McCulloch v. . Dobson

30 N.E. 641, 133 N.Y. 114, 44 N.Y. St. Rep. 89, 88 Sickels 114, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1289
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 12, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 30 N.E. 641 (McCulloch v. . Dobson) 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
McCulloch v. . Dobson, 30 N.E. 641, 133 N.Y. 114, 44 N.Y. St. Rep. 89, 88 Sickels 114, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1289 (N.Y. 1892).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

The plaintiff’s action was for the recovery of damages for the breach, by the defendants, of the covenants of a lease of a silk mill and machinery, executed and Bearing date September 4, 1884, for a period of two years from the thirtieth of September following. The defendants entered into possession of the demised premises, and occupied them for the term and paid the stipulated rent of $5,000 per annum. The covenant upon which this action depended was to the effect that the defendants, during the term would, at their own expense, keep and maintain the mill, water-power, machinery, tools and appurtenances, including the dam and race-way, in good repair and condition, and further, that after the expiration of the term, they would surrender the demised premises in as good condition as reasonable use and wear thereof would permit. The complaint charges a breach of these covenants in various particulars, not important now to specify, on account of which a large sum was claimed as damages. The- defendants covenanted in the lease not to run the mill over-time, without the consent of the underwriters and companies insuring the same first had, and in case permission to do so was given, they were to pay the jilaintiff any additional sum that he would be, for this reason, obliged to pay as premium on the risk insured. That the defendants, in compliance with the lease, gave the plaintiff notice on March 3, 1885, that it was ••their intention to run the mill over-time, and requested the plaintiff to get the consent of the insurance companies foi that purpose, with which request the plaintiff complied, at an expense to him of $300 in additional premiums, which the defendants never refunded. The defendants’ answer put in issue all the allegations of the complaint, with respect to a breach of the covenants of the lease and for a separate defense, and as a counter-claim alleged that both prior to and at the *120 time of the execution of the lease the plaintiff promised and agreed with the defendants that he would, at his own expense, make such repairs to the premises, appurtenances and machinery about to be included in the lease as would be sufficient to put the same in good, full and complete working order and repair, prior to the time that the defendants’ right of entry should accrue. That the. defendants refused to sign the lease until such repairs were made, or until plaintiff promised so to do, Whereupon the plaintiff, as an inducement to the defendants to execute the lease, and in consideration thereof, agreed to put the premises and machinery covered by the lease in good, full and complete working order and repair. That in pursuance of this agreement the plaintiff requested and employed the defendants to make the repairs themselves at his expense. That in making the repairs contemplated they performed labor and furnished materials of the value of $2,500 and upwards, which the plaintiff had not paid to them. After the covenant in the lease providing for the surrender of the premises, follows this provision : “ It being understood that the said premises shall be in good repair before entry of the said party of the second part, and it is also agreed that the said party of the first part shall put in steam pipes for heating.”

' The issues were tried by a referee, who found that the plaintiff stipulated in the lease to put the premises in repair before entry by defendants, and that the plaintiff agreed, by paroi, that if defendants would make such repairs he' would pay to them the cost of the same. That the defendants then did make such repairs which the plaintiff was bound to make under the agreement at a cost in all of $2,413.15. He also found that the defendants surrendered the demised premises at the expiration of the term in as good condition, reasonable wear and tear excepted, as they were in when received from the plaintiff, and bettered by at least the amount above mentioned expended by the defendants in the repair of the property. That, besides the sum so expended, the defendants during the term expended a large sum in keeping and maintaining the demised premises in good order and that they did *121 keep and maintain the property ill as good order and condition as that in which they had received them, except that they failed to surrender and turn over to the plaintiff certain machinery and tools, covered by the lease, of the value of $20. He sustained the plaintiff’s claim for additional premiums paid by reason of running the mill overtime and found the amount to be $302.12 which the defendants had not refunded. He then deducted the two sums found in favor of the plaintiff from the sum found in favor of the defendants and directed judgment in favor of the defendants for the balance, $2,031.03, and that the complaint be dismissed.

The covenants of the lease, when all read together, mean that the lessor will put the premises in good working order and repair before the commencement of the term, that the lessees will then keep them in repair and at the end of the term surrender them to the lessor in as good condition as they were in at the commencement of the term, when the lessor had performed his covenant to put them in good working order, ordinary use and wear excepted. The tenant was to receive the demised premises in good working order and repair, and he was to leave them in that condition as near as reasonable use and wear would permit.

Whether there was a breach of the covenants of the lease on the part of the defendants in failing to keep the premises in repair, or in failing to surrender them in the condition' required by the lease, "was a question of fact which has been determined against the plaintiff by the referee upon a mass of conflicting evidence, and in this court his finding on that point must be treated as conclusive.

It is not important to consider the effect of the plaintiff’s paroi promise to put the premises in a good and tenantable -condition before the commencement of the term, because the lease itself contains a sufficient provision on this subject. The plaintiff’s paroi request to the defendants, after the delivery of the lease, to make the repairs contemplated, and his promise to indemnify them for the cost, was certainly binding upon him, The request and promise, as well as the extent and cost *122 of the repairs, involved a question of fact which the referee has determined against the plaintiff. The voluminous record before us contains a mass of evidence bearing on the two questions referred to, but the most favorable view that can be taken for the plaintiff wrould be obliged to admit that ic was at least conflicting. In this court any discussion of it would be quite useless, as the finding of the referee must be accepted as the true state of the facts.

The plaintiff’s counsel has called our attention to various requests presented to the referee to find upon the evidence the facts therein incorporated. We have examined them with some care, and think it is sufficient to say with respect to them that none of the requests that were material or that the plaintiff was entitled to have passed upon by the referee, were so conclusively established by proof as to warrant this court in holding that there was legal error in declining to find as requested.

The learned counsel for the plaintiff argues, as ground of error, requiring this court to reverse the judgment, the omission of the referee to indicate, upon the margin of the.

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Bluebook (online)
30 N.E. 641, 133 N.Y. 114, 44 N.Y. St. Rep. 89, 88 Sickels 114, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcculloch-v-dobson-ny-1892.