Kline v. McLain

5 L.R.A. 400, 10 S.E. 11, 33 W. Va. 32, 1889 W. Va. LEXIS 3
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 13, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 5 L.R.A. 400 (Kline v. McLain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kline v. McLain, 5 L.R.A. 400, 10 S.E. 11, 33 W. Va. 32, 1889 W. Va. LEXIS 3 (W. Va. 1889).

Opinion

English, Judge:

On the 8th day of May, 1886, Simon Kline and Kalph Kline, partners under the firm name and style of Kline Bros., brought an action of trespass on the case in assumpsit against H. B. and K. B. McLain, laying their damages at $10,000.00, in the Circuit Court of Ohio county, and filed their declaration at rules held on the first Monday in July, 1886, to which declaration the defendants demurred, and on consideration the court below sustained the said demurrer as to the first two or special counts, and o\ erruled the same as to the other or common counts, and thereupon the plaintiffs obtained leave to amend, and on the 14th day of January, 1887, the plaintiffs tendered for filing an amended declaration, to which the defendants objected on the ground that the same and each [33]*33count thereof was insufficient in law, which objection being argued by counsel and considered by the court were sustained; and afterwards, on the 14th day of February, 1887, the plaintiffs tendered another amended declaration, to each count of which the defendants demurred, which demurrer was sustained by the court, and, the plaintiffs electing not to further amend, their action was dismissed with costs and afterwards, to wit, on the 7th day of October, 1887, the plaintiffs moved the court to set aside the judgment entered in this cause at that term, and for leave to file an amended declaration therein; and on the 8th day of October, 1887, no cause being shown by the plaintiffs in support of their motion to set aside said judgment, the said motion was overruled, and the plaintiffs applied for and obtained a writ of error and supersedeas to said judgment.

As there was no bill of exceptions taken in the case, the facts can only be ascertained, so far as they appear in the pleadings. From the first count in the last amended declaration filed by plaintiffs it appears, that defendants were the owners of a three-story brick building situated in the city of Wheeling, the locality of which is therein described, and that by an agreement in writing dated October 22, 1882, said defendants leased to plaintiffs the first story of said building for the period of one year next ensuing from the 1st of April, 1888, to be used as a store-room, which lease by its terms provided,-that the rental should be $800.00 per annum, payable quarterly from the 1st day of April, 3883, and that the plaintiffs should keep the building in repair except as to “unavoidable accidents and natural wear and tear,” which said exception of “unavoidable accidents” was construed and understood by and between both plaintiffs and defendants at the time of the execution of the lease and ever . afterwards as imposing upon the defendants the obligation, in consideration of which they (defendants) promised and undertook to keep said building in repair as to and against unavoidable accidents, and the plaintiffs averred, that such construction was the true intent and meaning of said clause, as understood and meant 'by both plaintiffs and defendants in the making and executing of the said contract and lease.

The plaintiffs in the second count aver, that said lease by [34]*34indorsements made thereon at different times was extended until the 31st day of March, 1888; that immediately after the execution of said lease they took possession of the room demised to them as aforesaid and put and placed therein a large stock of ready-made clothing and other goods, wares and merchandise and commenced carrying on in and at said room a wholesale and retail and jobbing clothing and other business store and trade, and established and built up a very large and profitable wholesale, retail and jobbing trade and business, which they continued to conduct and carry on until compelled by reason of the negligence, wrong and breach of contract of the defendants, as is thereinafter stated and set forth, to vacate and remove their said store from said room.

The plaintiffs further aver, that during the time of their occupancy under the lease aforesaid of said room they not only paid their rent but kept the said room in repair, as they had contracted to do except as to “unavoidable accidents and natural wear and tear,” and that the said store-room became by reason of an unavoidable accident uninhabit-table and unfit for the purposes, for which it was rented, and that the defendants, although frequently notified of the fact and requested to make said store-room habitable and fit for the purpose, for which it was rented by making the repairs, which were made necessary by the unavoidable accident aforesaid, did at the time aforesaid fail, neglect and refuse to, as by the terms of said lease and the mutual construction thereof they (defendants) promised and undertook to do, repair the injury occasioned by the said unavoidable accident; that the unavoidable accident, which occurred to the said store-room, and which rendered the same uninhabitable and unfit for use of any kind, and which, though often requested, the defendants refused to repair, consisted of the swaying, falling out and bulging out of the two parallel side walls of the brick store-room, which was caused by the great weight of the walls and building of the second and third stories immediately upon and above the said storeroom, which was so great as to make it dangerous, and as to make it necessary to tear down the western wall of said room, and the wall of the rooms above, to the foundation; [35]*35that the fire-wardens of the city condemned the said wall and store-room as unsafe, dangerous and uninhabitable, and the insurance-companies, in which the plaintiffs had their lives and stock of merchandise insured notified plaintiffs, that said companies would consider the plaintiffs’ longer remaining in said store-rooms as just ground for cancel-ling the policies they held on their lives and their stock all of which the defendants had notice; and that, although often requested, the defendants refused and neglected to make said repairs; that by reason of said unavoidable accident, and the failure and neglect of the defendants to make the repairs made necessary by the same, they were compelled to remove and did remove, their stock of goods, wares and merchandise out of the said store-room, and that thereby they sustained great loss, damage and injury for various reasons therein set forth and were compelled to abandon and did abandon their entire wholesale and jobbing trade; that in consideration of the payment of said $800.00 per annum and the beeping of said building in repair, except as to unavoidable accidents and natural wear and tear, the defendants wrere by the said lease obligated, and it became their duty, and in consideration thereof defendants undertook to furnish to them the entire and full use and benefit of said room for the purpose, for which it was intended and rented, for the term of the said lease.

The plaintiffs in their declaration made other averments as to the character and extent of the damages sustained by them by reason of said unavoidable accident and the failure and refusal of the defendants to repair the same, although often requested so do to, and that by reason of the premises the defendants were guilty of a breach of their contract of leasing, and the plaintiffs were compelled to abandon and did abandon their wholesale and jobbing trade to the damage of the plaintiffs $10,000.00, which the defendants undertook and promised to pay etc., but which they have failed to do although often requested ete., to the damage of the plaintiffs $10,000 00.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 L.R.A. 400, 10 S.E. 11, 33 W. Va. 32, 1889 W. Va. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kline-v-mclain-wva-1889.