I would modify the order, entered October 22, 1968, to grant defendant’s motion to the extent of dismissing the first cause of action, with leave to defendant to apply to Special Term to replead, and would otherwise affirm.
*345The basis of the first cause of action is the alleged breach of representations and warranties that the offices, leased by plaintiff from the defendant for law office purposes, “ would be constructed with a duct system, which would always provide a natural and continuous flow of air in the offices that the ‘ ‘ offices would have a sufficient flow of air so as to be sufficiently comfortable and usable at all evening hours and also on weekends, even when the air-conditioning and heating system were not in operation.” The representations and warranties were not contained in the written lease of the premises but are alleged to have been orally made and to have induced the execution of the same by the plaintiff. It is the pleader’s conclusion, unsupported by alleged facts, that the failure and refusal of the defendant to supply the continuous and adequate flow of air to plaintiff’s offices ‘'have caused the said offices to become untenantable and * * * was and still is an actual and partial eviction of the plaintiff from his offices in question ’ ’. The plaintiff then “ demands judgment on this cause of action relieving the plaintiff from paying rent until the time that the defendant/Iandlord shall fulfill the aforesaid representations and warranties, and make the said offices usable by supplying 'a continuous flow of air therein ’ on evenings and weekends. ’ ’
The plaintiff insists that the gravamen of his cause of action is an actual partial eviction and that such eviction gives him the right to be relieved from the payment of rent until the landlord fulfills his alleged obligation to furnish a continuous flow of air on evenings and weekends.
Assuming arguendo that the plaintiff is not precluded by the provisions of the written lease from establishing the alleged misrepresentations and the alleged warranties and breach thereof, nevertheless, the plaintiff may not be relieved of his obligation to pay rent. The general rules, which are well settled, were restated in Herstein Co. v. Columbia Pictures Corp. (4 N Y 2d 117, 120-121) as follows: “ [I]n an action for rent, it is not sufficient for the tenant to defend on the theory that there was a diminution of the beneficial enjoyment of the property. (Edgerton v. Page, 20 N. Y. 281; Two Rector St. Corp. v. Bein, 226 App. Div. 73.) Furthermore, there must be an abandonment of the premises by the tenant. (Boreel v. Lawton, 90 N. Y. 293; Thomson-Bouston Elec. Co. v. Durant Land Improvement Co., 144 N. Y. 34.) Lastly, the ouster by the landlord, or the justified abandonment of the premises, amounting to an eviction in law, must have occurred before the rent has become due. (Fifth Ave. Bldg. Co. v. Kernochan, 221 N. Y. 370; Sully v. Schmitt, 147 N. Y. 248.)”
*346On the facts alleged, all the plaintiff is claiming is that the defendant, as landlord, is wrongfully depriving the plaintiff of the full beneficial enjoyment of the leased premises; that the landlord is not furnishing services as represented and that the landlord’s wrongful acts have impaired the value of the plaintiff’s occupation of the premises In this State, however, it has long been settled, starting with the decision of Edgerton v. Page (20 N. Y. 281) that, “ [a]s against a tenant occupying the demised premises for the whole time in which the rent accrued, it is not suspended or extinguished by reason of wrongful acts of the landlord impairing the value of the occupation ” (from the headnote). Later decisions, very much in point, are Forshaw v. Hathaway (112 Misc. 112 [App. Term.]); City of New York v. Pike Realty Corp. (247 N. Y. 245); Two Rector St. Corp. v. Bein (226 App. Div. 73); Webb & Knapp v. Churchill’s Term. Rest. (2 A D 2d 332).
In City of New York v. Pike Realty Corp. (supra), the defendant leased vacant land from the city but the city thereafter wrongfully refused to permit the defendant to erect thereon a public garage. The trial court held that rent was suspended during the time that the city had prevented the defendant from erecting the garage. The Court of Appeals, however, reversed, noting that there was no actual eviction in the case and none was claimed, and the court stated ,(p. 247): “ The refusal of the city to approve the plans for a public garage was at most a breach of the covenants of the lease and a constructive eviction. [Citing cases.] Consequently, the defendant not having abandoned the premises or surrendered the lease must pay the rent reserved and seek recoupment for the city’s breach of contract.”
In Two Rector St. Corp. v. Bein (supra), the leased premises were law offices in an office building. It appeared that the landlord, in making repairs to the building, had erected a hoist close to the windows of the tenant’s offices and, as a result, sunlight was cut off and noise and some dirt and dust entered the offices. This court, in reversing a determination of the Appellate Term, held that the landlord was entitled to recover possession of the premises for nonpayment of rent. The court said (p. 76): “ [T]here was no actual eviction of the tenant from any portion of the premises. The tenant continued in possession of the entire premises, of which there was no actual invasion by the landlord of any part. At the most, the acts of the landlord tended to make a portion of the premises less enjoyable and might have constituted a constructive eviction from such portion of the premises, had the tenant surrendered the premises because of such acts. A necessary element of a *347constructive eviction is a surrender by the tenant' of the demised premises. A tenant cannot claim uninhabitability, and at the same time continue to inhabit. If the tenant remains in occupancy the obligation to pay rent continues and any wrongful acts of the landlord do not constitute a defense to the action for rent, but may be set up as a counterclaim if arising out of a breach of the contract of lease.”
Finally, in Webb & Knapp v. Churchill’s Term. Rest. (supra), the tenant, in connection with the leasing of premises for restaurant purposes, was given the right to erect an illuminated upright sign, 20 feet high, on the exterior wall of the landlord’s building; the parties had agreed to enlarge the demise to include the wall space necessary to affix the vertical sign. The landlord, however, refused to permit the erection of the sign and the tenant refused to pay the rent. This court reversed the Appellate Term, which had dismissed the landlord’s petition in summary proceedings (p. 335), “ without prejudice, however, to the tenant’s right, if any, to recover in an appropriate action for the failure of the landlord to comply with its obligations, if any,” in connection with the erection of the sign. Significantly, this court said (p. 334): "There is no authority to extend the defense of partial eviction to situations such as this, where, it can only be said, at best, that the tenant did not receive all for which the letting called.”
In summary, the plaintiff’s claim of part-time untenantability in alleged breach of defendant’s representations and warranties does not give him the right to withhold the payment of rent. If the plaintiff here has a valid claim for abatement of the rent or for damages, on.the theory of fraud or on the theory of misrepresentation and breach of warranty, he should be remitted to an application to ¡Special Term for leave to plead such a cause of action.
Capozzoli and Nunez, JJ., concur with McGtvern, J.; Eager, J., dissents in opinion in which Stevens, P. J., concurs.
Order entered October 22, 1968 affirmed, with $50 costs and disbursements to the respondent.