167 N.Y. 153 | NY | 1901
The action is to recover damages for injuries claimed to have been suffered by the plaintiff through the negligence of the defendant, who at the time was the owner of an apartment house in the city of New York. The plaintiff on November 25th, 1895, went to the butcher shop of one Lutz and found the shop closed, with a card on the door upon which was written: "Residence, 216 East 84th Street." Thereupon she went to the building designated, which was the apartment house of the defendant. She rang the bell and the door was opened by some mechanical contrivance, no one coming to meet her. Then she entered the hallway, which she testifies was so dark that she could not see the floor, and proceeded back some distance till she came to a flight of steps, down which she fell and met with the injuries for which she sought to recover. The negligence charged upon the defendant is the failure to keep this hall so lighted that the plaintiff could have discovered the steps. On the trial it was a disputed fact whether the gas was burning in the hall at the time of the plaintiff's injury, or not. The trial court, over the plaintiff's objection and exception, excluded evidence tending to show that it was the custom to turn the gas off in the cellar of the house every morning. At the close of all the evidence the trial court dismissed the complaint. The Appellate Division, by a divided court, reversed this judgment on the ground that the exclusion of the evidence of custom was erroneous.
We shall not discuss the point on which the learned Appellate Division decided the case, as in our judgment no cause of action was made out, even if it be assumed that the gas was not *Page 156
lighted at the time of the accident. It is not contended on behalf of the plaintiff, nor charged in the complaint, that the building fell within the provisions of section 9, chapter 567, Laws of 1895, which require that certain halls in tenement houses shall be kept lighted during specified times of the day, and it is conceded that, apart from the statute, ordinarily there is no obligation on the part of the owner of a building to keep hallways lighted. (Hilsenbeck v. Guhring,
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed and judgment on the nonsuit at Trial Term affirmed, with costs.
PARKER, Ch. J., GRAY, O'BRIEN, HAIGHT, LANDON and WERNER, JJ., concur.
Ordered accordingly. *Page 158