Page images
PDF
EPUB

the third floor of a certain house or store in Beaver Street, corner of William Street, in the city of New York, at a rent of $425 per annum, which the defendant covenanted to pay, and entered into possession of the demised premises.

The defendant pleaded, 1st, Non est factum.

2. That before any of the rent became due, to wit, on, &c., the plaintiff entered upon the demised premises, and ejected, expelled, put out, and amoved the defendant, and kept and continued him so ejected, expelled, and amoved from thence hitherto.

Replication, denying the expulsion and issue.

The cause was tried at the New York Circuit, June 19th, 1823, before Edwards, C. Judge.

On the trial, the counsel for the defendant produced receipts for rent to the 1st February, 1820, and offered to prove that about that time the plaintiff introduced into the house demised, lewd women or prostitutes, and continued this practice from time to time and at sundry times, keeping and detaining them in there all night for the purpose of prostitution; that such women would frequently enter the house in the daytime, and, after staying all night, would leave it by day-light in the morning; that the plaintiff sometimes introduced other men into the house, who, together with him, kept company with the lewd women or prostitutes during the night; that on such occasions, the plaintiff and the women, being in company in certain parts of the house not included in the lease, but adjacent and in the plaintiff's occupation, were accustomed to make a great deal of indecent noise and disturbance, the women often screaming extravagantly so as to be heard throughout the house, and by the near neighbors; and frequently using obscene and vulgar language, so loud as to be understood at a considerable distance; that such noise and riotous proceedings being frequently continued all night, greatly disturbed the rest of persons sleeping in other parts of the house, and particularly in the parts demised; that these practices were matter of conversation and reproach in the neighborhood; and were of a nature to draw, and did draw, odium and infamy upon the house as being a place of ill-fame, so that it was no longer reputable for moral or decent persons to dwell or enter there; that all these practices were by the procurement or permission and concurrence of the plaintiff. That the defendant, being a person of good and respectable character, was compelled by the repetition of these practices to leave the house, and did leave it for that cause, about the beginning of March, 1820; and did not return. That a respectable man by the name of Fox, to whom part of the house had been underlet, left it for the same cause.

This evidence was objected to, and overruled by the judge as inadmissible upon the issue; and the defendant's counsel excepted. Verdict for the plaintiff, damages $362.52.

H. W. Warner, for the defendant.

J. A. Dunlap, contra.

CURIA, PER SUTHERLAND, J. Eviction of the whole or any part

of the demised premises, is a good plea in bar to an action either of debt or covenant for the rent. In this all the authorities agree. Cruise, Dig. tit. 28, Rents, chap. 3, Woodfall, 412-13; 1 Saund. 204, n. 2, and cases there cited. The plea in this case is unex ceptionable in point of form. It is according to the established precedents. Salmon v. Smith, 1 Saund. 203, 4, n. (2). It states that the plaintiff (who was the defendant's lessor) entered into and upon the demised premises, and ejected, expelled, put out, and amoved the said defendant from the possession thereof, and kept and continued him so ejected, expelled, &c., from thence hitherto. The only question in the case is, whether the evidence offered by the defendant, and which was rejected by the judge who tried the cause, supported the plea, or was of a character which ought to have been submitted to the jury, for them to decide whether it made out the fact of eviction or not. No actual ouster or turning out of possession is pretended. The proof offered does not show an entry by the lessor upon the premises. It does not make out even a trespass. The acts complained of as amounting to an eviction, were committed in a different part of the same house, with which the demised premises had no connection, except that the approach to each was by a common entrance. They operated not upon the physical safety of the tenant, or the physical condition of the demised premises; but upon the moral sense and feeling of the defendant. The acts were most exceptionable in themselves; and, if they could not be abated, the defendant had not only a moral right, but it was his moral duty, to abandon the scene of riot and prostitution. But they could have been abated. The law afforded a prompt and sufficient remedy. The police of the city, upon the complaint of the defendant, would have instantly taken the plaintiff and his associates into custody, and punished them by fine and imprisonment as often as the offence was repeated. There was no moral necessity, therefore, for abandoning the premises. Suppose the plaintiff had been in the habit of exhibiting himself either in the common passage or in the street opposite the premises in question, in indecent attitudes, or in a state of offensive nakedness, so that the defendant and his family could not leave his house without witnessing the disgusting exhibition: would this cause have supported a plea of eviction? They would both stand upon the footing of nuisances, which the plaintiff or any other citizen might cause to be abated. But if, instead of taking that course, he should abandon his house, it must be considered a voluntary and not a compulsory act.

