Vincent v. Frelich

23 So. 373, 50 La. Ann. 378, 1898 La. LEXIS 460
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 24, 1898
DocketNo. 12,607
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 23 So. 373 (Vincent v. Frelich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vincent v. Frelich, 23 So. 373, 50 La. Ann. 378, 1898 La. LEXIS 460 (La. 1898).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Breaux, J.

This was an action for rental.

The lease was entered into for five years, beginning May, 1898.,

The rental was one hundred and fifty dollars a month. Two four-•story brick stores, Nos. 226 and 228 Decatur, of this city, was the property leased. They were connected by open arches in the •dividing wall; one could step or move goods from one building •to the other; they were fitted up for defendant’s plant.

[380]*380A fire on September 5, 1896, damaged one of the buildings leased, also the plant of the lessees. They were manufacturers of jeans clothing, and the buildings had been fitted up for the particular business in which the defendants were engaged.

Immediately after the fire, the tenants surrendered possession to the insurance companies in which they were insured, for adjustment of the loss and settlement. They held possession until the 23d of September, and during their possession they refused to permit the builder employed by the landlord to enter the building to work thereon as he had contracted. After the insurance adjuster had completed the adjustment of the loss of the tenants, the latter resumed their possession, and retained it a few days.

The contract of lease between the plaintiff and defendant contains the usual clauses of leases, save the following, which was also inserted in the contract: Should the property be destroyed by fire, or should the lessee be deprived of the use of said premises by some other unfortunate event, not due to any fault or neglect on their part, then the lessee shall be entitled to a credit for the unexpired time of the lease;” and the following: “ No repairs shall be due to the lessee except such as may be needed to the roof or floor, or rendered necessary by fire or other casualty, not occasioned by the lessees fault or negligence.”

Returning to the matter of the extent of the injury done td the building, the testimony shows that one of the roofs, that on building 228, was destroyed by the fire, and part of the building; a detail statement given shows that the injury (in addition to the destruction of the roof) was to the upper floors, stairway and water-closets which were in the building 228.

The building adjoining, 226, was not as badly damaged. The builder, by whom the injury, after the fire, was carefully examined, to whose testimony much weight is given by all parties to the suit, testified that the defendants could have continued the operations of their plant after the damage, had they chosen so to do, until the end of his contract.

• The plaintiff immediately after the fire offered another building to the defendants to store away their property, until the repairs were made. He also after they had refused to continue their lease placed, a notice to let ” on the buildings.

It also appeared that the defendants desired to lessen the extent [381]*381of their business; that they became the lessees of a seventy-five dollars a month one-building place, instead of plaintiff’s one hundred ar.d fifty dollars a month two-building place; that defendants di\3 not make the least inquiry of the builder, who was anxiously awaiting to begin the work of repairing. It is also in evidence that such was the condition of defendant’s factory after the fire that it would not have been possible for them to resume operations in twice the number of days needed for the repair of the buildings.

These are the prominent facts.

From an adverse judgment the defendants prosecute this appeal.

The damages to the building rendered them, in their unrestored condition, unfit for the purpose for which they were leased. One of the buildings, however, was only in a small degree damaged.

Experienced mechanics, who had carefully examined the leased property, were decidedly of the opinion that the less-damaged building could have been occupied by the tenant while the building badly damaged was being repaired.

The builder and contractor, who had bound himself to make needful repairs on these buildings in seventeen days, testified that he had examined the property thoroughly, to see how much the repairs would cost. That the work required consisted of repairs and not of reconstruction; that the defendants might, while he was at work in one of the buildings, have occupied the other; that such moving is a little inconvenient, but that it is done frequently. The testimony of this witness is corroborated by another builder and contractor. They had.the experience rendering them competent to judge the extent of the damage, and the amount it was worth, and the time it would take; they also are presumed to have a practical knowledge of the difference between repairs and reconstruction. Their evidence in a case such as the one before us for determination should evidently have more weight than that of the merchant or manufacturer of clothing, however skilful he may be in his business.

The question involved is more particularly within the domain o,f the architect than of the jurisconsult. Baudry-Lacantinerie, Vol. 3, p. 409.

The following we translate from Laurent, Vol. 25, p. 121:

“ The ordinary carpenter,” said Laurent, “ would have taught Troplong that his notion of repairs is not correct, and that no one [382]*382has ever thought of releasing a lessor from making the repairs he mentions.”

Prom another section of the work of the same commentator we translate: The facts in each ease almost always give rise to discussion (Ib., par. 41).

From Dalloz we glean: It is for the court as a matter of fact, and not strictly of law, to determine whether it is a matter of “ reconstruction ” and not of repairs, after having heard a report of expert builders. If the repairs require only a short delay within which it is possible to make them, and the proprietor offers to the tenant another house temporarily, the lessee has no ground of action to dissolve (par. 181, Vol. 30, p. 307).

Here defendant’s witness, Richard, corroborated by Mass, were the only witnesses in the case who had practical knowledge of building. They testified that the work consisted of repairs,” and not reconstruction.”

A building, as we understand, is repaired “ after it-has been damaged;” it is reconstructed after it has been demolished as a whole or in part.

The cost of repairing in the case here was much less than the value of the whole building.

Marcadé, Vol. 6, p. 450, thus expresses his views under similar articles of the Oode to ours: When the fire of heaven or any other

unforeseen cause of destruction strike a building, three things are possible:

It may be completely destroyed, it may be destroyed in part, or it may be only damaged. Without question every demolishment is a destruction, and if a violent blast of wind causes the fall of a chimney, it might be said that there is a partial destruction of the house, the chimney being destroyed; but this reasoning is not exact, and when, as in the case supposed by M.

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Bluebook (online)
23 So. 373, 50 La. Ann. 378, 1898 La. LEXIS 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vincent-v-frelich-la-1898.