Lawrence v. Rapaport

181 N.W. 1011, 213 Mich. 358, 1921 Mich. LEXIS 571
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1921
DocketDocket No. 67
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 181 N.W. 1011 (Lawrence v. Rapaport) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawrence v. Rapaport, 181 N.W. 1011, 213 Mich. 358, 1921 Mich. LEXIS 571 (Mich. 1921).

Opinion

Wiest, J.

This is an action for rent of premises leased by plaintiff to defendant for 5 years from the 1st day of February, 1915, and vacated by the defendant before the end of th© term. Under the plea of the general issue defendant gave notice of an eviction. The issues were submitted to a jury and verdict found for defendant. Defendant rented for the purpose of a retail clothing store the second floor at 222 Monroe avenue N. W., Grand Rapids, the premises having at •the time of the commencement of the lease a front entrance stairway, and at the rear a stationary stair leading to the alley and used to carry up fuel and some express and freight packages and to take down ashes and refuse. At the time defendant entered under the lease the lower floor of the building was let by plaintiff to another tenant and afterwards such lease of the lower floor was sublet by such tenant, with the consent of plaintiff, to one R. D. Carstens for use as a jewelry store. Mr. Carstens having a jewelry stock on the first floor and desiring to protect the windows at the rear opening upon the alley placed steel shutters over them to be closed at night and opened during the day. In order to install the shutters and permit them to be opened and closed it was found necessary to remove the stationary stair leading from the rear of defendant’s store to the alley and fix the same so that it could be raised up out of the way by means of pulleys and weights, and that was done, but without the consent of defendant. Thereupon trouble arose between defendant and plaintiff and the lower tenant and there is evidence in the case [361]*361that the shutters interfered with defendant’s beneficial use of the stairs, preventing him at times from bringing up his fuel and express and carrying down ashes and refuse.

One of the issues at the trial was whether the change as made materially affected the use of the stairs when lowered; defendant claiming that the stairs were changed into a mere fire escape and rendered practically useless, and plaintiff claiming that the stairway was never more than a fire escape and was not changed except to be made to be raised or lowered.

Another issue involved trouble between the defendant and plaintiff over the use made by plaintiff of the front stairway culminating in plaintiff calling defendant abusive names, and the defendant claimed that the plaintiff ordered him to vacate the premises and he did so. Plaintiff denied ordering defendant to vacate the premises and claimed he ordered him to vacate upper rooms which defendant had not rented.

The plaintiff moved for a new trial which was denied. The assignments of error bring up the questions of whether there was sufficient evidence to go to the jury upon the claimed eviction and whether the defendant had a right to vacate if told to do so by the plaintiff, even though before he vacated plaintiff informed him he was laboring under a misapprehension and must not vacate the premises. Plaintiff insists that he is not to be held for any interference arising out of the acts of the lower tenant. The record discloses plaintiff’s connection with the matter of the change in the stairway sufficient to remove the case from the rule with reference to the acts of third parties.

An eviction must be predicated upon the wrongful act of the landlord and those acting with his permission, and which results in an interference with the beneficial enjoyment of the use the tenant pays him [362]*362for. Here the lower tenant interfered with the upper one, and the landlord cannot, under the record herein, be heard to say that he is in no way responsible for the acts of the lower tenant. The landlord’s covenant for continued beneficial enjoyment on the tenant’s part does not, of course, make him guard the tenant against the wrongful acts of other persons, but does require him to see to it that the conveniences he has let for hire are not taken away or the beneficial use thereof interfered with) by any one who cannot, and does not, act except under his permission. It is clear that there was serious interference with the means of ingress and egress established and in use at the time of the letting. To transform a stationary stairway available for use at will to one that lifts up and out of the way of the lower tenant and open to use at the will of the lower tenant deprived defendant of a beneficial use of the stairway at his own will.

Had the case been submitted to the jury upon the sole issue of an eviction based upon deprivation of beneficial use of a part of the premises we should not feel inclined to disturb the verdict of the jury. The issues, however, as submitted, went beyond this and brought into the case the question of whether the plaintiff ordered the defendant to vacate the premises and the right of the defendant, if so ordered, to consider it an eviction and to vacate. If plaintiff ordered defendant to vacate the premises, as claimed, and defendant wrote him that he would do so and before he did so the plaintiff informed him that he had not ordered him to vacate and he must not do so and She would be held to his lease, then there was neither an eviction nor surrender of the premises by the defendant nor a release from his tenancy. The demand, if made, that the defendant vacate, not being operative when he did vacate, cannot be considered an eviction, and could not relieve defendant from the obligation [363]*363to pay rent. To constitute a wrongful demand for possession a justification for leaving the premises, the tenant must accede to the demand and the surrender must be complete before a countermand of the order to move.

■Plaintiff requested the court to charge the jury as follows:

“The defendant claims that the plaintiff ordered him to move, but does not deny that before he acted upon said order he was notified that he was mistaken as to plaintiff’s intention by letter written his counsel. . And I instruct you, gentlemen, that this order to move, if such there was, did not give the defendant the right to vacate the premises and cease paying.”

The court charged the jury upon this subject as follows:

“Taking up the other question of fact, if you find, as a matter of fact that the defendant’s claim is true that the plaintiff on this Saturday in January told the defendant, or notified the defendant, using opprobrious language in connection with such statement, that he should move out of the premises or his goods would be thrown out, and that the defendant within a reasonably short time did move out, in compliance with that request, the plaintiff cannot complain of it. It is claimed, and it has been argued, that after the receipt of the defendant’s letter written on the same day and addressed to the plaintiff, the plaintiff, through his counsel, replied to the defendant, correcting his claim and statement as to what took place on that Saturday.
“As a matter of law, I instruct you that that letter cáme too late if the defendant is telling the truth, and you so find, as to what took place on that Saturday. If the plaintiff’s claim is true, the defendant would not be justified in vacating the premises; he would have no claim or right under his lease to vacate the premises if the plaintiff’s version as to what took place there is true, and you so find. But, on the other hand, if the defendant’s version is true that the plaintiff told him to get out of the premises or he would throw him out, I instruct you that the defendant had a right to [364]*364take plaintiff at his word, if you find that language was used.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
181 N.W. 1011, 213 Mich. 358, 1921 Mich. LEXIS 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-v-rapaport-mich-1921.