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Appellate Term, First Department, April, 1921. [Vol. 115.

APPEAL by defendant from a judgment of the Municipal Court of the city of New York, borough of Manhattan, sixth district, in favor of the plaintiff after trial by the court without a jury.

Prince & Nathan (Sidney J. Loeb and Leon M. Prince, of counsel), for appellant.

Levy & McMahon (Nathan D. Levy, of counsel), for respondent.

WAGNER, J. The plaintiff instituted suit against the defendant brewing company for rent for the months of January to October, 1920, for the use of premises occupied by it as a saloon under a written lease which included the following provision: "It being expressly agreed, that the only business to be carried on in said premises is the saloon business." A further clause contained in the lease provided for indemnity by the tenant for loss or damage by reason of the maintenance by the tenant" of a saloon or place for the sale of malt, strong, spirituous, or intoxicating liquors The tenant by way of defense denied liability for rent accruing beyond the month of January, 1920, by reason of the passage of the Eighteenth Amendment to the federal Constitution and the enactment of the subsequent Volstead Act and claimed resulting abrogation from obligation. to pay rent thereunder. This amendment forbidding the manufacture of intoxicating liquors after one year from its ratification, sale or transportation was by proclamation of the acting secretary of state dated January 29, 1919, declared duly ratified by the legislatures of thirty-six states, certified as valid, and became effective from and after the 29th day of January, 1920, which in turn was followed by the supplemental

Misc] Appellate Term, First Department, April, 1921.

enforcement law commonly known as the Volstead Act.

The defendant's license to sell intoxicating liquors having expired and none being possible of procurance thereafter, it discontinued the maintenance of the saloon business which it had previously conducted and resisted the later demands of the plaintiff for rent on the ground that the enactment of the so-called Prohibition Law worked an exoneration of its liability under the lease.

The general rule is that where the law creates a duty and a person without fault on his part is disabled from performing it, failure to perform is excused; but where a party by contract creates a duty upon himself, he is bound to make good if he can, notwithstanding any inevitable accident or unforeseen contingency; but the rule has no application where performance becomes impossible by a change in the law or as a result of action taken under governmental authority. The rule is thus stated by Parsons on Contracts, at volume 2, page 674: "That the illegality of a contract is in general a perfect defense must be too obvious to need illustration. It may indeed be regarded as an impossibility as an act of law; and it is put upon the same footing as an impossibility by act of God, because it would be absurd for the law to punish a man for not doing, or in other words to require him to do that which it forbids his doing. Therefore if one agrees to do a thing which is unlawful for him to do, and it becomes unlawful by an act of legislature, the act avoids the promise.

To the same effect see Brick Presbyterian Church v. City of New York, 5 Cow. 538; Baker v. Johnson, 42 N. Y. 126; 3 Elliott Cont. § 1901; Bishop Cont. 594; Wharton Cont. § 305.

The principle rests upon the maxim lex non cogit

Appellate Term, First Department, April, 1921. [Vol. 115.

ad impossibilia, or as phrased by Hannen, J., in Bailey v. DeCrespigny, L. R. 4 Q. B. 180, upon the ground that it is not reasonable to suppose that the legislature, while altering the condition of things, with reference to which the covenantor contracted, intended that he should remain liable on a covenant which the legislature itself prevented his fullfilling."

This court in Adler v. Miles, 69 Misc. Rep. 601, after reviewing the authorities on this subject, held that the performance of a contractual relation was excused by a supervening condition brought about by the operation of a change in the law which made its performance illegal. In that case the defendant when sued for rent claimed that while originally it was lawful for him to conduct a motion picture business on the premises which constituted what then was known as a " tenement house," subsequently an ordinance was passed which provided that no license for such purpose should be granted when a show was given in a building known as a tenement house, and that consequently the lease terminated by act of law. Justice Seabury writing for this court said: "The parties to the lease contracted to do a thing which at the time the lease was made was lawful. Public authority, in accordance with law, has provided that the very thing, which the parties in their lease contemplated, should not be done. To carry out the lease according to its terms has now become unlawful. It follows, therefore, that the lease cannot be performed according to its terms; and under such circumstances the obligation of the lessee to pay rent is discharged

* *. Section 231 of the Real Property Law recognizes the doctrine of these cases and provides that, whenever the lessee shall use the premises for an illegal business, the lease shall become void. Here the lease restricted the use of the premises to a purpose

Misc.] Appellate Term, First Department, April, 1921.

which was subsequently prohibited by law; and for the tenant to have used the premises for the sole purpose for which the lease authorized them to be used would, under section 231 of the Real Property Law, have avoided the lease."

In the instant case the lease made to the brewing concern expressly limits and restricts the lessee's use of the premises to the saloon business. No other purpose is authorized. The presence of words of restriction is, therefore, equivalent to an express covenant not to put the premises to any other use. Chautauqua Assembly v. Alling, 46 Hun, 582. It follows accordingly that if it should be found upon the facts appearing in the record before us that a continuation of the use of the premises in question as intended by the parties would be violative of the fundamental law we would be compelled to hold that the law as changed ex proprio vigore terminated the lease and discharged the lessee from future requirements in the payment of rent. For in that event the lease became void because the use contemplated by the parties was one in express contravention of the statute.

Our inquiry narrowing down eventually to one of judicial construction of the phrase "saloon business " as used in the instant lease, we are forced to examine the circumstances and conditions surrounding the parties at the time of their signature to the instrument of demise, in order to ascertain the true intent and purpose of the parties in its inclusion as a covenant. While words used in contracts are ordinarily to be interpreted in accord with their usual meaning it is our duty as nearly as we can to place ourselves in the situation which confronted the parties at that time and with a view of all the surrounding circumstances seek to arrive at the meaning rightly to be ascribed

Appellate Term, First Department, April, 1921. [Vol. 115.

to the language employed. Mecca Realty Co. v. Kellogg Toasted Corn Flakes Co., 166 App. Div. 74.

It appears that the defendant was a brewery corporation and had for nine years prior to the enactment of this lease been selling malt liquors of its own manufacture in these premises where a saloon was conducted. The plaintiff knew that the saloon had been operated during that period for the sale of spirituous and intoxicating liquors, and in the light of such knowledge as to the previous character of business transacted prepared the present lease, with express limitation of use to a saloon business. We think that in view of the prior unquestioned and concededly known use of the premises, together with that provision of the lease regarding indemnity by reason of the maintenance of "a saloon or place for sale of malt, strong, spirituous or intoxicating liquors," the clear indications of the lease and the circumstances which surround the parties, are that they were specifying their own definition of the word saloon and intending it to cover and apply to the precise use theretofore made, and a use later forbidden by legislative act. In so construing the word, we are of the opinion that we are giving the effect to the language which the parties clearly intended to be given, and which further accords with the present, common, acceptation of the term. Whatever former distinctions or refinements in meaning have been made with respect to the word "saloon," we think as the Supreme Court of Washington did in Stratford v. Seattle Brewing Co., 162 Pac. Repr. 31, that the word saloon has acquired a very definite general meaning as a place where intoxicating liquors are sold and that as such it is generally understood.

While neither counsel in their briefs nor this court upon an extensive investigation has been able to find

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