(after stating the facts). The controlling question in the case is whether or not the ordinance of the City of Argenta, making it unlawful to sell intoxicating liquors in the leased premises, operated to cancel the lease. It will be observed that the language of the lease is that Wilhelm covenants that he will use said premises as a hotel and saloon, and for no other purpose whatever, and that he specially will not let said premises, or permit same to be used for any unlawful business or purpose whatever.
(1) It is first argued that the word “saloon” does not necessarily mean a place where intoxicating liquors are sold, and that the city ordinance prevents the operation only of a saloon for the sale of intoxicating liquors. It is true that the word “saloon” does not always mean a place where intoxicating liquors are sold, but there can be no doubt that such was the meaning contemplated by the parties to this contract. This is shown by the provision of the lease cancelling it in the event Pulaski County should vote dry at the election in 1916. This election, of course, refers only to saloons in which intoxicating liquors are sold, .as no other kind of saloons could be affected by that election.
But it is insisted that, even though it be conceded that the word “saloon,” as here used, means a place where intoxicating liquors are sold, this would not avoid the lease, because the keeping of a saloon was not the only business authorized by the contract; and for the further reason that the parties expressly named a condition upon which the lease should be terminated, towit: That Pulaski County should vote dry ,at the general election in 1916, and that having named one condition which should operate to cancel the lease, the parties thereby agreed that the lease should not otherwise be cancelled. This last contention was based upon the doctrine of expressio unius est exchosio alterius.
(2) We think the important question in the case is whether or not the building was leased for a single purpose, that purpose being the operation of a hotel and saloon ; "and we think the lease should be so construed. The lease does not provide for keeping a hotel or saloon, but for a “hotel cmd saloon.”
It is not necessary that a lease specify the use to be ¡made of the property let.. In 24 Cyc. 1061, under the title of “Landlord and Tenant,” it is said: “Where the contract of lease is silent on the subject, the lessees have by implication the right to put the premises to such use and employment as they please, not materially different from that in which they ¡are usually employed, to which they are adapted, and for which they were constructed. The law, however, implies an obligation on the part of the lessee to use the property in a proper and tenant-like manner, without exposing the buildings to ruin or waste by acts of omission or commission, and not to put them to a use or employment materi ally different from that in which they are usually employed, or apparently violative of the spirit and purpose of the lease as such spirit and purpose is evidenced by the recitals therein. ’ ’
Discussing restrictions in leases as to mode of use, the same authority, page 1062, says: “Express condition or covenants are frequently embodied in leases to the effect that the premises shall only be used for purposes specified therein, and such covenants run with the land. A recital in a lease of the purposes for which the demised premises are let'is often held to constitute an express covenant on the part of the tenant to use them for no other purpose. Where, however, such restrictive conditions or covenants are incorporated into a lease, the general rule of interpretation is that they should be so construed as to carry into effect the intention of the parties, and when considered in connection with .other parts of the instrument, will tend to support, rather than defeat it. =* =X= $ >>
The parties to this lease agreed .and covenanted that the property should be used as a hotel and saloon, and for no other purpose whatever, and, in construing the lease, we have no right to strike out one cf the terms there employed. It is argued that the building could be used for a hotel, even though no saloon was kept there, and that a temperance saloon could be kept, where cigars and nonintoxicating drinks could be bought; and further that the property has other usable value. But we think the answer to this contention is that this is not a general lease, but a special one, for the purpose of operating a hotel and saloon. It is alleged, and there was proof to support the allegation, that the landlord does not object to the tenant making other uses of the property. But we can not consider the landlord’s present inclination in determining the meaning of his written contract. His permission for a different use is essential and it would be a modification of the contract to read into it the landlord’s changed purpose. And in construing this lease, we can not say that the stipulation of the use to be made of the building was solely for the benefit of the landlord.
Through the industry and research of opposing counsel, we have had the benefit of citation to many cases on this subject; but we shall not undertake to review these cases in this opinion. The cases are numerous and are conflicting, and it must be conceded that there are courts of the highest authority which sustain appellant’s view of the law. But we think the better rule is announced by those courts which hold such contracts to be void, when their performance becomes unlawful.
