15 Misc. 474 | City of New York Municipal Court | 1896
The plaintiff was injured by reason of a broken step in the stairs leading to the cellar, in which was built a storehouse for the use of the tenants in the defendant’s house.
It was the duty of the defendant to keep said stairs in a reasonably safe condition, and his failure to do so would leave him liable to his tenants for injuries sustained by them, provided they were free from contributory negligence.
The plaintiff had a right to assume that the defendant, as landlord, fully performed the duty just mentioned which the law cast on him, and he, therefore, had the right to use the stairs in question, and was not bound to carry with him a light while so doing, just as the landlord was not bound to furnish light to tenants while they were, using such stairs.
It was, therefore, not negligence for the plaintiff to fail to-carry with him a light, as contended for by the defendant, while passing over the stairs in question, nor was it for the-plaintiff to show that the defendant had actual knowledge of the defective or broken step, and it was quite enough for him to show that such dangerous condition existed for a reasonable length of time prior to the injury to the plaintiff.
Thus defendant would have constructive notice of the existing dangerous condition of his premises, all that it was necessary for him to have, and that such notice was furnished him is quite certain, because it appears that the step was broken for at least six months prior to the plaintiff’s injury, and that the defendant was the owner for at least the three last months of that period, and surely long enough for him to have learned of the dangerous condition of his premises, of which he had at least constructive notice.
The exception taken to the judge’s charge, we think, was
For loss of wages he was entitled to damages at least nominal as a matter of law^ but, under the circumstances of this case, he was entitled to receive a reasonable sum for such loss of wages, because it appears that he was a peddler, and from such employment supported his family, and the jury, relying on their common knowledge and experience, had the right to fix the damages sustained for such loss of wages, even though no actual sum was fixed by the plaintiff, and their finding should stand unless it is apparent that they allowed an unreasonable amount of money, which cannot be claimed in view of the fact that the verdict for all damages sustained by the plaintiff is only the sum of $275.
The judgment must be sustained, with costs.
McCarthy and Botty, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.