167 N.E. 582 | NY | 1929
The Elsie S. Holding Co., Inc., was the owner and lessor of a building; the Alamo Warehouses, Inc., was the lessee and occupant. It had been stipulated that the building was "to be used and occupied as a warehouse" and that all repairs thereto were to be made by the tenant. The building was equipped with a freight elevator which was operated in an open shaft immediately adjoining the front wall of the building. This wall, which was wide at the base, narrowed as it rose, so that the inner face of the wall inclined outward. So much out of plumb was the wall that the elevator platform, which almost touched the wall when at the first floor, raised to the eighth floor, was eighteen inches distant therefrom. The elevator had side walls but was entirely open front and back. Consequently, when the elevator was at the eighth floor, between the wall of the building and the edge of the platform there was an uncovered opening eighteen inches wide, access to which from the platform was unobstructed by any rail or other guarding *448 obstacle. John Murphy, an employee of the lessee Alamo Warehouses, Inc., was at work on the eighth floor unloading a truck which he had wheeled upon the elevator platform. In some unexplained manner he fell through the opening and was killed. This action was thereupon brought by the administratrix of his estate against the lessor, Elsie S. Holding Co., Inc., to recover damages for his death.
It is a familiar rule that the lessor of a building is not liable for injuries to the lessee, or others upon the premises in the right of the lessee, resulting from a structural defect existing when the lessee took possession. (Jaffe v. Harteau,
In this instance there was no evidence that the premises were rented to be used in serving the public or a large number of persons; none, that the public or a large number of persons have been admitted to the premises. True it is that the premises were "to be used and occupied as a warehouse." Whether the warehouse was to be used to store goods for the public for a hiring charge, or merely to store the merchandise of the lessee, was not stated and has not been proven. We are aware that in Edwards v. N Y H.R.R. Co., and Barrett v. Lake Ontario Beach Imp. Co. (supra) it was said that a lessor who "lets a building for a warehouse" or "lets a warehouse," knowing that its floors will break down from the weight to be placed upon them, is liable for injuries resulting to a person lawfully therein from a collapse of its floors. We think that the plaintiff can justly draw no comfort from the statements made. In the first place they wereobiter dicta. In the second, the context shows that the court spoke concerning warehouses which served a public use. Thus, in the first of the two cases, the court was at pains to explain the holding in Swords v. Edgar (supra), where a lessor of a defective dock was held liable, by saying that "a dock is regarded as a species of public highway." In the second, the instance of the warehouse was cited to illustrate the general rule of liability where "premises *450 are rented for a public use," the statement of which by the court in the cited case we have already quoted in full. As the building in question here may have been leased for private storage by the lessee, may have been used exclusively therefor, and may never have been intended for use, or been used, by a large number of persons, we think that liability for the death of John Murphy never attached to make the lessor, the defendant Elsie S. Holding Co., Inc., responsible in damages therefor.
The judgment of the Appellate Division and that of the Trial Term should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
CARDOZO, Ch. J., POUND, CRANE, LEHMAN, O'BRIEN and HUBBS, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, etc.