In the case of Hooper v. Mueller, 158 Mich. 595, 123 N. W. 24, a certain building in Alma, Michigan, with the hotel furniture and fixtures, was let for a term of eight years, to be occupied for hotel .and saloon purposes. The lease contained the following clause: ‘ ‘ The said first parties further agree that in case they are unable to furnish, that is secure, for the said second parties, or the tenant of said parties, two sufficient bondsmen required by law in case of retail dealers in malt and spirituous liquors, at second parties’ own proper expense, however, then this lease shall be and become void. ’ ’ Thereafter, under the operation of the local option law, the sale of intoxicating liquors was prohibited, and upon suit for the rent of the building after the prohibitory order became effective, the trial court held that the lease became void and nonenforeeable on the date the prohibitory order became effective. It was there contended that the contract did not provide for its abrogation in the event of the adoption of local option, and, consequently, the law would not operate to avoid it on the happening of that event. But the court there said:
“It is not argued by either party that the contract was not .such a one as the parties at the time could not undertake to perform, and which could not be enforced. The local option law which went into effect in that county during the term of this lease, rendered the performance of the contract on the part of plaintiffs impossible. They had agreed that in case of failure to furnish and secure bondsmen for defendants as retail liquor dealers, the lease should be .and become void. It may well be said that they contracted, with reference to this contingency which has arisen, as well as to any other circumstance which' would intervene, either from their own acts or otherwise. This was a part, of the consideration which induced defendants to enter into the lease.
“In a recent well-considered case decided by the Supreme Court of Maine, the question involved in the case at bar was before the court. It was held that the enactment of a law after a lawful contract is made which renders its performance unlawful, discharges the contract. American Mercantile Exchange v. Blunt, 102 Me. 128, 120 Am. St. Rep. 463, 66 Atl. 212, 10 L. R. A. (N. S.) 414, 10 Em. & Eng. Ann. Cas. 1022, notes and leases cited. In the case note, it is .said: T,he authorities are almost unanimous in holding that, where the act contracted for is rendered unlawful by the enactment of a .statute before the expiration of the time for performance, the obligation is thereby discharged,’ citing, among other cases, Cordes v. Miller, 39 Mich. 581, 33 Am. Rep. 430. ’ ’
In the case of Jamieson v. Indiana Natural Gas & Oil Co., 128 Ind. 555, 28 N. E. 76, 12 L. R. A. 652, a bill of complaint was filed by a stockholder seeking an injunction, in which it was alleged that a contract had been entered into by his corporation with a construction company for building and operating a pipe line for transportation of natural gas, which had become incapable of performance' by reason of'.a statute passed, after part performance, which prohibited the transportation of gas at as high pressure as that provided for in the contract;.and the syllabus in that case is as follows:
“A contract is invalidated by the subsequent enactment of police regulations which render its performance illegal as to one of the parties. ’ ’
An extensive case note reviews a large number of oases.
• Another 'ease which discusses the principle which we think should control here is that of Heart v. East Tennessee Brewing Co., 19 L. R. A. (N. S.) 964, 113 S. W. 664. In that case a certain house situated in Knoxville, Tenn., had been leased for a term of eight years, to be used as a saloon or place for the sale of intoxicating liquors, and by an act of the General Assembly of that State, it thereafter became unlawful to sell intoxicating liquors in said city. The chancellor sustained a demurrer to a suit for the rent which .accrued thereafter, and, in sustaining that action, the Supreme Court of Tennessee, speaking through Shields, J., said:
“There is no error in the action of the chancellor. ' When the contract was made, the purpose for which the property was leased, the sale of intoxicating liquors in Knoxville — was lawful, and the lease valid and enforceable. Afterward, that purpose was made unlawful by the acts of the General Assembly above referred to, and thus, by operation of law, the lease became and is void and unenforceable at the instance of either party.”
Many oases were cited in that opinion, and among other things, it was there said:
“It is a principle of general application that all contracts are void which provide for doing a thing which is contrary to law, morality, and public policy. * * * It has been applied to contracts of this character, and held for that- reason, that the rent contracted to be paid could not be collected.”
