The pleadings are oral. The plaintiff claims to recover $100 for the July, 1898 rent of a part of certain real estate in Brooklyn, and the defendant pleads general denial, eviction, former adjudication, and a counterclaim for $500 damages, because of breach of the contract of lease. The entire premises were owned in 1893 by one Sarah E. Lynch, and on the twenty-eighth day of June in that year she leased a portion of them to the defendant for the term of five years from August 1, 1893, at the yearly rent of $1,100 for the first year, and $1,200 per year for the residue of the term, payable monthly in advance. On August 9, 1893, Mrs. Lynch mortgaged the entire premises to the plaintiff, and on January 4, 1897, the plaintiff acquired the property by sheriff’s deed, pursuant to a judgment of foreclosure of said mortgage. The plaintiff at once entered into possession of the property, and the defendant paid her the rent until June, 1898, when he vacated the premises. His lease was recorded in the office of the register on July 1, 1893, with the exception of the following “ clause which was attached to the lease, written on a sheet of note paper, viz.: “ That should the owner of the lot in the rear of the demised premises build on his land now vacant, and shut *36off the light and ventilation to the rear of the demised premises, then the party to the first part hereby agrees to put a skylight ventilator on the roof of the demised premises in addition to a glass floor on the second floor sufficient to light the rear of the store.”
It appears that after the defendant took possession under the lease, but before- the plaintiff’s purchase, the owner of the -lot in the rear did build and did thereby shut off the light and ventilation to two windows which were in the rear of the demised premises, and that Mrs. Lynch, apparently to the then satisfaction of the defendant, constructed three windows in the side of the rear part of the demised premises instead of the skylight ventilator and glass, floor referred to in the clause attached to but not recorded with- the lease. Subsequently and a few months before the. defendant vacated the premises, but after the plaintiff’s purchase, the defendant and the owner or occupant of the premises in the rear, and which premises . apparently extended along the side of and to the front of the premises in question, had a quarrel which arose from the fact that the defendant placed some of llis goods upon the sidewalk, and because of the feeling engendered by this quarrel, such owner or occupant erected a spite fence which closed the light and ventilation . from the three side windows. . He offered to remove this fence if. the defendant would apologize to him, but this the defendant refused to do.
The plaintiff sued the defendant for the rent due for June, 1898, and recovered a judgment, which was affirmed on appeal. (Huber v. Ryan, 26 Misc. Rep. 428.) -In the opinion on such appeal Mr. ' Justice Gayitor held that the failure on the part of the landlord to keep the covenant relating to the skylight ventilator and- glass floor ■ did not amount to an eviction nor justify the abandonment of the premises, and, aside from the reasoning and the authorities cited, this decision must have the force of stare decisis as to the parties then and now before the court.
Upon the question whether or not the plaintiff is bound at all by the unrecorded portion of the lease the authorities are not uniform, but I am of opinion that the construction of the spite fence under the circumstances was not within the terms of the clause of the lease referred to, nor within the contemplation of the parties.- The agreement related to a building which might be erected on the adjoining *37property, shutting off the light and ventilation to the rear of the demised premises. Such a building having been erected, the former owner appears to have satisfied the covenant by the substitution of side windows, and there is nothing in the terms of the covenant which can extend its operation to theQ darkening of these windows by a temporary structure erected as an act of spite or enmity provoked by the personal quarrel between- the defendant and his neighbor.
A part of the defendant’s counterclaim arose because of an alleged defective water closet and injury which he claimed resulted to articles of personal property from its overflow. The defendant was not justified in creating or adding to such damage by leaving his property where he knew it would be subjected to the injury complained of. The measure of damages would be the difference in the rental value of the leased premises as they were and as they would have been in a proper state of repair. (Drago v. Mead, 30 App. Div. 258.) But a lessee, knowing that his property if left upon the premises will be exposed to injury by a failure of the lessor to repair, has no right to take the hazard, and if he does and his property is injured he cannot recover of his lessor therefor.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered.
All concurred, except Sewell, J., taking no part.
Judgment of the Municipal Court reversed and new trial ordered, costs to abide the event.