155 A. 813 | Conn. | 1931
The plaintiff in the late afternoon of December 24th, 1929, fell upon a public sidewalk in front of premises in Meriden owned by the defendant The Home National Bank and leased by it to the defendant William Schaal Son, Incorporated. The sidewalk was built up to the wall of the building and sloped slightly toward the street. Above and projecting over it was a coping along the front of the building and a cornice forming a part of the roof. The plaintiff claimed to have slipped on ice upon the walk formed by the freezing of water caused by drippings from the melting of snow accumulated upon these projections. The complaint, which lacked that precision which is desirable, particularly in a trial to the jury, presents a fourfold aspect. It alleges negligence in allowing snow to accumulate upon the roof and coping of the building, so that it melted and dripped upon the sidewalk, there to freeze; negligence in not making some provision in the construction of the building which would have prevented the water dripping upon the sidewalk; maintenance of a nuisance consisting of the construction of the building in such a way that such dripping naturally resulted; and negligence in failing to take steps to protect passersby from the dangerous condition upon the sidewalk due to the ice upon it.
This being an appeal from the refusal to set aside a nonsuit, that refusal cannot be sustained if, taking the evidence in its most favorable light to the plaintiff, strengthened by every reasonable inference, it afforded any substantial support to the allegations of the complaint.Baggish v. Offengand,
Under the final aspect of the complaint, the plaintiff does not assert a claim of liability upon the part of the defendants based merely upon the fact that the sidewalk was defective due to the ice upon it, but her contention is that they maintained the building in such a way as to create a dangerous condition upon the sidewalk and were therefore obligated to use reasonable care to protect persons passing along it from injury caused thereby. If one by his acts creates a dangerous condition in a highway, or so conducts his own affairs that such a condition follows and he has notice of it, he is under a duty to use reasonable care to protect travelers from it; the liability for failure to do so does not arise out of the fact that the highway is defective but out of the duty resting upon him to guard persons subjected to danger by his act. Waterbury
v. Clark,
The lease to the Schaal corporation was of the entire premises, building and land, with a covenant for surrender of them at its expiration in as good condition as they were or should be put by the bank and one that the lessee should make all necessary inside repairs, and also a provision for a termination of the lease should the lessee make any alterations in the premises without the written consent of the lessor. There was no evidence that the premises were in any way out of repair. As between the Schaal corporation and the bank, the former under the terms of the lease had no power to make structural changes in the exterior of the building, amounting to "alterations." But, having otherwise full possession and control of the building, they might be responsible for not taking any steps short of such alterations to prevent water dripping upon the sidewalk by removing the accumulations of snow or other expedients. Leonard v.Strong,
As regards the cause of action based upon nuisance, it is settled law that where an owner leases premises upon which there is a nuisance which will continue if they are used for the purpose and in the manner intended he is liable for damages resulting from that nuisance; House v. Metcalf,
There was evidence upon which the plaintiff was entitled to go to the jury upon the question of the liability of each of the defendants for her injury and the nonsuit should not have been granted.
There is error, the judgment is set aside and a new trial ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.