Myers v. . Burns

35 N.Y. 269
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 35 N.Y. 269 (Myers v. . Burns) 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
Myers v. . Burns, 35 N.Y. 269 (N.Y. 1866).

Opinion

Hurt, J.

This is an action for rent on a lease, dated May 28th, 1856, brought by the grantee of the reversion against the assignee of the term. The present defendant went into possession of the premises September 20th, 1856.

The defense is a counterclaim, under a covenant of the landlord to keep the premises in repair. There is also connected with the covenant to repair, an agreement that if the premises were damaged by fire, so as to be unfit for a first-class hotel, the rent should abate. The counterclaim set up in the answer is, 1st, for $908, expended by the defendant in repairs; and 2d, for $700 damages occasioned by the loss of the use of four rooms, alleged to be untenantable for the want of repairs.

The rent due was $1,000, with interest from August 1st, 1858.

The jury found specially $752.57, amount of repairs made by the defendant, and $300 damages for the loss of the use Of the rooms. These amounts left a balance of $9.45 due to the defendant, for which he had a verdict.

The most important questions in the case were questions of fact, which were carefully and correctly submitted to the *270 jury upon the trial, and in relation to which their decision is final.

A question arose upon the charge for painting, on which an exception was taken hy the plaintiff. Certain portions of the wood work of the hotel were repainted by the defendant with zinc paint, which was about fifteen per cent more expensive than common lead paint, which was- the original style of painting, and was more durable and more ornamental. The court charged, that “ the defendant was entitled to recover the full expense of the' zinc paint, although it was ■more expensive than the description of paint ' originally employed, it appearing that it was more desirable and a better material than white lead.” This charge ..was correct. The plaintiff had the option of making these repairs by his own mechanics, and with such suitable materials as he should select. His omission to do so gave the defendant the right to make them by his mechanics, and with such suitable materials as he should select. He was bound to be reasonable and judicious in his repairs; but he was not compelled to select precisely the same kind- of paper'or paint, or . to -be .precise that the expense was not a farthing greater than had before been expended upon the same spot.. He was at liberty to repair according to the-, modern, style, .and adopt modern improvements. The testimony showed that the repair fdr the purpose in question was an useful one, that, it was- necessary, and that it was not extravagant. The charge of the judge, and the finding of the jury under it, are unexceptionable. .

The plaintiff also objects to the allowance of damages,- and to the rule of damages adopted, on account of the loss of the use of certain rooms through a defect in the flues of the chimney. It appears that, during-some portion of the time, four rooms fronting on Hicks ' street were of no use to the defendant. ■ When fires were kindled in them the flues-would not" draw, but the gas and smoke issued out into the rooms, rendering them uninhabitable. - The-court charged the jury “that the defendant was entitled'to recover of'the plaintiff as a-counterclaim,the damages-which he-, the defendant, had sustained by reason of the loss of- the use of the -rooms, so far *271 as caused "by a defect in the flues of the chimney, without reference to the cause of the defect, and that the fair value of the use of such rooms, for the time they were unoccupied by reason of such defect,, was the amount to .which the defendant was entitled.” This charge involved two propositions : first, that the plaintiff was responsible, although the defect in the flue was in its original construction, and had not occurred through dilapidation or decay; and secondly, that the loss of the use of the rooms afforded the rule of compensation, instead of the expense of actual repair by the defendant. The exception was to the entire charge as stated. If either of the propositions was correct, the exception was too general, and is unavailing. I think the charge, however, was correct in both aspects.

On the first point. The plaintiff’s grantor leased the premises in .question as a first-class hotel,” and he covenanted “ to keep the said hotel and premises in good necessary -repair during the term, at his own proper charge and expense.” Are the rooms of a hotel in good repair for such a purpose, when they are so smoky that they cannot be occupied; or when the more offensive coal gas issues at all times from the lighted grate and fills the room with its noxious substance 1 Ho tenant or occupant can inhabit such rooms when a fire is needed, and fires are needed in the city of Brooklyn during three-fourths of the year. A house or a room that cannot be comfortably and safely inhabited is not in good repair. A room in a first-class hotel, where women and children usually form portions of the-family, cannot be tenantable or in good repair unless a fire can be had when desired. Hor is it important, either to the tenant or landlord, whether such defects in the flues are caused by dilapidation or arise from original misconstruction. The rooms are equally untenantable and uninhabitable; they are equally out of repair, from which cause soever the difficulty may have arisen. The grates are in their places, and the flues are in the walls. Ho new structures of an origin al character, are required. It is only required that those in the building should be made to perform their proper duty. ' The party agrees to “ keep ” in repair, and if, to *272 keep in repair, it is necessary that the rooms should first be put in repair, the lessor is bound to perform that duty. (Mayne on Damages, 133; 92 Law Library; Payne v. Haines, 16 Mees. & Wels., 541.) There is no covenant that the rooms be kept in their then condition of repair, and no exception of natural wear and natural decay; but good repair and good condition, at all times, is the fair intent of the agreement. The requirements of a first-class hotel in Brooklyn demand all the comforts and conveniences, and many of the luxuries, of civilized life. Different standards of comfort and civilization prevail in different parts of the world. The location in question was that of the second city of the State, immediately adjoining the city of Mew York, and the general standard of that latitude must be assumed. A hotel of the first class, in such a location, without the means of heating its rooms, would not be tolerated. It would not, indeed, be a hotel of that character. If the rooms had been rendered untenantable, by water from the roof, would it have been an answer to the request to repair, that the leak existed when the lease was entered into ? If the ceilings had fallen, or the rooms were filthy from dirt and want óf paint, it certainly would have been no answer, that they were in that condition when the lease was made. The condition of the covenant, to keep in repair, as already stated, can only be performed by first putting in repair, when that is necessary. (Beach v. Crain, 2 Com., 86, and cases supra.)

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Bluebook (online)
35 N.Y. 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myers-v-burns-ny-1866.