233 Mass. 229 | Mass. | 1919
It is admitted that the defendants’ testator was the owner of the tenement house in which the plaintiff received the injuries for which she seeks to recover. A part of the house was hired by the husband of the plaintiff from the defendants’ testator on or about July 1, 1916, and was occupied by them at the time of the accident on November 26, 1916. An extension had been added to the front end of the house as originally constructed, in which, at the time of the accident, there were two shops, one occupied by a barber and the other by a furniture dealer. There was a room about eight by ten feet in size in the rear of the barber shop, occupied by that tenant, and a small hall opened upon the cellar stairs; there was another flight of stairs which led to the second floor. The plaintiff’s husband hired three rooms on the second floor and two rooms in the attic. There was evidence that another tenant occupied other rooms in the house.
The undisputed evidence showed that there was but one water closet in the house and that it was located in the cellar. The plaintiff’s husband testified that he was to have the same use of the cellar that the other tenants had; that he kept his coal and wood there; and that he and his family and the other tenants used the water closet. The plaintiff testified that she descended the cellar stairs to go to the water closet, and when a short distance from the foot of the stairs, a portion of the timbers supporting the floor of the small room connected with the barber shop fell upon her, causing the injuries for which she seeks to recover.
The defendants contended and offered evidence to show that the water closet in question was used only by the plaintiff’s husband and his family; and that no other tenant had the right to use it. The jury were not bound to believe this testimony, but could have found that it was for the use of all the tenants in the building; and that the stairway leading to the cellar and the cellar itself remained in the control of the landlord, who permitted the
There was ample evidence to show that the joists and timbers which supported the floor that fell were water soaked and decayed, and that this condition was caused by a leaky sink in the room occupied by the barber; that the beams that broke "looked wet and rotten.” Upon this evidence it is manifest that the timbers * and joists which fell could have been found to have been unsafe and dangerous, and not in as good condition as they appeared to be in when the tenancy of the plaintiff’s husband began. There was evidence for the jury of the defendants’ negligence. Shea v. McEvoy, 220 Mass. 239. Fitzsimmons v. Hale, 220 Mass. 461. Oles v. Dubinsky, 231 Mass. 447.
The plaintiff, as the wife of the tenant and a member of his family, may recover for the negligence of the landlord. Domenicis v. Fleisher, 195 Mass. 281, 283. It could not have been ruled that she was not in the exercise of due care. St. 1914, c. 553.
The testator’s son, who had charge of the premises for about twelve years before the accident, was called as a witness by the plaintiff and was allowed to answer the following question: “After November 26, 1916, did you do any repairing to these beams or floors, or any timbers of the cellar?” This question was admitted as tending to show who was in control of the cellar, the defendants contending that it was not in their .control; for that purpose it was competent, and the exception thereto must be overruled. Without referring in detail to the other exceptions taken to the admission and exclusion of evidence, we find no error.
The request that on all the evidence the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, could not properly have been given for the reasons stated.
Exceptions overruled.