Agate v. Lowenbein

By the Court.*—Daly, Ch. J.

—There was no ground for equitable interference for the alleged breach of the covenant, that the premises were not to be used for any business that would increase the hazard or rates of insurance more than would be caused by the steam engine and boiler, for the reason that the plaintiff has an ample remedy at law. If the premises are so used, and the plaintiff has in consequence to pay an increased rate for the hazard of insurance, then the increased amount he has to pay for insurance is the exact measure of his damages for the breach of the covenant, and this he may recover in an ordinary action. Courts of equity interfere to prevent an injury that would be irreparable, or where, as the Vice-Chancellor said in Steward v. Winters (4 Sandf. Ch. 591), it is manifest that the extent of the injury is difficult to be ascertained or measured in damages,” or where, as in that case, a new cause of action would have arisen every day, by the continuance of the breach; for which reason a court of equity will lend its aid to prevent, or dispense with, a great number of actions. But this is not such a case. There is no difficulty in it in respect to the measure of damages. The covenant itself showing what the measure is to be, and as the premium upon fire policies is payable for the whole period upon the delivery of the policy (1 Phillips on Ins. 505), and in this city upon continuing policies annually, there was no ground for in*66terference to prevent, multiplicity of suits. The equitable remedy,” says Adams, “ is not concurrent with the legal one, and will not be substituted for the legal remedy, unless a particular necessity be shown” (Adams’ Doctrine of Equity, 83), and no such particular necessity exists in this case.

Moreover, it is not for equitable interference sufficiently clear, upon the covenant and the evidence, whether the letting of the premises for the carrying on of the business of job printing, stereotyping and book binding, or for the manufacturing of chocolate, was a violation of the covenant;, as it appears from the evidence, that steam engines are classed as extra or specially hazardous according to the business in which they are used. It may be urged that the hazard ” that, in the language of the covenant, may be caused by the steam engine, necessarily means the use of it in the building in connection with such trade or occupations as are ordinarily carried on in such places with the aid of an engine. I do not mean to say that in an action brought to recover damages for the breach of the covenant in which this question would have to be passed upon, the legal conclusion would, or ought to be, that the letting out of parts of the premises for the carrying on of these occupations, was no breach of the covenant. The conclusion might, and very possibly would, be the other way; but courts of equity are not called upon to construe contracts where the meaning is ambiguous, doubtful, or uncertain, unless it be in a case where their aid is invoked to arrest an irreparable injury, and the party has no other remedy (Fisk v. Witber, 7 Barb. 395). It is, as a general rule, only where the rights of the parties are or can be "clearly ascertained, and are free from all reasonable doubt, that the court will entertain jurisdiction in the first instance to restrain an act by injunction (Snowden v. Noah, Hopk. 353 ; Olmsted v. Loomis, 6 Barb. 164; Bonaparte v. Camden, &c. R. R. Co. 1 Bald. C. C. R. 218; Brown v. Newatt, 2 Mylne & C. 570; 1 Story’s Eq. Jurisp. § 959, b).

This disposes of the appeal on the part of the plaintiff. It now remains to consider the appeal from the injunction granted to restrain the defendants, McGee, Maddern & Co. from affixing their signs upon the stairway of the building No. 647; for if *67they were not entitled to do this under the lease given by the plaintiff, the keeping of the signs there is a continuous trespass, which, as already suggested, will authorize equitable interference to prevent a multiplicity of suits.

. The demise was of the whole of the building known as No. 645, and the three upper floors of the one known as 647 Broadway, with the privilege of using the stairs of No. 647 for the purpose of carrying in or out ashes, coal and so forth. The buildings adjoin each other, and when the lease was granted the three upper floors of No. 647 opened into and were connected with .the corresponding floors of No. 645. As there was, under this arrangement, free access to and from the three upper floors of No. 647, through and by the entrance and staff-way of No. 645, it is very clear that the right to use the stairway and entrance upon the front floor of 647 was not granted, except for the purpose stated, the “ carrying in and out of ashes, coal and so forth? If the lessee could not, when the demise was made, have access to and from the three floors of 647, and the complete enjoyment, except by the use of the stairway and entrance on the first floor of the building, then a right of way by the stairway and entrance would of necessity, pass as incident to the grant (Lifford's Case, 11 Co. 52; Holmes v. Seely, 19 Wend. 507; Doty v. Gorham, 5 Pick. 487). But free access to these floors through the entrance and stairway, of 645 was provided from the way in which the buildings were arranged, and the qualified right granted in respect to the stairway and entrance of 647 shows very plainly what was intended : that he was to have the right to use the latter for a particular purpose, and where an easement of this discription is granted for a particular purpose, it does not include a right of way for another purpose (Cowling v. Higginson, 4 Mees. & Welsb. 245). Thus it was held in Jackson v. Stacey (Holt’s N. P. C. 455), that a right of way for agricultural purposes, that is, to carry corn and manure over the locus in quo, did not give the right to carry lime, or the produce of a quarry over it at all times and for all purposes, and in Ballard v. Dyson (1 Taunt. 279), that a right or way for carriages does not include a way for cattle. A right of way for some purposes, said the court *68in Brunton v. Hall (1 Gale & D. 207), must not be enlarged for other purposes. The defendants, McGee, Maddern •& Co. by putting up a sign over the entrance, and signs along the stairway, undertook to make that the chief and principal entrance to the floors above, which was clearly not what was contemplated or intended by the lease. It was to be used to carry ashes and coal and so forth in and out. There is nothing in the words “and so forth” that would embrace the privilege claimed. “And so forth” means “of the like kind” (Worcester’s Dictionary). It is equivalent to and has the same meaning as “ et cetera ” (Cole’s Dictionary, 1717; Todd’s Johnson, Dictionary), in the first of which dictionaries, “ et cetera ” is defined “ and so forth,” and in the latter, “ a common expression denoting others of the like kind.”

The decision of the judge at the special term should there- . fore be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

Present, Daly, Ch. J., Loew and Robinson, JJ.