Meyers v. Drewes
This text of 196 So. 2d 607 (Meyers v. Drewes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Joseph C. MEYERS, Jr.
v.
Lloyd E. DREWES, Jr.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
*608 John B. Wilkinson, New Orleans, for Joseph C. Meyers, Jr., plaintiff-appellant and defendant in reconvention.
William P. Rutledge, New Orleans, for Lloyd E. Drewes, defendant-appellant and plaintiff in reconvention.
Before YARRUT, CHASEZ and HALL, JJ.
HALL, Judge.
Plaintiff, lessor of the premises known as Apartment "B", 5607 Prytania Street in the City of New Orleans, filed this suit against his lessee for $440.00 representing rental for the unexpired term of a written lease plus 20% thereof as attorney's fees together with interest and costs.
Defendant answered alleging that he and his family had been constructively evicted from the apartment by reason of the fact that the apartment was unfit for human habitation and therefore plaintiff was not entitled to recover any rental. Defendant also filed a reconventional demand for $1,302.30 for damages allegedly occasioned to certain articles of clothing and furniture by the condition of the apartment and for damages for worry, concern, embarrassment and physical discomfort suffered by him.
Following trial on the merits the Trial Judge rendered judgment in plaintiff's favor for the amount of rental and attorney's fees prayed for plus interest and costs; and rendered further judgment in defendant's favor in the sum of $580.00 on his reconventional demand. Both parties appealed.
The record reveals that the defendant first entered the apartment under a written lease from plaintiff, the term of which commenced on August 1, 1964 and expired on September 30, 1965.
On September 29, 1965 the parties entered into a second lease of the apartment for the term commencing October 1, 1965 and ending September 30, 1966. The two leases are on the standard form of the Real Estate Board of New Orleans and are similar in all of their terms and conditions. Plaintiff occupied the apartment and paid the rental due throughout the term of the first lease without complaint of any kind. The second lease was entered into just twenty days after Hurricane "Betsy", which occurred on September 9, 1965. The only complaint which defendant made of any damage occasioned by the storm was in response to a post card which plaintiff sent his tenants *609 sometime in October making inquiries as to storm damage. Defendant's only complaint was that one pane of glass had been broken by the force of the wind.
Defendant made no complaint whatever either to plaintiff or his agent until sometime in January 1966 when he telephoned plaintiff's agent complaining of the condition of the apartment and requested that he be released from the lease. According to defendant this telephone conversation took place on January 17th. Testimony on behalf of plaintiff places the date as January 20th. At any rate defendant addressed a letter to plaintiff's agent on January 20, 1966 stating "As per your request today, I am hereby sending you a report of the conditions of our apartment." Then follows a list in which defendant refers to excessive moisture causing mildew, mold and sweating of the walls bringing on cold after cold to his child and also causing damage to his clothes and furniture. He also refers to the broken pane of glass which had not been repaired since the storm, to leaking plumbing in the bathroom and inadequate wall heaters which he states "are outdated and poor burning, heating only the ceiling and upper parts of rooms, while floors and people remain uncomfortable." Because of these conditions defendant requested that he be released from the lease. Plaintiff's agent answered this letter on January 21, 1966 stating that plaintiff would not agree to a cancellation of the lease but that he would permit defendant to sub-lease the apartment (subleasing having been prohibited by the terms of the lease) and offered to assist him in finding a tenant.
Defendant moved out of the apartment on January 31, 1966 without communicating further with lessor or his agent. The first knowledge that they received of defendant's action was upon receipt of a letter from defendant's attorney dated February 2, 1966. On February 10th when the rent for February became due plaintiff made demand upon defendant for payment. The rental not being paid plaintiff filed this suit on March 29, 1966 praying for rental due for the balance of the term of the lease amounting to $440.00 plus 20% attorney's fees carried by the lease.
Plaintiff made prima facie proof of his case. The questions presented are (1) whether defendant was constructively evicted from the apartment and therefore justified in refusing to pay the rent, and, (2) whether defendant is entitled to damages on his reconventional demand.
Defendant contends that he was constructively evicted by reason of the fact that the apartment became unfit to live in. The only testimony in the record pertaining to the apartment's condition is that given by plaintiff and his wife.
Their main complaint was with reference to the gas wall heaters which they testified were old and antiquated, with dirty burners rendering it impossible to get them to burn properly with a clear blue flame. As a consequence condensation formed in the apartment causing mildew to form on walls, furniture and on their clothing. They testified that the walls sweated to such an extent that water actually dripped onto the floors and formed in sheets and puddles. They testified they could not walk about the apartment either bare-footed or in socks, and were unable to allow the baby to crawl about the floor; that water actually dripped from the baby's mattress and that the infant developed a severe cold and was unable to get rid of it. They also complained of one occasion in November 1965 during a week of rain that water leaked into the apartment at the base board and attributed this to the fact that the roof had been damaged during the hurricane. The record however reveals that the apartment which defendant occupied was a lower apartment and was one of twelve under the same roof; that although the roof sustained some damage during the hurricane, the damage was to a part of the proof on the other side of the building, and was repaired as soon as plaintiff was able to procure a roofer. The record also reveals that none of the other apartments in the building, upper or lower, had *610 any damage. We are of the opinion that none of the complaints of defendant can be attributed to the roof or to any structural defect in the building or in defendant's apartment. They also complained of leaky plumbing in the bathroom, but apparently the water complained of did not come from this source. Neither did it come from the broken window. We are convinced that the condition of the apartment as described by defendant and his wife was due to condensation caused by constant burning of the gas heaters.
Defendant admitted that he had made no complaint during his occupancy of the apartment under the first lease. He testified that when he rented the apartment the first time he and his wife had just been married; that both of them worked and spent very little time in the apartment even in the evenings or on week ends and that the heaters were not used to any great extent; that some mildew appeared on the walls during the winter of the first year but no complaints were made because they were able to control it by washing down the walls. A baby was born to the couple during the summer of their first year of occupancy of the apartment.
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196 So. 2d 607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyers-v-drewes-lactapp-1967.