O'Rourke v. Fulton Bag & Cotton Mills

PROVOSTY, J.

Plaintiff leased a warehouse building from defendant for the purpose, expressed in the lease, of conducting therein a public warehouse business. One of the beams supporting one of the floors of the warehouse having given away under the weight of the merchandise stored upon it, and other beams of other floors having shown signs of weakness by sagging, the plaintiff called upon the defendant to remedy the situation, and the defendant, after consulting with counsel, brought suit, alleging that the weight which the floors had been constructed to carry was 150 pounds to the square foot, with a factor of four, and enjoining plaintiff from loading them in excess of 200 pounds, and thereupon plaintiff brought the present suit, asking for the dissolution of the lease and for damages. The rent was payable monthly, and plaintiff had given notes for it. At the end of the month in which the suit was filed, the note then maturing not having been paid, the defendant company notified plaintiff that it exercised its right to cancel the lease for nonpayment of the rent, and accompanied the notice by the return to plaintiff of all the notes. Plaintiff accepted them, but with the qualification that he would consider the cancellation to be simply in compliance with the demand of the pending suit. The warehouse was a government bonded warehouse, out of which goods could not be removed without permission of the government; and several months elapsed after the cancellation of the lease before this permission could be obtained. The lease having thus been canceled, the suit remains one exclusively in damages.

[1] Paragraph 11 of Ordinance No. 6533, New Council Series, provides:

“Floors of all stores and warehouses to be calculated to carry a dead load of 250 pounds. All calculations for strength of floors of buildings .to be with a factor of five.”

By “a factor of five” is meant that the floor must be five times stronger than necessary to carry the ordinary weight it is designed to carry; so that, under this ordinance, a warehouse floor must be designed to sustain theoretically a load of five times 250, or 1,250 pounds to the square foot.

Plaintiff contends that, in view of this law regulating the construction of buildings, and intended for the safety and protection of life and property, there enters into every lease of a building for warehouse purposes in the city of New Orleans, if nothing be said as to what weight the floors of the *961building can carry, a representation that the floors are calculated to carry a weight of 250 pounds with a factor of five, and that the person who accepts the lease has the right so to understand.

[2] Defendant contends that the cause of the termination of the lease was the failure of plaintiff to pay his rent, and that, such being the case, any losses which plaintiff may have sustained, as the result of his having had to vacate the building, and of his not having had the continued enjoyment of it, - are attributable to his own fault, and do not give rise to any right of action.

This contention of defendant is but the presentation in another form of the main issue in the case, which is whether the floors of the building should have been capable of supporting 250 pounds to the square foot, with a factor of five, in order to come up to the requirements of the lease. For a lessee does not owe rent unless the leased premises are delivered to him, and if he does fio|; owe rent, he cannot default upon the payment of rent; and the leased premises cannot be said to be delivered to him if, the lease calling for a building whose floors are capable of supporting a weight of 250 pounds, with a factor of five, to the square foot, there is delivered a building designed to support 150 pounds, with a factor of four, and the delivery is accompanied by an injunction forbidding the use of the building beyond this reduced weight. If, therefore, the plaintiff is well founded in his said contention as to the 250 pounds, he ceased to owe rent from the moment he notified defendant, by his suit in cancellation, that he was unwilling to accept the building as a compliance with the obligation under the lease to deliver a building designed to sustain a load of 250 pounds to the square foot, with a factor of five. This would be very clear if plaintiff had not gone into possession at all, but, discovering the inadequacy of the building, had refused to accept possession, and had brought suit instead for cancellation, and the suit had proved to be well founded. In such a case a contention on the part of the lessor that the juridical cause of the cancellation of the lease was not his own failure to deliver such a building as the lease called for, but was the failure of the lessee to have paid the rent at the end of. the first month, would not have been entertained seriously. And it is plain that the fact of having gone into possession is legally insignificant, if done under the false impression that the building was such as was called for by the lease. A lessor who thus allows a lessee to go unwittingly into possession of an inadequate building does but superadd injury to his default.

