Argued April 23, 1925. This is an action of assumpsit by a landlord against his tenant to recover rent due on the demised premises. There was a verdict and judgment for plaintiff and defendant has appealed.
Plaintiff was the lessee of the second floor of a store building in the City of Butler, Pa. As such tenant he partitioned it into offices and rooms and installed certain *Page 291 water and electric fixtures. He occupied the two front rooms as offices and sublet the other portion for housekeeping apartments. His lease expired June 30, 1924. On March 26, 1924, he entered into a written agreement with defendant to sublet the premises to him for the months of May and June, 1924, at a rental of $35 a month. The rent for May was paid at the date of the execution of the lease. Defendant is an attorney-at-law. He moved his office equipment into plaintiff's front office early in April and was occupying it with plaintiff when the latter moved out on the first of May. When plaintiff moved he took out the kitchen sink in the housekeeping apartments, the lavatory in the front office, and all of the electric light bulbs, and removed the window blinds. The tenant in the housekeeping apartments moved at the same time. Defendant refused to pay the rent for the month of June and this suit was brought to recover it.
The learned court below held that the agreement of lease between plaintiff and defendant merely turned over to defendant two months of plaintiff's term under his lease, and that the lease under which this suit was brought did not require plaintiff to leave for defendant's use the water fixtures, electric light fixtures or window blinds for defendant, and that defendant presented no valid defense to plaintiff's claim. We find ourselves unable to agree with this view of the law. Plaintiff exhibited the premises to defendant for inspection before the lease was executed. While it is true that there is no implied warranty in the letting of premises that they are fit for the purpose for which they are let, there is an implied covenant for the quiet enjoyment of the demised premises. "It is settled in this State that any wrongful act of the landlord which results in an interference with the tenant's possession, in whole or in part, is an eviction for which the landlord is liable in damages to the tenant": Kelly v. Miller, 249 Pa. 314, 316. Physical expulsion is not *Page 292 necessary to constitute an eviction. Any act of a landlord which deprives his tenant of that beneficial enjoyment of the premises to which he is entitled under a lease will amount in law to an eviction and suspend the rent: McSorley v. Allen, 36 Pa. Super. 271,273. There is an implied warranty that the condition of the premises remain substantially the same between the time of the execution of the lease and the beginning of the term. If this is not the case the landlord is not in a position to tender for occupation that which is described in the lease. If any material change has taken place during this period, the tenant is not bound to take possession: Schomaker v. Heinz, 77 Pa. Super. 30,35. The contract in the present case was more than a mere letting of so much empty space. The lavatory, the kitchen sink and the blinds were part of the demised premises at the date of the lease and the change resulting from their removal was a violation of the tenant's implied covenant for quiet enjoyment of the premises and of the implied warranty that the condition of the premises should remain substantially the same as when defendant leased them. Defendant having remained in possession for the term, was entitled to set-off the reduction in the rental value of the premises caused by the removal of the parts thereof which were useful and necessary to the lessee: Kelly v. Miller, supra. The affidavit of defense avers that the damages resulting from the eviction are a sum in excess of plaintiff's claim. Defendant presented three points which in substance asked the trial judge to charge the jury in accordance with the law above stated. The refusal of the points is made the basis of the first, second and third assignments of error. We are constrained to sustain these assignments.
The judgment is reversed and a new trial is awarded. *Page 293