70 A.2d 126 | Conn. | 1949
The plaintiff is seeking to recover, under a policy of insurance issued by the defendant, a sum of money it was adjudged liable to pay for damages done to a building by reason of the operation of a truck owned by it. The policy was a so-called "fleet policy"; it covered liability for damages to property caused by the operation of automobiles owned by eight corporations, and it was issued at a reduced rate because of the large number of cars covered, all of which were under the same management and operating control. It contained a clause excluding liability for damage by reason of "injury to or destruction of property owned by, rented to, in charge of or transported by the insured." The principal damage in question was done to the front of a one-story garage which, in conjunction with the first floor of an adjacent three-story building, was rented, not to the plaintiff, but to another of the corporations insured under the policy, to which we shall refer as the Linen Company. The trial court found that the garage was in the exclusive control of the Linen Company, and it held that the damage was *236 within the exclusion clause quoted above because the garage was "rented to" and "in charge of" that corporation. It gave judgment for the defendant, and the plaintiff has appealed.
In the trial court, the parties submitted a stipulation of agreed facts and stated that testimony was to be taken only for the purpose of clarifying a paragraph of the stipulation which described the damage to the building. The trial court made a finding which, in certain respects apart from that matter, is at variance with the stipulation. A formal stipulation of facts by the parties to an action constitutes a mutual judicial admission and under ordinary circumstances should be adopted by the court in deciding the case. King v. Spencer,
The second and third floors of the three-story building were rented by a corporation not among those insured under the policy, which we shall call the Gasket Company. The plaintiff does not contend that it could recover if the portion of the building damaged was rented to or in charge of the Linen Company. The plaintiff claims that the garage and the adjacent building constituted a single structure which was in part rented by the Gasket Company; that some of the damage was done to an entrance to the three-story building which was used by both the Linen Company and the Gasket Company; and that the damage to the garage was to its front and roof and so not to a portion of the property rented to or in charge of the Linen Company. The question whether the entrance to the three-story building was damaged was *237
within the scope of the hearing before the trial court; it did not find that it was; and we cannot add that fact to the finding because the evidence was conflicting. We do not read another paragraph in the stipulation of facts to which the plaintiff calls our attention as requiring us to take a contrary view. The finding of the trial court that the garage was in the exclusive control of the Linen Company not only was outside the issues submitted to it for determination but, as a statement of fact, has no support in the stipulation or evidence, and we must disregard it. The terms of the rental of a part of the building by the Linen Company might be relevant and even controlling upon that issue; Calway v. William Schaal Son, Inc.,
Where entire premises are rented, in the absence of any agreement, the tenant, with certain possible exceptions not presented by the facts before us, has the right of exclusive possession and control, and the landlord has no right to enter upon them. Swift Co. v. Peoples Coal Oil Co.,
To that question our decisions afford no answer. The case most nearly analogous is Aprile v. Colonial Trust Co., supra, 579, where we found error in a judgment in favor of the owner of an apartment building in an action against him by guests of one of the tenants *239
who were injured because of the rotting of certain portions of the exterior of the building; but our decision in that case was based on the fact that the trial court found on adequate evidence that the owner had retained control of the portion of the building in question. Cases in other jurisdictions uniformly hold the law to be that, in the absence of any provision of a lease to the contrary, the right to use and control the outer walls adjacent to a portion of a building occupied by a tenant is impliedly included in the premises he rents. 265 Tremont Street, Inc. v. Hamilburg,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.