We concur readily in the contention of plaintiff that, in view of the above transcribed building law of the city, requiring warehouse floors to be designed to carry 250 pounds to the square foot with a factor of five, he had a right to assume (in the absence of anything to the contrary either said or written) that this warehouse was of that character, and that the leasing of it by defendant for warehouse purposes amounted to a representation that it was such.

[3] Defendant says that the ordinance speaks only of “dead” load, and that the term “dead” load means the weight of the floors themselves before any load is put upon them, that the load put upon the floors after they are constructed is known as “live” load, and that, because of this defect in speaking of “dead” load when “live” load was meant, this ordinance became obsolete.

But this alleged defect could not have misled any one, since it is evident enough that the weight which the floors were to be “calculated to carry” was the weight to be on them when the space above them was full, not when empty; evidently, it would be useless, if not absurd, to provide by ordi*963nance that floors of stores and warehouses should he strong enough to uphold their own weight, and even more so to require that they should be so constructed as to have a weight of their own of five times 260 pounds to the square foot. And, moreover, this ordinance was extant, both in the official publication of the city ordinances and in the handbook of the city engineer, as being the law regulating the construction of buildings. The contractor who constructed this warehouse admits, on cross-examination, that in 1910, when this warehouse was constructed, this ordinance was not obsolete. To the question: “Who made it obsolete?” he answered: “A committee of architects, contractors, and insurance men made a new Code on the 1st of January, 1911.”

[4] Defendant also says that before entering into the lease the plaintiff visited and examined the warehouse, and that the beams supporting the floors were visible to him, and that it would have been a very easy matter for him'to have calculated the carrying capacity of the floors. But, in so saying, defendant can hardly be serious. The carrying capacity of these floors was a matter for experts to determine and not for a nonexpert leasing the building for the purposes for which it had been recently constructed.

[5] Much evidence was taken on the question of whether or not plaintiff had loaded,' beyond 250 pounds to the square foot, the beams that gave away. The materiality of this evidence we are unable to see. This evidence would be material, it seems to us, only if there were a demand that the plaintiff be required to pay for damages done to the building by overloading the floors, but there is no such demand. On this issue of whether the lease did or not call for a building capable of sustaining 250 pounds with a factor of five to the square foot, this evidence is clearly irrelevant; and on the issue of whether or not this building was of that character, it is of no use, since the defendant, far from pretending that it was, has alleged the contrary under oath in his petition for injunction.

[6] Defendant says that by an expenditure of $1,625 the building could have been brought up to the requirements of the lease, and that as this expenditure would not have been repairs, but reconstruction, the defendant was not obligated to' make them, and that plaintiff should have made them, under his obligation to minimize the damages, and cannot recover a greater amount of damages than this $1,625. T

Suffice it to say that plaintiff was utterly without right to make any alterations in defendant’s building, and that defendant when called upon to make these alterations chose, instead, to file the injunction suit prohibiting the loading of the floors beyond 200 pounds.

Defendant cites cases where it has been held that a lessee cannot claim damages resulting from the want of such repairs as a lessee is authorized to make and pay for out of the rent. These cases are not in point, since the building was brand new, and did not need repairs.

Defendant having breached its contract, owes the damages which plaintiff has suffered as a consequence of such breach. The items are as follows:

[7] 1. Difference in insurance on Mente & Co.’s burlap, $258.48. The rate of insurance in defendant’s building was 28 cents per hundred pounds. It was 75 cents in the building to which plaintiff had to move temporarily after defendant’s breach of contract. Defendant had made a contract with Mente & Co. for the storage of this burlap, and hence had to make good to them this difference in the insurance, and he actually paid them that amount. He is entitled to recover it.

[8] 2. In labor and drayage in moving the *965goods from the defective floor to another, and in moving the goods into another warehouse, plaintiff expended $573.80. He is entitled to this also. This expense would not have been incurred if the goods had been moved out in regular course of business.