‘ ‘ It is not necessary in this case to determine whether or not the contract contained in the lease restricts the use of the property for the sale of intoxicating liquors. It was the purpose of both lessor and lessee, as clearly expresesd in the instrument, that it should be used .-as a saloon, and this being made unlawful by law, the contract is no longer enforceable.”
One of the cases strongly relied on by appellant is that of O’Byrne v. Henley, 23 L. R. A. (N. S.) 496, 50 So. 83. The lease in that case provided for the occupation of the premises as a saloon, and not otherwise. The court there discussed the meaning of the word “saloon,” and held that this word will not be understood, as a matter of law, to mean a place where intoxicating liquors only were sold, and not a place for the sale of soda water, etc., and it was there said that there had been only a partial, and not a total, destruction of the business for which the premises were leased after the prohibitory law became effective which prevented the operation of a saloon for the sale of intoxicating liquors. That the lessee could have continued to use the premises as a saloon, though he could not have sold intoxicating drinks or beverages, and after reviewing a number of cases, the court reached the conclusion expressed in the syllabus as follows:
“A lease of property solely for saloon purposes is not terminated by the taking effect during- the term of a prohibitory liquor law, where, by construction of the parties, the right was conferred upon the lessee of selling upon the property nonintoxicating beverages and tobacco, so that the right of the lessee was not totally destroyed. ’ ’
A later case by the same court is that of Greil Bros. v. Mabson, 60 So. 876, 179 Ala. 444. The lease in that case provided “that the parties of the first part have leased * * * the bar room and fixtures known as the Windsor Hotel Bar, and located in the Windsor Hotel building on Commerce Street, for occupation as a bar, and not otherwise.” The complaint in that case set out the facts stated above, and alleged the passage of a prohibitory law, which made the sale of intoxicating liquors unlawful in the State of Alabama. A demurrer was interposed to the complaint, which raised the question of the sufficiency of the allegations of the complaint of incapacity to use the building for other purposes than the sale of intoxicating liquors, in that it was not .shown that the passage of the prohibitory .act destroyed or deprived the lessee of the beneficial use of the premises, and that it was not alleged in the complaint that the lessor had declined or refused to permit the lessee to use the premises for other legitimate purposes, or that the lessor had consented to an abandonment of the premises. The opinion in that case called attention to the fact that the lease included the bar room and fixtures inseparably and provided that the room was to be occupied as a bar, and not otherwise, and that the lessor was bound under the contract to have permitted the use of the property as a bar, .and the lessee was prohibited from using it for any other purpose. After defining the terms “bar” and “barroom,” the court said:
“It is therefore evident that the main, and, indeed, the sole, purpose for which the property was leased was that it .should be used as a place for selling intoxicating liquors. Therefore, did the said business become totally prohibited by the subsequently enacted State prohibition law? We think that .such was the result, and that the said prohibition law forbade the very business and purpose for which the property was leased. The general rule is that, where the performance of a contract becomes impossible .subsequent to the making of same, the promissor is not thereby discharged. 9 Cyc. 627. But this rule has its exceptions, and these exceptions are where the performance becomes impassible by law, either by reason of. a change in the law, or by some action or authority of the Government. It is generally held that, where the act or thing contracted tó be done is subsequently made unlawful by an act of the Legislature, the promise is avoided. Likewise, where the performance depends upon the continued existence of a thing which is assumed as a basis of the agreement, the destruction of the thing by the enactment of a law terminates the obligation. ’ ’
Without reviewing in detail the decisions of the various courts upon this subject, it may be said that we have a statute on the subject of leases of buildings for use in connection with the unlawful sale of intoxicating liquors of a kind which we have not found referred to in any of the opinions which have been called to our attention on this' subject. This is Act No. 418 of the Acts of 1907, found on page 1106 of the Acts of the General Assembly for that year.
The purpose of this act was to aid in the suppression of the unlawful sale of intoxicating liquors, and, as a means to that end, it is made unlawful for one to lease a building for that purpose, and under the conditions stated, the landlord is made guilty of a misdemeanor who permits the illegal sale of intoxicating liquors in his building, and the act cancels the lease where the liquor law is violated.
Performance o*f the contract having, therefore, become unlawful, it must necessarily follow that no action will lie to compel its performance, and the judgment of the court below is therefore affirmed.