141 Ga. 311 | Ga. | 1914
Mrs. J. D. Clements brought an action against W. H. Blanchard, claiming $5,000 damages for personal injuries. She alleged: that about twelve months prior to the filing of her suit she rented from the defendant a dwelling-house having a cellar, and has since occupied it as á home; that at the time the house was rented the cellar was dry; that about seven or eight months after she moved into the house the surface-water washed out the dirt along and outside of the west wall of the cellar, causing the wall to leak and allowing the water to flow into the cellar and pond therein, creating a filthy, muddy, and unhealthy basin of water from which arose noxious odors and gases, rendering the house unfit to live in as a home, that she promptly complained to the landlord of the .defective 'condition, requesting him to repair and restore the premises to a condition suitable for occupancy, but he failed and refused to do so; that about three months thereafter she was stricken with malarial fever and confined to her bed as a result of the defendant’s failure to repair the premises; that she paid a certain sum monthly as rent of the premises for each anct every month she had lived in the house; and that it was negligence on the part of the defendant to'fail and refuse to repair the premises, after having notice of the dangerous and unhealthy condition of the same. Her petition was dismissed on general demurrer, and she excepted.
The statute (Civil Code of 1910, § 3699) requires a landlord to keep the rented premises in repair, and makes him liable for all
Judgment affirmed.