But I apprehend there can be no eviction, without an actual entry. Such is the form of the plea, and the proof must sustain it. The very definition of the term "eviction" is an expulsion of the lessee out of all or some part of the demised premises; and Serjeant Williams says, that to occasion a suspension of the rent, the plea must state an eviction or expulsion of the lessee by the lessor, and a keeping him out of possession, until after the rent became due; otherwise it will be bad.

1 Saund. 204, n. (2). If a constructive expulsion, without entry, may constitute an eviction, which will operate as a suspension of the rent, why is the averment of an entry contained in all the precedents, and why do all the cases agree, that without such averment the plea would be bad? Thus, in Timbrell v. Bullock, Styles, 446, it is said that, to make a suspension of rent reserved upon a lease for years, the lessor must oust the lessee of part of the thing let, at least, and hold him out until after the day on which the rent is made payable by the lease; and if the lessee re-enters, the rent is revived. A re-entry presupposes an actual ouster or expulsion. So in Page v. Parr, Styles, 432, which was an action of covenant for rent, the defendant pleaded in bar, that the plaintiff entered into a part of the land demised, before the rent became due, and so had suspended his rent. The plaintiff replied that the defendant re-entered and so was possessed as in his former estate. To which replication there was a demurrer. And Rolle, C. J., held the demurrer well taken, on the ground that the replication did not state that the defendant, after re-entry, continued in possession until the rents were due; and judgment was given for the defendant. According to the case of Salmon v. Smith, 1 Saund. 204, and n. (2), the plea would now be held bad for omitting to state that the defendant was kept out of possession until the rent became due. But this case also clearly contemplates an actual entry or ouster by the lessor, as necessary in order to suspend the rent. So in Reynolds v. Buckle, Hob. 326, which was an action of debt for rent, the defendant pleaded that before rent due, the plaintiff entered upon him; but did not say that he did expel him or hold him out; and the plea, on that ground, was declared to be of itself an insufficient bar. But in that case it was cured by the verdict. Bushell v. Lechmore, 1 Lord Ray. 369, also decides that a mere entry or trespass without an eviction will not suspend the rent. Upon this point all the cases concur. Hunt v. Cope, 1 Cowp. 242, is a strong There the defendant pleaded that the lessor, with force and arms, entered upon the demised premises and demolished a summer-house (being a part of the premises), by means whereof the tenant had been deprived of the use of the summer-house, &c. This plea was held to be bad, because it did not aver an actual eviction or expulsion of the lessee. The defendant's counsel urged that the facts in the plea amounted to an eviction, on the ground that an actual entry was stated, and a destruction of a portion of the premises; and if an eviction could be constructively pleaded, this would seem to be good. But all the court held it bad, and Aston, J., says, all the cases in the books suppose the lessee to be put out of possession. Therefore, merely saying that he was deprived of the enjoyment of the premises is not sufficient. If it is necessary to state, in terms, that the lessee was turned out of possession, in order to make a good plea of eviction, it would seem to follow that the proof in support of the plea must be substantially of the same character. Lord Mansfield, in IIunt v. Cope, says that the facts there stated, might have been sufficient for the jury to have found for

case.