[9] 3. Plaintiff paid the government $62'.50 as premium for bonding the warehouse for one year, beginning September 1, 1910. He had the benefit of this bond only during the time he used the warehouse. He says that this was only until the 17th of November when he discontinued the use of the warehouse for receiving goods on storage. But we think that he must be held to have had the use of the building until the 1st of April, when he actually moved out of it. Hence, we think that he can claim reimbursement from defendant only for so much of this premium as was for that part of the year after the 1st of April, that is to say, for five months, or five-twelfths of this $52.08, or $21.70.

[10] 4. From the 17th of November when the defendant’s building failed and plaintiff ceased receiving goods in storage in it, until April 1st, when plaintiff obtained permission from the government to move out, plaintiff was compelled by the government regulations to keep a storekeeper and an inspector at this warehouse, although he was no longer doing business, or receiving goods, in it; and, as he was compelled, under the same government rules, to keep a storekeeper and an inspector at the other warehouse to which he had transferred his business, he claims of defendant the salaries of these extra employes, and we think he is entitled to it. The amount is $704.97.

[11] 5. He is also entitled to the amount uselessly paid during the same time to the telephone company, $36.

[12] 6. Upon vacating defendant’s building, plaintiff moved temporarily into another building, and, upon securing a suitable building, he moved into it. We think he is entitled to recover the expenses of this second removal, $810.35. As we understand the situation, he had no choice but to move into this temporary building. The expense of this second removal was therefore the direct result of defendant’s breach of contract. Pothier, Obligations, Evans’ Translation, par. 162, says:

“So if I let my house to a, person in his quality as a tradesman, or for the purpose of being used as an inn, and the tenant is evicted, the damages and interests for which I am answerable to him will not be confined to the expense of removal and the rents, as in the former instance. The loss of custom, if he cannot meet with any other .suitable house in the neighborhood, ought also, in some degree, to be taken in the account; for, having let my house for the purpose, of a shop, or an inn, this kind of damage is one whereof the risk is foreseen, and to which I am considered as having tacitly submitted.”

The defendant must be held to have contemplated at the time of entering into this lease that if, from any cause, the building failed to answer the purposes of the lease, plaintiff would have to move into another, and would have to move á second time if he found himself compelled to move into an unsuitable building until he could procure a suitable one.

[13] 7. Plaintiff received in the temporary warehouse 2,839 bales of burlap. Had he received them in the leased building the cost of insurance, together with the cost of labor in handling, would have been $1,583.32 less than it was in the temporary building. This loss resulted directly from his not having had the use of the leased building. The advantage of being able to store and handle the goods on storage at less expense was one of the advantages intended to be secured by the lease, and in consideration of which the amount of the rent was made larger. The amount of this loss is established with certainty. This differentiates the case from that of Redon v. Caffin, 11 La. Ann. 695, where a jeweler sued for the diminution of *967the profits in his business, said to have resulted from the ineligibility of the building into which he had had to move, which amount it was impossible, in the nature of things, to establish with any degree of certainty. In the other case cited by defendant (Bonnecaze v. Beer, 37 La. Ann. 531) the lessor was held to have had the right to make the repairs and to have made them with the least possible injury to the lessee; there was therefore no right to claim damages; and, even if there had been, the profits in question, whereof the loss was claimed", were too uncertain, consisting, as they did, in the inconvenience and obstruction to a restaurant business.

[14] 8. Amount paid to experts for examining, and reporting on, the building with a verdict to supporting plaintiff’s side of the controversy. Expenses of this kind fall in the same category as attorney’s fees, which, as is well settled, are not recoverable in a suit for breach of contract — at least in the absence of malice or fraud.

9. Loss of business. This item is not proved with legal certainty.

The jury gave plaintiff judgment for $4,-500. What particular items this amount was allowed for, we are not advised.

The judgment appealed from is reduced to $3,988.62, and as thus amended is affirmed. Plaintiff to pay costs of appeal.