Leibschutz v. Black

1 Hosea's Rep. 377
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedJuly 1, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Hosea's Rep. 377 (Leibschutz v. Black) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leibschutz v. Black, 1 Hosea's Rep. 377 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

Hosea, J.

Injunction to restrain dispossession.

Plaintiff is lessee, under an un'expired lease, of a storeroom twenty by forty feet, fronting on the west side of Race street, above Sixth street; at the corner of an alley. The premises are part of a large building fronting about fifty feet on .Sixth street, at the northwest corner of Race ■and Sixth, and extending northward ninety feet on Race to the alley. The entire building, although under one roof, is made up of several buildings, as originally constructed at different times, with an average life of about fifty years.

The lease to plaintiff, from the trustees of the Frank estate, was made on November —, 1903, for the “store-room, No. 607 Race street,” for the “term of two years, three months and twenty days, ending February 28, 1906,” at a monthly rental, .(in the usual form of lease, commonly called the “short form”), and contains the following covenants :

“It is agreed that the lessees are to take the aforesaid premises as they now are and to make all improvements and repairs, etc.
“It is also agreed that if said lessees shall perform their •obligations under this lease they shall quietly have and enjoy said premises during said term free from molestation from said lessors.”

There is a further clause releasing the lessee from rent in case the premises are destroyed or rendered untenantable by fire or other' casualty.

[379]*379On July 6, 1904, the trustees were served with a notice by the building inspector of the city of Cincinnati, setting forth that, as the building fronting fifty feet on Sixth street and extending back fifty feet, being quite old, and, by reason of extensive changes and alterations made at various times, had become very materially impaired in stability so as to warrant the belief that its failure was imminent, and that its structure and. condition made it a “death trap” and “unfit for occupancy, and a menace to.life and property,” they were required to have the building vacated without unnecessary delay, and all weak and defective portions reconstructed, etc., and, if found impracticable to repair, to proceed with immediate removal; in default of which the inspector would proceed as the law directs and assess 'all costs against the property.

On August 9, 1904, the building inspector served upon the trustees, defendants, a substantially similar notice as to the building adjacent to that mentioned, on the north, 'fronting forty feet on Race, including plaintiff’s store-room, stating that said building was unsafe and dangerous for reasons set forth, and that the condition of its walls would become hazardous “if disturbed through fire or the demolition of the buildings adjoining to the south;” and that “the whole structure would become unsafe and liable to collapse, should the adjoining buildings, of which they are a part, be razed, and would also have to be taken down.”

The testimony of the building inspector on the stand in this case, confirms in greater fulness and detail his views and observations of the unsafe condition of the entire building, and his attitude of refusal to permit any attempts at repair or reconstruction other than by first razing the entire structure — considering the whole as one structure.

Testimony of architects was introduced to show that it would be practicable, by shoring and other repairs, to make the north building reasonably safe; but it does not seem to me that any such testimony can be considered except where fraud on the part of the inspector is charged.

As early as “Mouse’s case,” 12 Co., 63, the right to pull -down a house to prevent spread of fire was sustained; and [380]*380the same thing is held in a case in 4 Term, 797, wherein Buller, Justice, bases this right on the ancient maxim, "Salus populi est suprema lex.”

In an early Massachusetts case, on the same subject, Taylor v. Plymouth (Inhabitants), 49 Mass. (8 Metc.), 462, 465, the court says:

“If there be no necessity, then the individuals who do the act shall be responsible. This is the more reasonable, as the law has vested the authority in the proper officers, to judge of that necessity.”

The municipal code of this state, adopted in 1902 (96 O. L., 23, Sec. 7, Par. 13), confers upon cities general power, “to provide for the removal and repair of insecure buildings.” This power had long been exercised theretofore under special laws of the state, and ordinances of the city passed in pursuance of such laws. .

The building inspector is appointed, and his powers defined under ordinance 218, passed August 15, 1898, but amended — as to Section 6, which is here in question — June 9, 1902.

Speaking generally, he is authorized to examine buildings thought to be insecure and give orders for their repair, etc., and it is made a penal offense for owners to fail to comply with his orders in the premises. He is also vested with authority to permit or refuse specific repairs.

In Connors v. New York (Mayor), 11 Hun., 439, it is held that:

“The powers conferred on this department (bldgs., etc.) are in' many respects judicial, and the machinery of the law is put summarily in motion where the dep’t. acting under the laws, calls for its application.” (Citing Maxmilian v. New York (Mayor), 62 N. Y., 160.)

In Snarr v. Baldwin, 11 Up. Can. Com. Pl., 353, there is a full discussion of the effect of the action of city authorities upon the contract relations of lessor and lessee. It is there held that the right of the city was not a title paramount in law, but a superior authority; that the covenant [381]*381for quiet enjoyment is simply indemnity against acts of particular persons, that is, those having lawful title before the covenant was entered into; and that the rule that a contract may be dissolved by superior authority so as to absolve a contractor from performance, applies in such cases.

The same principle is illustrated in a series of cases showing that when a performance of a condition of a contract becomes impossible by the operation and effect of a statute, and performance becomes thereby illegal, performance is excused. Shellington v. Howland, 53 N. Y., 371, 372.

In Heine v. Meyer, 61 N. Y., 171, it is held that when a contractor is stopped in the work of repairing a building by the building inspector, further performance is excused, but he may sue and recover for the work done, provided the defect is not of his making. And to the same effect are: Jones v. Judd, 4 N. Y. (4 Const.), 411; Niblo v. Binsse, 1 Keyes (N. Y.), 476.

In Ohio, the rule of “caveat emptor” is well established as applicable to the rights and obligations of the lessee.

In Jones v. Roberts, 1 Dec., 572 (32 Bull., 118), Judge Pugh, of the Franklin common pleas, cites Bowe v. Hunking, 135 Mass., 380, 386 (46 Am. Rep., 471), quotes the statement therefrom that “the law is unusually strict in exempting the landlord from liability for injuries arising from defects where there is no warranty and no actual deceit,” and himself deduces the rule that the tenant assumes all risks of the premises being uninhabitable and unsafe, in the absence of a warranty in the contract.

In Burdick v.

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Related

Sprigg v. Garrett Park
43 A. 813 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1899)
Heine v. . Meyer
61 N.Y. 171 (New York Court of Appeals, 1874)
Shellington v. . Howland
53 N.Y. 371 (New York Court of Appeals, 1873)
Maxmilian v. . Mayor
62 N.Y. 160 (New York Court of Appeals, 1875)
Steefel v. Rothschild
64 A.D. 293 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1901)
Connor v. Bernheimer
6 Daly 295 (New York Court of Common Pleas, 1875)
Bowe v. Hunking
135 Mass. 380 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1883)
Kansas Investment Co. v. Carter
36 N.E. 63 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1894)
Shinkle, Wilson & Kreis Co. v. Birney
67 N.E. 715 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1903)
Silber v. Larkin
68 N.W. 406 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1896)

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1 Hosea's Rep. 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leibschutz-v-black-ohsuperctcinci-1907.