of the demised premises, is a good plea in bar to an action either of debt or covenant for the rent. In this all the authorities agree. Cruise, Dig. tit. 28, Rents, chap. 3, Woodfall, 412-13; 1 Saund. 204, n. 2, and cases there cited. The plea in this case is unexceptionable in point of form. It is according to the established precedents. Salmon v. Smith, 1 Saund. 203, 4, n. (2). It states that the plaintiff (who was the defendant's lessor) entered into and upon the demised premises, and ejected, expelled, put out, and amoved the said defendant from the possession thereof, and kept and continued him so ejected, expelled, &c., from thence hitherto. The only question in the case is, whether the evidence offered by the defendant, and which was rejected by the judge who tried the cause, supported the plea, or was of a character which ought to have been submitted to the jury, for them to decide whether it made out the fact of eviction or not. No actual ouster or turning out of possession is pretended. The proof offered does not show an entry by the lessor upon the premises. It does not make out even a trespass. The acts complained of as amounting to an eviction, were committed in a different part of the same house, with which the demised premises had no connection, except that the approach to each was by a common entrance. They operated not upon the physical safety of the tenant, or the physical condition of the demised premises; but upon the moral sense and feeling of the defendant. The acts were most exceptionable in themselves; and, if they could not be abated, the defendant had not only a moral right, but it was his moral duty, to abandon the scene of riot and prostitution. But they could have been abated. The law afforded a prompt and sufficient remedy. The police of the city, upon the complaint of the defendant, would have instantly taken the plaintiff and his associates into custody, and punished them by fine and imprisonment as often as the offence was repeated. There was no moral necessity, therefore, for abandoning the premises. Suppose the plaintiff had been in the habit of exhibiting himself either in the common passage or in the street opposite the premises in question, in indecent attitudes, or in a state of offensive nakedness, so that the defendant and his family could not leave his house without witnessing the disgusting exhibition: would this cause have supported a plea of eviction? They would both stand upon the footing of nuisances, which the plaintiff or any other citizen might cause to be abated. But if, instead of taking that course, he should abandon his house, it must be considered a voluntary and not a compulsory act.

But I apprehend there can be no eviction, without an actual entry. Such is the form of the plea, and the proof must sustain it. The very definition of the term "eviction" is an expulsion of the lessee out of all or some part of the demised premises; and Serjeant Williams says, that to occasion a suspension of the rent, the plea must state an eviction or expulsion of the lessee by the lessor, and a keeping him out of possession, until after the rent became due; otherwise it will be bad.

1 Saund. 204, n. (2). If a constructive expulsion, without entry, may constitute an eviction, which will operate as a suspension of the rent, why is the averment of an entry contained in all the precedents, and why do all the cases agree, that without such averment the plea would be bad? Thus, in Timbrell v. Bullock, Styles, 446, it is said that, to make a suspension of rent reserved upon a lease for years, the lessor must oust the lessee of part of the thing let, at least, and hold him out until after the day on which the rent is made payable by the lease; and if the lessee re-enters, the rent is revived. A re-entry presupposes an actual ouster or expulsion. So in Page v. Parr, Styles, 432, which was an action of covenant for rent, the defendant pleaded in bar, that the plaintiff entered into a part of the land demised, before the rent became due, and so had suspended his rent. The plaintiff replied that the defendant re-entered and so was possessed as in his former estate. To which replication there was a demurrer. And Rolle, C. J., held the demurrer well taken, on the ground that the replication did not state that the defendant, after re-entry, continued in possession until the rents were due; and judgment was given for the defendant. According to the case of Salmon v. Smith, 1 Saund. 204, and n. (2), the plea would now be held bad for omitting to state that the defendant was kept out of possession until the rent became due. But this case also clearly contemplates an actual entry or ouster by the lessor, as necessary in order to suspend the rent. So in Reynolds v. Buckle, Hob. 326, which was an action of debt for rent, the defendant pleaded that before rent due, the plaintiff entered upon him; but did not say that he did expel him or hold him out; and the plea, on that ground, was declared to be of itself an insufficient bar. But in that case it was cured by the verdict. Bushell v. Lechmore, 1 Lord Ray. 369, also decides that a mere entry or trespass without an eviction will not suspend the rent. Upon this point all the cases concur. Hunt v. Cope, 1 Cowp. 242, is a strong There the defendant pleaded that the lessor, with force and arms, entered upon the demised premises and demolished a summer-house (being a part of the premises), by means whereof the tenant had been deprived of the use of the summer-house, &c. This plea was held to be bad, because it did not aver an actual eviction or expulsion of the lessee. The defendant's counsel urged that the facts in the plea amounted to an eviction, on the ground that an actual entry was stated, and a destruction of a portion of the premises; and if an eviction could be constructively pleaded, this would seem to be good. But all the court held it bad, and Aston, J., says, all the cases in the books suppose the lessee to be put out of possession. Therefore, merely saying that he was deprived of the enjoyment of the premises is not sufficient. If it is necessary to state, in terms, that the lessee was turned out of possession, in order to make a good plea of eviction, it would seem to follow that the proof in support of the plea must be substantially of the same character. Lord Mansfield, in Hunt v. Cope, says that the facts there stated, might have been sufficient for the jury to have found for

case.

« PreviousContinue »