104 P. 722 | Or. | 1909
Opinion by
When the law imposes a duty on an administrator or an executor, and he neglects to discharge the obligation thus enjoined, whereby another sustains an injury, the personal representative is liable therefor. Thus in Blevin’s Ex’rs v. French, 84 Va. 81, 84 (3 S. E. 891), a hotel was devised to executors, who, as trustees were directed by the will to keep the building in repair. Between the curbing on the premises and the entrance to the hotel was a cellarway covered by an area light, composed of glass and iron. French, who was an express-man, was carrying a trunk from the sidewalk into the hotel, when the area light gave (way under him, and he fell and was injured. To recover the damages sustained he instituted an action, alleging that executors, being possessed of the premises, negligently permitted the cellarway to become and remain deficiently covered, where
So, too, in Boston Beef Packing Co. v. Stephens, (C. C.) 12 Fed. 279, 280, the defendants, as executors and trustees under a will, leased a building to be used as a storage warehouse, which structure at the time of the demise was unfit and unsafe for that purpose, and which, in consequence of such use of the tenants, fell, injuring the plaintiff’s adjoining building, and it was determined that the defendants were personally amenable, the court- saying: “They were held liable only to the extent that for their own profit they authorized and sanctioned the acts of .the tenants in the use and control of their property.” Farther in the opinion it is observed: “Whoever for his own advantage authorizes his property to be used by another in such manner as to endanger and injure unnecessarily, the property or rights of others, is answerable for the consequences.” In Donohue v. Kendall, 50 N. Y. Super. Ct. 386, 390, the defendants, who were executors, leased to the plaintiff some rooms in the upper part of the house with the right to use a part of the cellar. Access to such basement was had by a stairway from which one step was gone. In descending such stairway the plaintiff fell and was injured because of the absence of the step. She commenced an action to recover the damages sustained, and, having secured a judgment personally against the defendant, it was affirmed. In an agreeing opinion, Judge Truax says: “The statute * * placed upon defendants the duty of keeping the stairs in good repair. This duty they failed to perform. For this reason I concur.” It would seem that the decision last noted was affirmed without an opinion (Donohue v. Kendall, 98 N. Y. 635), though
Believing that the evidence offered at the trial was insufficient to establish such liability, and that no error was committed in granting the nonsuit, the judgment is affirmed. Affirmed.