199 A. 550 | Conn. | 1938
The plaintiff brought this action as administratrix on the estate of her little son. He died as a result of being burned by hot water which escaped by reason of the breaking of a pipe leading to the bathtub in an apartment occupied by the family, in a tenement house owned by the defendant. There is little conflict in the testimony material to the issues presented upon the appeal. The father of the little boy was janitor of the tenement house. On Saturday night he moved from an apartment he had occupied to that where the accident occurred. The next morning the plaintiff found that the water was shut off from the bathtub. When her husband turned it on, a leak appeared in the cold water pipe in a joint close to the tub. He secured a wrench and, according to his testimony, when he was engaged in tightening the joint, the handle of the wrench struck the hot water pipe near the tub a light blow. That pipe broke at a point some three or four feet away, where it screwed into a shut-off close to the wall of the bathroom. The hot water, forced by pressure through the break, struck the little boy and caused the burns from which he died.
The defendant has appealed from the refusal of the trial court to set aside a verdict rendered for the plaintiff. Assuming that the pipe was so within the control of the defendant that it owed to the deceased the duty to keep it in repair, the measure of that duty at common law would be to use reasonable care to see that the pipe was in a reasonably safe condition; and a failure in that duty would only arise if it knew or ought to have known that the pipe might break. Reynolds v. Land Mortgage Title Co.,
The plaintiff necessarily relies upon the fact that the pipe which broke was defective. She offers no explanation of that defect, except some testimony that the building had settled and that this was likely to put a strain upon the water pipes. She offered no testimony that any pipes in the building had been broken because of this fact or any evidence of any settling of the building which in any way affected the particular pipe which broke. The defendant offered expert testimony that the breaking of the pipe was *329 due to a process of dezincification, by which the zinc in brass pipes is destroyed and which progresses from the inside of the pipe toward its outer surface, and that it would have been reasonably discoverable only by an expert or by a plumber who had had experience with a similar condition and who would anticipate its possible presence because other brass pipes in the building had leaked at the joints. The plaintiff offered general testimony that the plumbing in the building was in bad condition and frequent repairs had been necessary. The cold water pipes throughout the building were for the most part made of lead, while the hot water pipes were of brass; and there was no evidence, except in two instances, that repairs had been made to the latter, and nothing to indicate that in these instances the defects produced leaking at the joints.
In order to establish liability upon the defendant it would not be enough to show that it had or ought to have had knowledge that the plumbing in the building was generally in a bad condition, although such knowledge might have been relevant upon the amount of care it was bound to use in inspecting the plumbing for particular defects; the burden was on the plaintiff to prove that the defendant knew or ought to have known of the particular defect which caused the accident and taken steps to prevent the breaking of the pipe at that particular place. Drible v. Village Improvement Co., supra; Jainchill v. Schwartz,
We have declined to take a technical view of that doctrine. All the tenant would ordinarily do with reference to the water pipe in his apartment in such a situation as the one before us would be to turn the water on or off at the faucet. On the other hand, the defendant might have completely shut the water off from the apartment had there been reason to do so, and there was testimony that there was a shut-off for the water supply for the bathroom in the hall outside it. The turning on or off of the water by the members of the family of the tenant had no more significance as regards the maintenance of the pipes in proper repair than the acts of the plaintiff in lighting the fuse which we considered in Jump v. Ensign-Bickford Co.,
In recent decisions we have carefully considered the doctrine and have pointed out that it does not compel an inference of negligence even where applicable but merely permits the trier to infer it. "When the case goes to the jury, the doctrine as such has no further application, but the facts upon which that application depends remain in the case to be considered alone or with other proven facts as the basis for an inference of negligence." Motiejaitis v. Johnson,
This renders it unnecessary to consider other errors claimed by the defendant except generally and so far as may be of assistance on another trial if one is had. We could not hold as matter of law that the blow given to the hot water pipe could not have been the cause of the breaking of the pipe. Ordinarily, where there is no agreement to repair, the landlord is not liable for defective conditions within a tenement he has rented; but if he retains control of any part of the building, with that control goes the duty to take reasonable care to keep that portion reasonably safe. Liability in such cases does not depend primarily upon the portion of the building in which the defective condition occurs but on the fact that the owner has retained control. Brandt v. Rakauskas,
There is error and the case is remanded with direction to grant the motion to set the verdict aside.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.