24 A.2d 260 | Conn. | 1942
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff, a member of a fraternal organization which rented lodge rooms on the third floor of a commercial building owned by the defendant, brought this action to recover damages for injuries she suffered when she fell down an unlighted stairway. A verdict was rendered in her favor and the defendant has appealed from a denial of its motion to set the verdict aside and from the judgment.
There is no substantial dispute as to the facts. The plaintiff entered the building at about fifteen minutes before eight in the evening, went up the stairway to the second floor and proceeded along a hallway eighty feet in length and up the stairway to the third floor, where she attended a lodge meeting. The stairways and hall were lighted. The meeting was over at about 10 o'clock, and she was the first person to leave. The light on the third floor stairway was operated by a switch on or near the third floor, under control of the lodge, and the light was on. When she reached the long second floor hallway she found it in darkness. The only switch controlling the lights for it and the first floor stairway was at the bottom of those stairs. Being familiar with the premises, and unafraid, she *529 groped her way along the hall until she reached the stairway partition, then she felt along it with her hand until she came to the end, found the handrail of the stairs, took hold of it, put her foot out to feel for the top of the stairs and in the darkness fell headlong into space. There was evidence of a defective condition of the floor of the hallway and the top tread of the stairs, at their juncture, which the plaintiff claimed required the use of lights at night to make their use reasonably safe. It was customary for the landlord to turn on the lights to the first floor stairs and the second floor hall as soon as it became dark, and to keep them on until sometime after 10 o'clock in the evening, unless it happened to be one of the regular meeting nights of the lodge, when the janitor would ascertain whether the meeting was over before turning out the lights.
The plaintiff testified that she took hold of the handrail and fell because she misjudged the distance, and her testimony furnishes no basis upon which the jury could reasonably find that any defect in the stairway was the cause of her fall. The case comes down, both on the claim of the plaintiff and on the evidence, to the alleged failure of the defendant adequately to light the stairway.
There is a conflict of authority as to the common law rule concerning the duty of a landlord to keep the ordinary halls and stairways lighted, in the absence of a statute compelling him to do so, but where the construction of a stairway or hall is such as to require the use of artificial light to make it reasonably safe, or the landlord has assumed the duty of keeping them lighted, the rule of using reasonable care to keep common halls and stairways reasonably safe applies, and this general obligation, applied to the instant case, would mean to take reasonable care to see that the *530
stairway was properly lighted. See Gibson v. Hoppman,
The trial court should have granted the motion to set the verdict aside. As a new trial must be ordered, we discuss briefly certain assignments of error as to the charge, a decision upon which will be of assistance to the court upon a retrial of the case. The defendant pleaded as a defense that the plaintiff had assumed the risk of injury, and complaint is made of the court's instruction upon that issue. In Freedman v. Hurwitz,
Complaint is made of the; portion of the charge which deals with the right of the plaintiff, a married woman, to recover, as an element of her damage, expenses *533
which have been incurred by reason of her injury, in the absence of a statutory waiver by her husband. The instructions given were in accord with our law as stated in Katz v. Cohn,
Other assignments of error as to the charge as given, referring to isolated paragraphs, are of no merit. We do not find error in the single ruling on evidence, or in the failure to submit interrogatories. The latter situation was one falling within what we said in Morgan v. Marchesseault,
There is error, the judgment is set aside and a new trial is ordered. Costs for printing sixty-four pages of the evidence, which were relevant only to the issue of the amount of damages recoverable if the plaintiff prevailed, are not to be taxed in favor of the appellant.
In this opinion MALTBIE, C. J., AVERY and JENNINGS, Js., concurred.
Dissenting Opinion
It is my view that the statement upon which the conclusion of the majority is predicated, that "liability could be imposed upon the defendant only if it knew or in the exercise of reasonable inspection should have ascertained that the light was out" at the time the plaintiff fell, unduly limits the defendant's liability in view of the scope of the issue of liability presented by the record. The complaint alleged that by reason of the defendant's "failure to light" the stairs, they were dangerous and that this caused the plaintiff's fall. The finding discloses that it was in issue whether the defendant had *534 made any provision to maintain proper lighting of the stairway, and in its charge the trial court submitted this issue to the jury. They could reasonably have found a total failure of the defendant to do anything either to provide proper lighting facilities or to arrange for keeping the lights lighted, and that its negligence in these respects was a substantial factor in producing the plaintiff's fall. Since the evidence warranted a finding that the plaintiff was free from contributory negligence, the motion to set aside the verdict was properly denied.
I do not think that this case is "controlled by our opinion in Laflin v. Lomas Nettleton Co.," as is stated in the majority opinion, because of the broader scope of the defendant's claimed negligence in the present case. To my mind that case would be more nearly on all fours if the defendant's breach of duty there relied on had been its failure to provide the steps supporting the toy referred to, which were essential as a means of exit from its apartment house, by reason of which the plaintiff fell and was injured, although she had been enabled to enter by steps provided temporarily by a volunteer and removed before her exit.
In my opinion there is no error.