299 Mass. 432 | Mass. | 1938
This is an appeal from an order of the Appellate Division for the Northern District, dismissing a report established by a judge assigned for that purpose under Rule 30 of the District Courts (1932) as amended.
The action is in tort to recover for personal injuries, sustained by the plaintiff in falling on a common stairway of a two-tenement house owned by the defendants in which the plaintiff’s husband was one of the tenants. At the close of the evidence the plaintiff and the defendants presented
The plaintiff contends that the judge erred in his disposition of her requests and that his general finding for the defendants was predicated upon erroneous special findings. The plaintiff had the burden of proving that she sustained her injuries through a lack of reasonable care on the part of the defendants to keep the common stairway in as good condition as it was or appeared to be when the tenancy began. Griffin v. Rudnick, 298 Mass. 82, 84, and cases cited. In so far as the plaintiff’s requests which were refused were for findings of fact, the judge was not obliged to make them. Crowninshield Shipbuilding Co. v. Jackman, 283 Mass. 21, 22. Those refused which were for rulings of law were based on assumptions of facts not in accord with the facts found by the judge; they were thus rendered immaterial and were properly denied. Marschall v. Aiken, 170 Mass. 3. Levine v. Cohen, 235 Mass. 446, 448. Franklin Park Lumber Co. v. Huie-Hodge Lumber Co. 246 Mass. 157, 158. Mahoney v. Norcross, 284 Mass. 153, and cases cited. The requests denied which called for rulings on fragments of the facts in evidence were not required to be given. Barnes v. Berkshire Street Railway, 281 Mass. 47, 50. Halnan v. New England Telephone & Telegraph Co. 296 Mass. 219, 223. The requests that there was evidence to warrant findings that there was a change in the premises, and for the plaintiff, became immaterial by virtue of the precise finding of the judge that there had been no change in the condition or apparent condition of the stairway between the letting and the accident, and were properly refused. Roche v. Brickley, 254 Mass. 584, 585, 587. In view of this specific finding the plaintiff was not harmed by the ruling of the judge that there was no duty on the part of the defendants to make repairs in
Order dismissing report affirmed.