Gentile v. Schlieder

ON THE MERITS.

Plaintiff sued to recover the sum of Three Plundred and Twenty-five Dollars ($325.00), being the aggregate of three rent notes of One Hundred and Twenty-five Dollars ($125.00) each, drawn by defendant in favor of plaintiff as the rental for the lease of premises in Iberville street, this City. The lease was entered into on the 24th day of March, 1904, but was made to begin from the 1st day of June, 1904, from which the first note was dated, the lease to extend for a period of five years.

The plaintiff bound himself by an agreement which does not appear in the contract of lease, to certain repairs and alterations to the building, a long list of specifications being found in the record.

*19Answering, defendant avers, that 'when the lease was entered into the plaintiff obligated himself to make certain repairs and improvements to the leased premises‘and put the same in proper condition to answer the purpose for which it was leased, to-wit: a restaurant and saloon, and that June ist., was agreed upon as the time from which the lease should begin to run. The parties to the same considered that the repairs-could be finished by that time. He further avers that on the ist of June, the repairs had not been finished, there being no flooring on the ground floor, the plastering being only partially finished, etc, etc, and that it was only in the latter part of July, that be was able to take possession, and avers that for these reasons he is absolved from the payment of two of said three notes sued on.

Defendant avers that he is liable for the rent note for the month of August, sued herein.

The Lower Court gave judgment in favor of plaintiff for the sum of One Hundred and Twenty-five Dollars ($125.00) being the amount of the note for the month of August rent, and rej ected the plaintiff’s demand as to the rent’notes for June and July.

In view of the admission made by-the defendant of his liability for One Hundred and Twenty-five Dollars ($125.00), and the judgment for the Court a qua, which is corrected, this Court is now concerned with the question of the notes for June and July; that of August being eliminated.

In our opinion the_ determination of the question at issue, must be based largely upon the facts elicited upon the trial of the cause, because, the contract of lease due to its brevity, perhaps designedly so, does not contain those clauses and conditions which would make clear the purpose.and intentions of the parties to it. For instance, it is true that the contract recites that the lease shall begin to run from the ist .of June, yet there is nothing contained therein indicating that plaintiff shall suffer the loss of rent for non-performance, or that the defendant shall enjoy any diminution of rent by reason of that non-performance.

It is evident that the plaintiff intended that the defendant should take possession of the premises on the ist of June, and that both he and the defendant believed that the repairs to be made by the plaintiff would be finished by that time.

The evidence satisfies us that the work called for under the specifications and contract entered into with the builder on the *2024th of March, would have been completed, as the contractor himself testifies by the ist of June, and perhaps earlier, had it not been for certain changes made at the instance of the defendant, which changes had the effect of stopping his work. These changes, we find, were made the subject of a contract, between defendant and one Babin, the same whom plaintiff contracted, as late as the 12th of April. It is shown that the plaintiff had nothing to do with these alterations, and that they were done altogether at the instance of the defendant.

Babin, the Contractor, is asked:

Q. What effect did that contract thus made with Mr. Schlieder and his sub-tenants (Schlieder having in the meantime sub-let the premises), have upon your finishing the original contract made by you?
A. Well, this made the delay in my contract, and there was some work we had to stop and re-order some of it, which made some delay.
Q. Examine the Document “P-4” which purports to be a deed of Joseph Zimmermann to Mr. Gentile, for the laying of a tile floor for Four Hundred and Sixteen Dollars ($416.00), and laying' vitrified sewer pipe in the wall for Thirty-five Dollars ($35.00). What effect did that have on your completing your work?
A. This was the main delay.
Q. Why?
A. Because it took so long to get the tiles there, and I had to stop my work until he got through.
Q. If it had not been for the changes made in the front of the building and in laying the tile flooring, could you have finished and would have finished your work in the time stated?
A. I would have finished probably earlier than the time which was agreed upon.
Q. Earlier than the ist of June?
A. Yer sir.
Q. You were going to put down, under your original contract, as appears thereby, a wooden floor?
A. I was to repair the wooden floor which was there already.
Q. And that would have taken comparatively a short time ?
A. Yer sir.
On cross-examination, however, this witness admits that he *21could have completed the work by the 1st of June, notwithstanding the alterations contracted for with the defendant, maintaining however, that he could not do so by reason of the greater change in the original contract with the plaintiff, to-wit; from a wooden to a tile floor.

The record shows that the change in the original specifications, from a wooden to a tile floor, was made at the instance of the lessee, the defendant here, who was urged to do this by his sub-lessee; and that they prevailed upon the plaintiff to agree to the change. This was a change in the repair work which plaintiff had bound himself to pay, and the question of the increase in cost from a wooden to a tile floor, naturally .caused a hitch.

