Vorenberg v. William Filene's Sons Co.

Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
Vorenberg v. William Filene's Sons Co., 232 Mass. 153 (Mass. 1919)
122 N.E. 287
Pierce

Vorenberg v. William Filene's Sons Co.

Opinion of the Court

Pierce, J.

These are actions to recover rents, taxes and insurance under covenants contained in a lease executed by and be- - *155tween the plaintiff and the defendant in the three first actions, and by and between the defendant in those actions and the defendant in the three last named actions. The defendant William Filene’s Sons Company admits its obligation to pay the amount claimed unless it is entitled to an abatement. The defendant Alonzo W. Perry, as sublessee, admits the amount claimed against him is due unless he is entitled to a like abatement. In each set of actions the premises demised are the same, the periods of time included are the same, the amount of rent sought to be recovered is the same, and the single issue of law presented is, was the judge of the Superior Court right in ruling “that the defendant is precluded so far as any right to have the rent abated or to have damages determined or recouped because of any failure on the part of the plaintiff to restore the premises to the condition in which they were before the first fire, by the judgment in the first action.”

The premises were injured by a fire which occurred on February 6 or 7,1915. The rent under the demise to William Filene’s Sons Company and under the demise to Alonzo W. Perry was paid up to June 1, 1915. The action reported in 227 Mass, at page 575 was brought to enforce the covenants of the leases to pay rent for the months of June, July and August, 1915. The present action is upon the same covenant to recover rent of the same defendants for the remaining months of 1915 and for every month during the year 1916.

In the answers filed in the former actions the several defendants in the paragraph numbered 2 of their answers, set out that provision •of the lease which reads: “ ‘ In case said premises or anypart thereof are injured by fire or other casualty, the rent reserved shall be abated in proportion to the extent to which said premises are thereby rendered unfit for use by the lessee, until the premises are restored as hereinafter provided. If such injury does not exceed fifty (50) per cent of the value of the building immediately before the injury, as determined by the adjustment of insurance, the lessor shall, as soon as may be, restore said premises to the condition they were in before such injury as far as this can be done out of the proceeds of the insurance,”’ and alleged that “on or about February 7, 1915, said premises were injured by fire, and thereby rendered, in part, unfit for use by the defendant;” *156that "the insurance due to the plaintiff on account of said fire was adjusted on or before April 13, 1915;” that "on or before that date the plaintiff received payment of said insurance in full . . . and [that] the injury caused by said fire did not exceed fifty (50) per cent of the value of the building immediately before the injury, as determined by the adjustment of insurance.” The defendant charged that “the plaintiff did not, as soon as might be, restore said premises to the condition they were in before such injury, as far as could be done out of the proceeds of the insurance, and the plaintiff has never so restored said premises;” and asserted “by reason of the facts aforesaid, the defendant is entitled, with respect to the entire period subsequent to the date of said fire, and with respect to the months rent for which is claimed in said declaration, to an abatement of rent, as in said indenture provided.”

In paragraph 3 of the answers the defendants, further answering, say: "... by reason thereof, and of the plaintiff’s said failure to restore said premises to the condition they were in before their said injury, as far as that can be done out of the proceeds of the insurance, the defendant has been greatly damaged, and it claims to recoup its said damages in this action.”

Under paragraph 2 of the answers in abatement of the rent the amount of damages suffered by the defendants by reason of the failure of the plaintiff to restore the premises to the condition they were in before they were injured by the fire could not be assessed beyond the date of the writ. The obligation of the covenant is a continuing one, and is enforceable until the premises are restored. Fay v. Guynon, 131 Mass. 31.

It follows that the defendants are entitled to an assessment of damages in abatement in the present actions, unless in lieu of an insistence upon a physical and specific performance of the covenant “to restore said premises to the condition they were in” they have elected to take damages in recoupment. We think paragraph 3 of the answers above quoted is such an election, and that the damages which were assessed under those answers in recoupment by the court, or which might have been assessed on submission by the jury, now stand in place and in performance of the covenant to restore the premises. Black River Savings Bank v. Edwards, 10 Gray, 387. Berman v. Henry N. Clark Co. 194 Mass. *157248. Edwards v. Columbia Amusement Co. 215 Mass. 125. It is quite true the rent sought to be recovered is not the same rent sought to be recovered in the former actions and that the abatement is not the same abatement, “but the question here is, not on the identity of the cause of action, but on the identity of the grounds of defence set up in the former actions, with those relied on in answer to the present actions. These are precisely the same.” Black River Savings Bank v. Edwards, supra.

Exceptions overruled.

Reference

Full Case Name
Simon Vorenberg v. William Filene's Sons Company Same v. Same Same v. Same William Filene's Sons Company v. Alonzo W. Perry Same v. Same Same v. Same
Status
Published