The defendant has been convicted of a violation of section 225 of the Sanitary Code, which provides that it shall be the duty of every person who shall have contracted or undertaken, ot shall be bound, to heat or to furnish heat for any building occupied as a home or place of residence, to heat or to furnish heat for every room occupied in such building, so that a minimum temperature of sixty-eight degrees Fahrenheit may be maintained. The amendment thereto in December, 1919, provided that “ in the absence of a contract or agreement to the contrary,”, the owner, agent or lessee shall be deemed to have contracted to furnish heat, wherever a building is heated by means of a furnace, boiler or other apparatus in control of the owner, agent or lessee. (See Cosby’s Code of Ordinances [Anno. 1920], pp. 599, 617, 618.)
It appears that the corporation of which defendant is the president made an agreement on June 3, 1919, with the tenants of its premises. It apparently was arrived at after negotiations through, the mayor’s committee on rent profiteering. It contains no provision respecting the heating of the apartments occupied by the tenants but contains a provision .that the tenants are to have the apartments at the rents stated until May 1, 1920. The violation for which defendant was convicted was found as a result of an inspection by a health department inspector on March 2, 1920.
The defendant attempted to show that he had an oral agreement with the tenants whereby he was not to be obliged to furnish steam heat.. Defendant testified that at the time of the agreement a reduction in rents was granted, but this was ruled out. Every attempt by defendant’s counsel to introduce evidence tending to show that in addition to the
It is contended by the appellant on this appeal that the exclusion of the evidence offered by defendant of an agreement between the tenants and the landlord that the latter was not to heat the building was fatal error, and that the parol evidence rule is not applicable when parol evidence is offered by a defendant to negative criminality in a criminal case, and, in any event, the parol evidence rule is not applicable to this case, because the controversy does not arise between parties to the written instrument. In support'-of his contention appellant relies on People v. Barringer (76 Hun, 330) and People v. Walker (85 App. Div. 556; affd., 178 N. Y. 563). It is contended on the part of the district attorney that the cases above referred to do not decide so broad a proposition as is contended by him; that they merely decide that where the accused could by parol evidence disprove a felonious intent, such parol evidence was admissible notwithstanding it seemed to vary the terms of a written instrument. An examination of the case first cited discloses that this is what was actually there decided. But as to the Walker case, decided after the Barringer case, it was in terms held that the parol
I think the trial court erred in excluding the testimony offered by defendant tending to show a verbal agreement with his tenants, and that the judgment must be reversed and a new trial ordered, and advise accordingly.
Jenks, P. J., Blackmar, Kelly and Jay cox, JJ., concur.
Judgment of conviction of the Court of Special Sessions reversed and new trial ordered.