83 N.J.L. 593 | N.J. | 1912
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff, a widow, with her family of children, was a tenant occupying the top floor of defendant’s tenement house in Jersey City at the time of its partial destruction, by fire, in April, 1910. The house was not equipped with fire escapes, as required by the Tenement House act of 1904. The plaintiff, in endeavoring to escape from a window in the rear of her apartment by hanging to a rope lowered from.the roof, fell to the roof of an extension to the premises and suffered the injuries for which she brought this action.
The plaintiff seeks to hold the defendant liable for failing to provide fire escapes, as required by the. provisions of the act of 1904. It was conceded that the building was of the character which, under the statute, made it necessary to be equipped with fire escapes. The plaintiff obtained a judgment against the defendant and it is this judgment that the defendant below, who is the plaintiff in error, seeks to reverse, assigning as error the failure of the trial judge to non-suit the plaintiff, and at the close of the case to direct a verdict for the defendant upon tire ground that the plaintiff, having occupied the premises for a year prior to the accident, must be deemed to have had knowledge that there were no fire escapes provided, and to have waived the erection thereof. Particular stress was laid upon the fact, by the plaintiff in error, that because it appeared, in evidence, that the plaintiff having hung clothes out of the rear window, once a week, during that year it must be deemed that she had knowledge that there were no fire escapes and hence acquiesced in the failure'of the landlord to provide them. The plaintiff’s testimony makes it uncertain whether or not she had "observed the absence of fire escapes prior to the time of the fire, for in answer to a question, as to how long before the fire she observed that there were no fire escapes, she answered: “We never
Whether or not the plaintiff had made any observations or had knowledge of the absence of fire escapes prior to the fire was fox the jury to determine from the facts and circumstances in evidence. It follows, as a matter of course, if she made no observations or had 110 knowledge of the absence of fire escapes, her conduct in remaining, as a tenant, docs not give rise lo a conclusive legal presumption that she know and therefore waived their erection, but at most is simply a circumstance which together with the testimony and other circumstances in the ease was for the consideration of the jury whether the plaintiff had knowledge of the absence of fire escapes. Even though it appeared that the plaintiff liad made observations, so that she knew before the fire occurred that the landlord liad failed to provide fire escapes, it did not give rise to a conclusive legal presumption that she acquiesced in the landlord's violation of duty, for it does not appear what the character of the lease was under ■which she occupied her apartments. It may be that her origina] term liad not expired at the time of the fire. If she became a tenant for a term longer than a year (she had occupied the premises for a year at the time of the fire), and had not known of. the absence of fire escapes at the time she contracted for the apartments, we do not think that her remaining in. possession under the lease, after becoming apprised of the absence of fire escapes, can be considered as a waiver of the duty of the landlord. That she would have been justified in attempting to terminate the lease because of the abseuce of fire escapes, the lease containing no provision relating thereto, is doubtful. Viewed in any aspect it would require the intervention of a judicial tribunal to determine the matter and she was not hound to so conduct herself as to invite a law suit.
It is congruous with reason to hold that mere length of time of occupancy, unaccompanied by some affirmative act or cir
The tenant owed no duty to the landlord to examine and ascertain whether any fire escapes had been provided by. the landlord. The tenant might reasonably assume that the landlord had performed the duty imposed upon him by statute. Willey v. Mulledy, 78 N. Y. 310. And even if the plaintiff had discovered that the landlord had failed to perform his statutory duty she might reasonably assume that he would perform that duty at any time. The landlord was entitled to the presumption in his favor that he would obey the law and not disregard it. It was the defendant’s plain disregard of his duty, under the statute, in failing to provide fire escapes that resulted in the plaintiff’s injuiy. The jury was permitted by the trial court to find that their absence was the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury. There was no error in this.
The judgment of the Circuit Court will be affirmed.
For wffimnance — The Chief Justice, Garrison, Swayze, Bergen, Voorheus, Minturn, Ivaliscii, Bogert, Vreden-BURGI-I, CONGDON, WlIITE, TrEACY, JJ. 12.
For reversal — None,