153 N.Y.S. 951 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1915
The plaintiff leased from the defendant an apartment in a tenement-house in the city of New York. She testified at the trial that on February 3, 1913, “ I was sitting on a chair in the kitchen nursing my baby * * * and the floor broke down and I fell down with the chair. There was a fire in the stove and the stove was hot and as I fell I fell on top of the stove and burned my back. * * * Q. Did your foot go into the opening caused by the breaking in of the floor? A. Yes. * * * Q. Before this floor
The action is brought in negligence and after the plaintiff had given this testimony the learned trial justice dismissed the complaint, apparently on the theory that there is no cause of action in negligence against the landlord for failure to repair demised premises. The law is of course well established that “ no duty rests upon the landlord to repair premises which he has demised or to keep them in tenantable condition and that there can be no obligation to repair except such as may be created by the agreement of the landlord so to do.” Schick v. Fleischauer, 26 App. Div. 210. It is, however, equally well established that where a landlord demises apartments in a house to separate tenants the duty does rest upon the landlord of keeping those parts of the house in repair over which he maintains control. The question in this case, therefore, is whether the fall of the floor in plaintiff’s apartment was due to a failure to repair the floor itself or to the failure to keep in repair a part of the house over which the landlord maintained control.
Although I have been able to find no case directly in point, it seems to me that upon principle it must be held that although the tenant is given control of the individual apartment including floors, and ceilings, .the spaces between the floors of one apartment and the ceiling of the next lower apartment remain like the general plumbing connections or the roof of the house within the control of the landlord to be maintained by
It follows that the judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs- to appellant to abide the event.
Guy and Whitaker, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.