37 A.2d 697 | Conn. | 1944
The plaintiff brought this action to recover damages for injuries suffered when she fell by reason of a defect in a platform at the entrance of a store leased by one Ciak but forming a part of a building owned by the defendant. The trial court gave judgment for the defendant and the plaintiff has appealed. The trial court found that the platform at the time the plaintiff fell was and had been for a considerable time not reasonably safe for visitors to the store because of certain holes or depressions in it, but *73
held that no duty rested upon the defendant to repair the defect and that she was not liable for the results of the fall. The contention of the plaintiff is that the defendant is liable under the principle of our decision in Webel v. Yale University,
The finding presents this situation: The defendant bought the building in October, 1941. At that time Ciak was a tenant of the store under an oral lease on a month-to-month basis, with rent payable on the first day of each month, and he continued thereafter to be, and at the time of the plaintiff's fall was, in occupancy under such a lease. The platform where the plaintiff fell formed a part of the premises leased to him. Before the defendant bought the premises, Ciak had twice repaired it by filling the depressions with a mixture of tar and stone pounded level with the surrounding surface. The last time he had done this was in June, 1940. When the defendant bought the property, the fill had disappeared and the depressions were in substantially the same condition as they had been prior to the repairs. That was the situation when, on June 6, 1942, the plaintiff fell. The defendant on the first of each month was in the habit of going to the store to collect the rent, and, in entering and leaving it, she passed over the platform. She knew or should have known that the depressions made it unsafe for patrons of the store who, in considerable numbers, passed over it.
Liability under the doctrine of Webel v. Yale University, supra, is not restricted solely to dangerous conditions due to such structural defects as were before us in that case and in Hahn v. Musante, Berman Steinberg Co., Inc.,
The trial court, however, as we understand the record, did not rest its decision upon the ground that the plaintiff had failed to prove that the condition of liability we have been discussing was not satisfied. Rather, its determining conclusion was that, as the defect resulted from ordinary wear and tear and as it arose during the continuing occupancy of the premises by the tenant under a month-to-month lease, the defendant would not be liable. The principle involved is the same as that which controls where the question is the liability of a landlord for a nuisance existing on leased premises. Lucas v. Brown, supra, 364; 1 Tiffany, Landlord Tenant, 102. In Swift Co. v. Peoples Coal Oil Co.,
There is some conflict in the decisions upon the *76
question whether a landlord by a renewal of leases of this nature, without any resumption of possession, will be liable for a nuisance arising during the occupancy and in existence at the beginning of the last tenancy. 1 Tiffany, Landlord Tenant, 106; 32 Am. Jur. 647; note, 25 L.R.A. (N.S.) 849. Where, as in England and in some jurisdictions in this country, the tenancy from week to week or month to month does not of itself terminate at the end of each week or month but requires notice from the landlord to bring it to an end, the situation might well be regarded as not within the rule stated in the Swift Co. case. Bowen v. Anderson, [1894] 1 Q. B. 164; Ward v. Hinkleman,
There is error, the judgment is set aside and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.