Norma Conerly, hereinafter plaintiff, went to visit a friend who lived in an apartment building at 329 Holbrook, Detroit. She rode the elevator to the fourth floor, found her friend not home, and returned to the elevator. When she pushed the button for the main floor, sparks flew, she smelled something like rubber burning, and the elevator plummeted. The elevator came to an abrupt stop just below the first floor, throwing plaintiff to her knees and rendering her momentarily unconscious. She next remembered a man pushing the outside button in an attempt to raise the elevator to floor level so that he could assist her. The elevator moved haltingly upwards and the man assisted her from the elevator. The police were then called and plaintiff was taken to the hospital. She sustained injuries to her *240 back and right wrist, leg and foot. Plaintiff and her husband sued for damages.
The manager of the apartment building testified that the elevator in question was the only one servicing the 84 units in the building.
After the plaintiffs and defendant rested their cases, the latter renewed a motion for a directed verdict, the motion was denied, and the jury awarded Mr. and Mrs. Conerly $60,000. Defendant subsequently made a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or new trial, which motion was denied by the trial judge.
Two issues arise on appeal. First, did plaintiffs offer sufficient proof of the elements of a cause of action for negligence to survive defendant’s motion for a directed verdict?
Defendant contends that plaintiffs did not show that there was a defect in the elevator of which the defendant should have had notice. Citing a series of cases which supposedly stand for the. proposition that "[t]here must either be a showing of active negligence * * * or there must be a showing of notice, whether actual or constructive, of a defect”, defendant further argues, under issue 2, infra, that, since proof was offered that the elevator could not have fallen, it was the duty of plaintiffs to show how it could have happened; in other words, plaintiff was obligated to demonstrate what caused her injuries, and mere testimony that the elevator fell was not sufficient to sustain that burden.
Plaintiff responds that she showed that the elevator was old and constantly malfunctioning; the defendant was thus on notice that the machinery "had previously shown inefficiency” and "dangerous irregularities”. Notice was a fact question for the jury, she says, and there was sufficient evi *241 dence from which the jury could have inferred negligent conduct on the part of the defendant. She claims plaintiffs did not have to prove the precise cause of the accident, since an elevator does not usually fall if it is properly maintained and since the elevator was in the exclusive control of the' defendant. Finally, the so-called "conjectural cause” cases are not applicable since defendant did not submit a theory of causation but attempted to prove the elevator could not have fallen.
The instant case does not require a foray into the jungles of proximate cause. If there was a fall-related defect in defendant’s elevator, it was certainly foreseeable that an injury might have been caused thereby. Instead, the case turns upon an application of the three essential ingredients of a cause of action for negligence — duty, lack of reasonable care, and cause in fact.
The duty which a landlord owes to his tenants and his tenants’ guests with regard to the so-called common areas of the building, that is, those areas the control of which has been retained by the landlord, is analogous to that which is owed an invitee. Prosser delineates this obligation more fully in his discussion of the duty owed invitees:
"The occupier is not an insurer of the safety of invitees, and his duty is only to exercise reasonable care for their protection. But the obligation of reasonable care is a full one, applicable in all respects, and extending to everything that threatens the invitee with an unreasonable risk of harm. The occupier must not only use care not to injure the visitor by negligent activities, and warn him of latent dangers of which the occupier knows, but he must also inspect the premises to discover possible dangerous conditions of which he does not know, and take reasonable precautions to protect the invitee from dangers which are foreseeable
*242
from the arrangement or use.” (Prosser, Torts [3d ed], §61, pp 402-403; footnotes omitted; see also,
Lipsitz v Schechter,
It is important to note that the rules set out above go only to the existence of a duty and the conduct which is necessary to fulfill that duty; in short, they go only to what is generally thought of as negligence. Presumably, it is still necessary for a plaintiff to show that defendant’s negligence caused, or substantially caused, the injury.
Michigan does not purport to follow the doctrine of
res ipsa loquitur,
but it achieves the same result by allowing negligence to be inferred from circumstantial evidence. The recent leading cases in this regard are
Gadde v Michigan Consolidated Gas,
Robinson v Wright & Co,
On three occasions in recent years, the Supreme Court has reversed decisions of the trial court or this Court holding that plaintiff had not established defendant’s negligence or the cause of plaintiff’s injury. Those cases are
Gadde v Michigan Consolidated Gas, supra; Lipsitz v Schechter, supra,
and
Schedlbauer v Chris-Craft Corp,
In
Cusumano v Stroh Brewery Co,
"In every action for negligence it is the duty of the plaintiff to prove by the most accurate evidence that is reasonably available to him the particular defect or act or omission which to him was the cause of the injury for which he would recover. [Citations omitted.] That is precisely true of evidence which is within his control.” (p 231.)
A similar holding appears in
Martin v King Riding Device Co,
"We have not invariably thrown upon the injured passenger the often impossible burden of pointing out by direct evidence on his main case the specific breach of duty by the carrier resulting in injury, especially where the carrier is in sole possession of the facts.” (p 485; quoting
Mitcham v Detroit,
These cases lead us to the conclusion that the trial court properly denied the motion for a directed verdict.
Issue two asks whether reversible error was committed when plaintiffs’ attorney, during cross-examination and final argument, represented de *245 fendant as a wealthy absentee landlord, not concerned about the suit.
It. is contended that plaintiffs’ attorney attempted to characterize defendant "as an absentee slum landlord, who owns numerous buildings in the area, which in fact was not true, and to characterize him as a man so unconcerned with the course of this lawsuit that he could not even be bothered to return from Florida during the course of the trial”.
The trial judge included in his instructions to the jury these charges:
"As the court indicated, members of the jury, it is your duty to determine the facts and evidence received in open court. You are to apply the law to the facts and in this way decide the case. You may not let sympathy or prejudice influence you in your decision whatsoever.
"The landlord here is entitled to the same fair and unprejudiced treatment as the plaintiff, who is an individual, and anyone under like circumstances, and it is your duty to decide the case with the same impartiality you would use in deciding a case between other individuals.”
A review of the record indicates that a reversal is not mandated for the following reasons: (1) the jury was thrice instructed that its verdict should in no way be based on sympathy for plaintiff or defendant’s superior economic status, thus curing any prejudice (see
Owen v Birmingham Federal Savings,
For the foregoing reasons, the jury verdict is affirmed. Costs to appellees.
