Ray Realty Co. v. Holtzman

119 S.W.2d 981, 234 Mo. App. 802, 1938 Mo. App. LEXIS 92
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 30, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 119 S.W.2d 981 (Ray Realty Co. v. Holtzman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ray Realty Co. v. Holtzman, 119 S.W.2d 981, 234 Mo. App. 802, 1938 Mo. App. LEXIS 92 (Mo. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

McCULLEN, J.:

This suit was begun in a justice .of the peace court in the City of St. Louis by appellant herein, who will be referred to herein as plaintiff, to recover from respondent, who will be referred to as. defendant, the sum of $510, as rent for an apartment from September 3, 1931, to March 2, 1932, a period of six months, at $85 per month.

Plaintiff alleged in its petition in the justice of the peace court that defendant had entered into a lease with it for said apartment for a term of two years from March 3.,, 1930, an,d had paid the rent under said lease up to. September 2, 1931, and had abandoned- the premises on October 6, 1931, and paid no further rent.

Defendant filed an answer in which he admitted the lease and the tenancy, and pleaded that plaintiff had installed an incinerator in the apartment building; which, because of its:failure to.destroy and; dispose of, the garbage- that accumulated .therein, caused, allowed and permitted,, rats, mice, roaches,, and bugs to overrun the premises *805 occupied by defendant;-and caused an obnoxious odor therein on account of dead.rats and mice remaining 'in a decomposed-condition ¡between the walls and under the -floors’; and that plaintiff, although informed thereof, failed to remedy -said condition, thereby allowing and permitting the premises to become untenantable and unfit for peaceful occupancy by defendant. :Defendant admitted in -his answer that when he -abandoned -the premises, there was rent from September 3rd to October 6th, 1931, amounting to ‘$93.50, unpaid and due -to -plaintiff, and stated in his answer that “defendant hereby tenders into.this court the said sum of $93.50 for the benefit of the plaintiff. ’ ’ included in the answer of 'defendant was . a “Counterclaim or Set-Off” in which defendant asked for damages by way of a set-off in the sum of $60.05, for-money--expended by him for renovation and repair of his rugs-and furniture, and the cost of removing, his household-goods from the premises.

The trial before the justice of the peace -resulted in a judgment ■in favor of defendant. Plaintiff appealed from that judgment to the circuit court, where a trial was had before the court without a jury, a. jury having been -waived, resulting in a judgment for plaintiff for $93.50; and also, for plaintiff-on defendant’s counterclaim, but the costs of the case were adjudged against plaintiff. The court made a separate finding of facts. After an unavailing motion for a new trial, plaintiff brings the case to this, court by appeal.

Plaintiff contends that the finding of the circuit court that defendant was deprived of the beneficial use of ’the premises because of the presence’of vermin therein-is without any -support in the evidence. It is also contended by plaintiff that the’finding of the court that plaintiff, as landlord, was responsible for. the presence of vermin on the premises during the period of the lease because of neglect -to properly consume the -garbage in -the incinerator, which was the direct reason for the presence of vermin in said apartment in such great numbers,'has no support in the- evidence.

An examination of the evidence shows that this complaint is not well founded. Plaintiff produced only two witnesses — -Mr. and Mrs. Leon Marglous. Mr. Marglous was vice ’president and -Mrs. Marglous was secretary of the plaintiff corporation.

Mrs. Marglous testified that -she-managed ¡the‘apartment; that'it was a-six-family apartment;-that a;new incinerator was put in the building in 1927; that it was necessáry to keep a -fire in it ‘every morning-to burn Up -all-the garbage thrown insthe incinerator. She said: “I received reports’from -Mr. Holtzman that there were rats and mice in the building, but-we had an Exterminator’to take care of them.” . .’’She-further testified that she ’had no -record of the 'number of times the -exterminator company had been out there; •that .the agreement with the exterminator company was for once a *806 month', but that she would call whenever it was necessary. Mrs. Marglous further testified that she notified Wilson, the janitor at the building, about “complaints from Holtzman about the bugs and rats around there.” In this connection Mrs. Marglous said: “I received numerous complaints from Holtzman, and I told the janitor to watch it more carefully and to watch the building more careful on account of receiving several complaints.” She stated that she had inspected the premises occupied by defendant Holtzman, and “I did not see any rats and bugs in their home but I did see some in the basement. . . . When we received a complaint of an odor, I told him why not investigate the plaster walls of the basement. ’ ’

It appears from the evidence, without contradiction, that defendant sent a letter of complaint to Henry E. Weisels Co., Inc., agent of plaintiff for the property in question, in which he stated that during the past year he and his wife had reported the condition complained of to the agent and to Mr. Marglous. In that letter defendant said:

“An influx of black bugs, mice, and the odor in our place is simply unbearable. Have taken the matter up with your janitor, Wilson, and he tells us that the only possible explanation of same is that one or several mice or rats which ate some of the stuff left by the exterminator on the premises crawled in between the walls or partitions and died, therefore he can do nothing to remedy same.”

In the same letter defendant stated that he would be forced to vacate if the condition was not remedied within ten days; that his wife was ill from said conditions; and that “several nights ago, we invited some friends for the evening, and the odor was so terrible we had to take them out for a ride to get away from same.” It further appears that the letter of complaint sent by defendant was received by plaintiff’s agent, who stated, in acknowledging receipt thereof, that the same had been forwarded to the owner with instructions to take care of it at once. The letter of complaint sent by defendant was dated April 16, 1931, and the letter of plaintiff’s agent acknowledging receipt thereof was dated April 20, 1931.

Cornelius Wilson testified on behalf of defendant that he was janitor in charge of the premises mentioned during the period of time defendant occupied one of the apartments therein; that before defendant moved out of the apartment, witness had occasion to tear up part of the ceiling to remove dead mice, and removed four; that he reported to Mrs. Marglous, and also to the exterminator company that had been working there, that “there were bugs around the place while the Holtzmans lived there.” Asked as to the cause of the bugs, the witness said: “Well, I could not say whether it was from the incinerator or not, but they were there.” The witness further testified that to relieve the condition of the *807 bugs around there, he would spray the kitchen and then on the outside between the window jambs, and the two kitchen windows; that after he sprayed the kitchen, Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
119 S.W.2d 981, 234 Mo. App. 802, 1938 Mo. App. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ray-realty-co-v-holtzman-moctapp-1938.