36 A.2d 231 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1943
Argued October 4, 1943. The trial judge sitting without a jury entered judgment for a tenant who sued his landlord in trespass to recover damages sustained through the negligent maintenance and repair of the roof of an apartment building. From the refusal of his motions for a new trial and judgment n.o.v., the landlord appealed.
The tenant occupied the top floor of the building, and prior to March 29, 1942, he noticed small leaks in the ceiling of his apartment. He reported this condition to the superintendent of the building, and the roof was patched with tar paper by the superintendent's son about March 25th or 26th. The young man who did the repairing was employed as maintenance man for the apartment in his spare time. He was not a roofer by trade, and his only experience along this line had been the repairing of other portions of the roof on three or four previous occasions. On March 28th a windstorm blew away the patches put on by the maintenance man shortly before, and other portions of the roof. On the following day, during a heavy rain, water leaked through the ceiling of the apartment, soiling the tenant's rugs, furniture covers, and draperies. The walls and ceiling of the apartment itself were so damaged by the water as to make the quarters no longer livable, and the furniture was moved into the hall and into a vacant one room and bath apartment to protect it from damage. The tenant and his wife moved to a hotel.
The trial judge found that the landlord had negligently *446
maintained and repaired the roof. There is sufficient testimony to support the finding that the landlord was negligent in making repairs to the defect which had been discovered prior to the rainstorm that damaged the tenant's personal belongings. He entrusted the repairs to a young man who was not a roofer, and who had had no roofing experience other than the applying of three or four patches to other parts of the roof of the apartment building on previous occasions. That the repairs were not skillfully done is amply demonstrated by the fact that the first high wind ripped off the patch; and that after the landlord subsequently employed an experienced roofing contractor there was no further difficulty: Minor v. Hogg,
True, the lease did not contain a covenant to repair and, generally, in the absence of such covenant, a landlord is under no obligation to repair: Wood v. Carson,
The trial judge awarded the tenant $234.79 as damages; $8 for the cost of repairing his personal property; and the balance, $226.79, to cover room rent paid to hotels from March 29, 1942, when he left the apartment building, to May 6, 1942, when he moved into an apartment in another building. The liability of the landlord for the damages to his tenant's personal property is clear, and requires no discussion. But the expenditures for the hotel bills, while the apartment was being repaired, cannot be recovered.
The tenant's basic proposition is that he was evicted from the apartment. It has been held that a forcible or physical expulsion is no longer necessary to constitute an eviction, and that any act of a landlord which deprives a tenant of that beneficial enjoyment of the premises to which he is entitled under a lease will amount in law to an eviction: McCandless v. Findley,
The cases upon which the tenant relies (Tarnogurski v. Rzepski,
The judgment is modified by reducing the amount thereof to $8, and, so modified, it is affirmed. *449