, but the substitution of one contract for another — a contract by parol for the written •one made by the parties.

The case of Bissell v. Lloyd et al., 100 Ill., 214, affords distinct support to the contention of appellant as to the implied covenant of the lessor to repair the portions of the building whose possession he retained, in order that the comfort or security of the tenant of the leased room might be maintained. But there is no attempt to fortify this conclusion of the supreme court of Illinois by reason or authority. It is the naked, dogmatic assertion of a court of last resort, and we decline to yield our assent to it.

The other ground of contention, viz.; the liability for repairs on the part of the lessor in eases where a part only of the premises are leased, and the remainder retained by the landlord, because of the relationship of the parties-to each other and to the property, seems to be clearly recognized in the case of Toole v. Beckett, 67 Me., 544. The decision and its reasoning are not satisfactory, and the vice of the opinion [17]*17is that it confounds the passivity of the landlord with affirmative action on his part amounting to negligence. It overlooks the fundamental principle in all leases, by which the lessor is made to “ hands off” during the continuance of the lease. He may not be required to affirmatively aid the tenant in repairs; and he may not affirmatively act inconsistently with his lessee’s right to possession and enjoyment. And so long as the lessor abstains from all action, he is within the line of his duty.- The Maine case confounds negligence with non-intervention, and is unsound.

A critical study of the cases of Priest v. Nichols, 116 Mass., 401; Kirby v. Boylston Market Association, 14 Gray, 249, and Looney v. McLean, 129 Mass. — the two former cited and supposed to have been followed by the court in 67 Maine, and the last relied upon by appellant’s counsel — readily distinguishes them from the. Maine-case and the case at bar. The case of Kirby v. Boylston Market

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Bluebook (online)
71 Miss. 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-millsaps-miss-1893.