Plaintiff at first agreed to contribute Two Hundred Dollars ($200.00), but the defendant and his sub-tenant, who were to contribute to the work, refused plaintiff’s offer, and told him to put in the wooden floor. Plaintiff then increased the amount that he was willing to contribute to Two Hundred and Fifty Dollars ($250.00), then to Three Hundred ($300.00), and finally to Three Hundred and Seventy-five Dollars ($375.00), which last figure being agreeable to defendant, all parties to the lease entered into a contract with one Zimmermann, to put in a tile floor and some schillinger work.

Plaintiff testifies:

Q. How much did you pay out of your own pocket for this tile floor?
A.' Three Hundred and Seventy-five Dollars ($375.00).
Q. There is a contract here, or rather, a bid made by Mr. Zimmermann marked “P-4,” addressed to you. Was there any other bid like that made to anyone else?
A. No sir.
Q. Did Mr. Zimmermann make a bid to these tenants ?
A. Yes sir.
Q. Just like this “P-4?”
A. Yes sir.
Q. Plow much did you pay and how much did Mr. Schileder pay?
A. I can’t tell you how much it' was.
Q. But you paid Three Hundred and Seventy-five Dollars ($375.00).
*22A. Yes sir, I paid Three Hundred and Seventy-five Dollars ($375.00).
Q.» Were you asked to reduce any part of your rent when you made this work?
A. No sir.

The lease between Schlieder, the defendant, and his sub-lessees, having been entered into and signed as late as May 10th, 1904, just twenty days of the 1st of June, the time fixed for the completion of the work, we take it that the suggestion for the change from wooden to the tile floor must have been agreed upon between the 10th of May, and June 1st.

It is in evidence that there was yet time to complete the wooden floor before the 1st of June.

Defendant must have known that the work would be delayed beyond the 1st of June, but agreed to the tile floor.

The tiles for the floor arrived in the City about the middle of July, and it is not shown that plaintiff was responsible for their non-reception at an earlier date. The delay appears to have been unavoidable. Thje defendant and his sub-tenants were parties to the contract for this tile work, and it was as much defendant’s as plaintiff’s.

In this connection, counsel for plaintiff, in his argument on brief, treats .the question most conclusively we think, as follows:

“The building, but for delay in receiving tiling, would have been completed June 1st. In asking for the tiling, if defendant wished a guaranty of completion by June 1st or remission of rent in the alternative, he should have asked for it. Had defendant done this work at his own expense he could not have complained of non-use of the building.
“The contract with Zimmermann was made equally with him and defendant. So that if this possession on June 1st was interfered with by work prosecuted, that work was done as fully at his instance as though he had ordered it done at his own cost and without consulting plaintiff.
“Delivery of possession was as complete, as between plaintiff and defendant, while Zimmermann was laying the tiles as at any subsequent time. Zimmermann’s possession *23was defendant’s possession, and the sub-lessee was daily in the building.”
November 27, 1905. Rehearing refused Feb. 5, 1906.

The codal provisions quoted by counsel for defendant are without application in the face of the alterations in the original specifications to which he became a party. The work was no longer the plaintiff’s, his obligation being shared by the defendant, who, as a matter of fact,'was as much in possession of the premises all the while as the plaintiff himself.

Plaintiff appears to have been fair and liberal in his transactions with defendant, showing good faith all along, and the facts presented, showing convincingly as they do, that his failure to finish work on and deliver the leased premises by June ist was due by the voluntary affirmative act of 'the defendant, we do not feel warranted in causing him the loss of the rental which he now claims.

Such a step would not have availed the defendant in this case, since he was as much in possession as he could be by reason of the fact that his own contractor was doing the repair work, yet the jurisprudence in this State is: that the lessor must be put in defaut for failure to complete repairs or else he loses his right to recover. The plaintiff does not appear to have been put in defaut, and the reason is obvious.

The expensive repairs made by the plaintiff at defendant’s suggestion have undeniably greatly improved plaintiff’s property, but they have also innured greatly to the benefit of the defendant, who has sub-let the premises at a figure considerably in excess of the rental which he pays the plaintiff. If appears to us that he is without right to complain,- and there was error in the judgment of the Lower Court.

It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed, that there now be judgment in favor of plaintiff and against defendant for Three Hundred and Seventy-five Dollars ($375.00), subject to a credit of One Hundred and Twenty-five Dollars ($125.00), and as amended the judgment of the Lower Court is affirmed.