The lease is silent as to the landlord’s ownership of the adjoining land, but the tenant claims that by this letting with the windows unobstructed the landlord must be held to have impliedly agreed not to build on the adjoining land and thus shut off the light and air supplied by the side windows of the premises leased. I am of the opinion that the contention ought not to be upheld. According to the great weight of authority, not alone in New York but in many other jurisdictions (See cases cited in 12 Am. Law Rep. Ann. 163 et seq.), a landlord is under no obligation to his tenants not to erect a building upon other lands belonging to him even though the result is to cut off the light and air from the leased premises, unless there is some covenant or agreement in the lease forbidding such erection.
The precise point was discussed in Myers v. Gemmel (10 Barb. 537), a case frequently cited and never overruled, it being there held that the landlord could lawfully darken or stop the windows by any erection on his adjoining lot, and that such an act was not in derogation of the lease and was not subject to restraint by injunction.
The Myers case was approvingly cited in De Baun v. Moore (32 App. Div. 397), where Cullen, J., writing for this court and citing the Myers case in support of the proposition, said (p. 398): “ We think the law is clear in this State that ‘ if one grants a house having windows looking out over vacant land, whether his own or otherwise, he does not grant therewith any easement of light and air, unless it be by express terms; it never passes by implication.’ ”
The De Baun case was affirmed by the Court of Appeals on the opinion of Mr. Justice Cullen (167 N. Y. 598).
In Solomon v. Fantozzi (43 Misc. 61) it was held (as per syllabus): “ Where an owner of a building having a basement room lighted by, and a water-closet ventilating shaft opening upon, a separate adjoining lot owned by him, leases the building, the demise does. not carry to the tenant any implied easements of light or air from or over the adjoining lot and therefore where the owner subsequently builds upon it in such a manner as to cut off light from the room and air from the shaft there is no constructive partial eviction available to the tenant as a defense to an action by the owner for the rent.”
So in Palmer v. Wetmore (2 Sandf. 316) it was decided that a landlord who owns a lot adjoining the demised premises has a right *284to build on such land, though he may thereby obstruct and darken the windows in the tenement demised. Oaicley, Ch. J., said that, if this were not so, the landlord would be deprived of the full benefit of his own property. “We perceive ” he adds, “ no reason why a landlord, in respect of his tenant, is more restricted as to his vacant lots, than he would be in respect of any other owner for years, or in fee, of an adjacent house.”
Myers v. Gemmel and Palmer v. Wetmore (supra) were referred to and approvingly cited in Doyle v. Lord (64 N. Y. 432), where the defendant attempted to build on a rear yard of store premises leased to plaintiff. Judge Eael, writing for the court (p. 439), said: “ Under these authorities, if the lessor had sold the store and lot upon which it stood, twenty-five feet by fifty-one, the grantee would have taken no right to light and air from the balance of the lot. In that case the grantor could have built upon the balance of the lot, and thus have darkened the windows in the store without violating any rights of the grantee. In this case, if the yard had not been part of the lot upon which the building was standing and if it had not been appropriated to use with the building so as to pass as appurtenant thereto, so far as to give easements therein to the tenants of the building, the plaintiffs could not have complained of the acts of the defendants alleged in the complaint.”
While the lease in the case at bar does not state that the letting is with “ appurtenances,” or any other words indicating that anything was leased besides the ground floor of the premises, I should not hold that the absence of the word “ appurtenances ” would not permit of an implied right to all that went necessarily with a beneficial use of the leasehold. An appurtenance to a lease, however, does not include an interest in adjoining lands, even though owned by a common owner, “ since land never passes as appurtenant to land.” (Dissenting opinion of Maddox, J., in Cohen v. Newman, 91 Misc. 561, 571; revd. by this court on that dissent, 173 App. Div. 976; Doyle v. Lord, supra, 437; Matter of N. Y. Central R. R. Co. v. Buffalo & N. Y. & E. R. R. Co., 49 Barb. 501, 505.) The word “ appurtenances ” signifies anything that is an incident of and belongs to some other thing as principal. To be availed of as such, an appurtenance must be a material and integral part of the demised premises.
In some of the cases cited by the tenant, respondent, there is found the expression that a right to an unobstructed continuance of windows where reasonably necessary and essential to the enjoyment of the leased premises could be implied from the fact of letting. This theory is well stated in the language of Mr. Justice *285Greenbaum in Solomon v. Fantozzi (supra, 63), viz.: “ Unless the light and air, of which the defendants were deprived, were necessarily-involved in the beneficial use of the premises by the lessees as an appurtenant to the lease, the defense must fail.”
It should be noted that the learned justice in the case last cited adds the material qualification that the beneficial use must be “ an appurtenant to the lease.” But the authorities relied on do not hold that to be an appurtenance which involves a restriction over or a limitation of use of adjoining property. The appurtenance is a thing affecting and relating to the land and property of which the demised premises are a part. Bauer v. Schwartz (122 Misc. 630; 209 App. Div. 827) illustrates this, there being involved there the erection of a building upon a yard in the rear of the demised ground floor of a store building and the blocking up a door leading to the yard. Hamilton v. Graybill (19 Misc. 521); Matter of Hall v. Irvin (78 App. Div. 107), and Schulte Realty Co. v. Pulvino (179 N. Y. Supp. 371) were cases where the tenant was deprived of a partial use of his premises caused in the one case by the blocking up of a door leading to a common hallway, in another alterations to hallways, stairs, elevators and lavatories producing a deprivation of use in the very building in which the demised premises were situated, and in still another the building out of a store above a rented basement so as to cover a shaft in the premises and including, in that particular case, the permanent closing of a door leading to a hall in the premises. In Doyle v. Lord (supra) the right to a continuance of the unobstructed windows was based upon the fact that they looked out upon a yard itself a part of the lot on which the leased store stood.
In my opinion the question presented by the pleadings is not one of fact but is one of law, and an adjoining owner, notwithstanding he also owns the premises demised, can only be held to the obligations sought to be imposed by the tenant here upon an express stipulation in the lease to be so bound. In the absence of such a covenant or stipulation his position with regard to his adjoining ownership when he decides to utilize and improve his property seems to me in no wise different from that of an independent adjoining owner not a party to the lease.
I advise that the order of the Appellate Term be reversed upon the law, with costs, and that the final order, judgment and orders of the Municipal Court be affirmed.
Lazansky, P. J., Rich, Hagarty and Carswell, JJ., concur.
Order of the Appellate Term reversed upon the law, with costs, and final order, judgment and orders of the Municipal Court affirmed.