Court Opinion

ID: 6414304
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 11:55:00.29101+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:51:28.907941
License: Public Domain

Gray, J.
By the indenture upon which this action is brought the defendant “ does lease, demise and let ” to the plaintiff a brick stable standing on the lessor’s own land, and a wooden carriage-house standing on land held by him under a lease from others, with a provision that if they shall require the termination of that lease and the removal of the carriage-house, the plaintiff may terminate this lease. The lessor “ agrees to make all necessary repairs on the outside of said building.” The lessee agrees to pay a certain rent monthly, and to quit and deliver up the premises to the lessor at the end of the term “ in as good order and condition, reasonable use and wearing thereof, fire and other •unavoidable casualties excepted, as the same now are or may be put into by the said lessor; ” not to make or suffer any waste thereof; and “that the lessor may enter to view and make improvements, and to expel the lessee, if he shall fail to pay the rent as aforesaid, or make or suffer any strip or waste thereof. And said lessee is to make all necessary repairs on the inside of the building at his own expense.”
The brick stable is the building mentioned in the lease next before the lessor’s covenant lo make outside repairs; but we have no doubt that this covenant includes all the premises leased by the defendant to the plaintiff, the carriage-house as well as the stable. Indeed in the duplicate indenture in the hands of the defendant the plural word “buildings” is substituted for “ building ” in this covenant.
The facts agreed by the parties are as follows : The carriage-house was a frame covered with matched boards, had a shingled roof and a plank floor, and on the inside was left uncovered by lath or plaster. While the plaintiff was occupying the premises under the lease, a quantity of snow accumulated upon the roof *121of the carriage-house, until, at the close of a heavy snow storm, the carriage-house fell from the weight of snow, crushing and injuring the plaintiff’s carriages kept therein. The plaintiff after-wards demanded of the defendant that he should restore and rebuild the carriage-house, but the defendant refused to do so. There is nothing in the case to show that any negligence of either party contributed to the accident.
For five months succeeding the fall of the carriage-house, the plaintiff paid to the defendant, under protest, the rent reserved in the lease; and then, ceasing to pay rent, was ejected by the defendant. The lessee’s covenant to pay rent was not affected by the injury to the premises, nor limited by the exception of unavoidable casualty in Ms subsequent covenant, and is independent of the lessor’s covenant to make outside repairs. Belfour v. Weston, 1 T. R. 310. Hare v. Groves, 3 Anstr. 687. Kramer v. Cook, 7 Gray, 550, and cases cited. And it is not now denied that the lessee was rightly required to pay rent, and lawfully ejected for failing to pay.
The lessee in this action claims damages, 1st. for the injury occasioned by the fall of the carriage-house ; 2dly, for the failure of the lessor to rebuild it, after being expressly requested so to do.
It is well settled that in a lease of real estate no covenant is implied that the lessor shall keep the premises in repair or otherwise fit for occupation. Dutton v. Gerrish, 9 Cush. 89. Foster v. Peyser, Ib. 242, and cases cited. Welles v. Castles, 3 Gray, 326. The express covenant of the defendant in this case is. only “ to make all necessary repairs on the outside of the building.” He does not covenant that the outside shall not give way, but that, if it does, he will repair it. He cannot therefore be held liable for the damages occasioned by the fall of the building.
But it has been the established rule of the common law for ages that an express covenant to repair binds the covenantor to make good any injury which human power can remedy, even if caused by storm, flood, fire, inevitable accident, or the act of a stranger. Yearbook 40 Ed. II1. 6. Dyer, 33 a. Paradine v Jane, Aleyn, 27; S. C Sty'e, 47. Compton v. Allen, Style, 162. *122Bullock v. Dommitt, 6 T. R. 650. Green v. Eales, 2 Q. B 225 ; S. C. 1 Gale & Dav. 468. Phillips v. Stevens, 16 Mass 238. Bigelow v. Collamore, 5 Cush. 231. Allen v. Culver, 3 Denio, 294. Dermott v. Jones, 2 Wallace, 7, 8. The defend' ant’s covenant contains no exception of natural causes or inevitable accident. “ The outside of the building ” includes the whole outer shell of the building, or external inclosure of roof and sides. Green v. Eales, above cited. “ The necessary repairs on the outside ” are those which will make the building outwardly complete. When those are made, then, and not before, the lessee will be bound by his covenant “to make all necessary repairs on the inside.” The fact that rebuilding the outside will so far replace the whole building as to leave very little to be done on the inside, and thus make the performance of the lessee’s covenant very easy, does not in any degree excuse the lessor from first performing his covenant. • The defendant is therefore responsible for the damages suffered by the plaintiff by reason of the defendant’s refusal to rebuild, from the time of that refusal until the ejectment of the plaintiff for not paying his rent; and according to the agreement of the parties the case must stand for the assessment of those damages.

Judgment for the plaintiff accordingly.