This action was brought to enforce a mechanics' lien against real property of the respondent situated in the city of New York, leased by him to the defendant Susan Murray. The lease provided that the demised premises should "be used and occupied as a first-class saloon and restaurant *Page 63 upon the conditions and covenants following." One of these covenants was: "It is understood and agreed that the said premises are to be fully fitted up and completed for the liquor and restaurant business contemplated to be carried on at said premises within three months from date, and should the tenant fail or neglect to have the same fully fitted up within said three months, then this lease to be null and void and of no effect as between the parties hereto." Murray entered into the possession of the premises under the lease and proceeded to repair the premises for a saloon. Under contracts with Murray the plaintiff furnished beveled plate glass windows, and the appellant defendant, the C.J. Purcell Company, laid a tile floor. The tenant failing to pay for the work, these parties filed mechanics' liens to which they sought to subject the interest of the owner of the premises, the respondent on this appeal, on the ground that the labor and materials for which the liens were filed were furnished and performed with his consent. The Special Term rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff and the defendant, the Purcell Company. The Appellate Division reversed this judgment and ordered a new trial.
As the order of the Appellate Division does not state that the reversal was upon the facts, under the Code we must assume that it was granted for errors of law alone. (Code of Civil Procedure, section 1338.) The facts must, therefore, stand as found by the trial court, unless any of such findings is entirely without evidence for its support. The learned judge at Special Term found that the work and materials rendered and furnished by the appellants was so done with the consent and approval of the respondent, and if there is evidence to support this finding the order of the Appellate Division cannot be sustained unless error has been committed in rulings on the admission of evidence. Under the Mechanics' Lien Law of 1885 (Chap. 342), the interest of an owner in real property is chargeable with the value of work performed or materials furnished in the erection or repair of any building thereon when the same is so performed or furnished *Page 64 with his consent, and a requirement in a contract between vendor and vendee or between landlord and tenant, that the vendee or tenant shall make certain improvements on the premises is a sufficient consent of the owner to charge his property with claims which accrue in making those improvements (Schmalz v.Mead, 125 N.Y. 188; Miller v. Mead, 127 N.Y. 544; Burkitt v. Harper, 79 N.Y. 273; Otis v. Dodd, 90 N.Y. 336), though it would not render his property liable for improvements or alterations beyond those specified in the contract. (De Klyn v.Gould, 165 N.Y. 282.) In the present case the lease provided that the tenant should fully fit up and complete the premises for the liquor and restaurant business within three months from the date of the lease. The learned counsel for the respondent contends that this covenant required the tenant only to supply trade fixtures suitable for carrying on the business of the saloon, and not to make any alterations or improvements in the building itself. We do not so construe this agreement. It was expressly provided that if the demised premises were not fitted up and completed within three months the lease should become void. If this provision related only to trade fixtures, the title to which would remain in the tenant, and which he would have the right to remove during his term, it is difficult to see what interest the landlord had in the subject or why a failure to perform the agreement should terminate the lease. If, however, the premises themselves were to be decorated and improved so as to be appropriate for the conduct therein of a restaurant and saloon, then the covenant on the part of the tenant was a substantial part of the consideration of the lease and the landlord might well insist that unless it was performed the lease should be abrogated. We think that the trial court properly construed this covenant as requiring the tenant to improve the demised portion of the building itself. The evidence tended to show that the work and materials furnished by the respective lienors were proper and necessary to fit the premises for saloon and restaurant purposes and were reasonable in character and in cost. It was, *Page 65 therefore, properly held that the respondent had consented to them and that his property was chargeable with their value.
It may be questioned whether the case does not contain other evidence sufficient to charge the respondent with consent under our decision in National Wall Paper Co. v. Sire (163 N.Y. 122), but the construction we have given the lease renders a discussion of this subject unnecessary. The exceptions to rulings of the trial court on the admission of evidence present no question of sufficient importance to justify a reversal of its judgment, even if those rulings were erroneous, which we think not.
The order appealed from should be reversed and the judgment entered on the decision of the Special Term affirmed, with costs.
O'BRIEN, BARTLETT, HAIGHT, VANN, LANDON and WERNER, JJ., concur.
Ordered accordingly.