46 A. 819 | Conn. | 1900
The plaintiff sued her landlord for a personal injury caused by the falling of the platform of a fire-escape attached to the building which she occupied as a tenant, and upon which platform she had stepped in order to fasten a loose blind.
It appeared that seven years or more before the accident the defendant had leased to the plaintiff certain rooms in the building, by the ordinary parol contract of leasing, without any express warranty or any agreement to repair, the rent being payable monthly, and that the plaintiff had continued to occupy them until the time of the accident, without any further lease.
The defendant requested the court to charge the jury that "in the ordinary contract of letting the law does not imply *175 any guaranty on the part of the landlord that the leased premises are in a safe or inhabitable condition, since the tenant ordinarily has it in his power to inspect the premises, and so accepts the tenancy at his own risk."
The court did not so charge, but upon that subject charged the jury that it was "the duty of a landlord when he rents premises to use all reasonable care to see that the premises have not so fallen into decay or become so dangerous that a person occupying the same is liable to be injured. It is further the duty of the landlord to comply with all statutory regulations, such as furnishing suitable fire-escapes, and to use due diligence to put and keep them in reasonably safe condition, and if the landlord when renting premises rents them with fire-escapes which he knows to be dangerous, or should and could have known to be so by the exercise of reasonable care, or if he fails to use reasonable diligence to keep fire-escapes erected on the building in repair, he is liable for the injury resulting from their defective and unsafe condition to a tenant making a legitimate and proper use of them, and in the exercise of ordinary care."
The court should have charged substantially as requested, and the rule as laid down in the charge is incorrect.
Under such an agreement of letting as that stated, and in the absence of any statutory provision affecting it, there is no implied warranty by the lessor that the premises rented are in a safe condition, or that they are suitable for the purposes for which they are hired; nor is there any implied agreement that he will keep in repair any part of the premises which are leased to and placed in the exclusive possession and control of the tenant.
The general rule is that under such a contract the lessee takes the risk as to the condition and quality of the hired premises, and that the landlord is not liable to the tenant for injuries sustained by reason of the defective condition of the building leased. By such a lease the lessee purchases an estate in the premises rented, and the rule of caveat emptor
applies, making it, ordinarily, the duty of the lessee as such purchaser to make such examination of the premises as is required *176
in order to ascertain whether the premises have "so fallen into decay or become so dangerous that a person occupying the same is liable to be injured." Jaffe v. Harteau,
In the absence of any special covenant or agreement, ordinary repairs upon such part of the leased premises as are in the exclusive possession and control of the tenant must be made by the tenant, if he desires them to be made, and he cannot require the landlord to make them during the term of the lease. Hatch v. Stamper,
The language of the charge above quoted erroneously places wholly upon the lessor the duty of exercising reasonable diligence, at the time of the leasing of the premises, to discover dangerous defects, and not at all upon the lessee, and the statement of the charge which follows is to the same effect. The court said: "If, however, the defects are not or were not discoverable by the exercise of reasonable diligence . . . , then the landlord is not liable. . . . He is only liable for a failure in his duty to exercise reasonable care and diligence."
From these instructions the jury must have understood it to be the law that a landlord who, without fraud or misrepresentation, rented a house manifestly so defective and out of repair as to be unsuited for occupancy, would be liable for an injury resulting from such defective condition of the building to a tenant who at the time of the leasing either knew or could easily have learned of its condition, but who afterwards while occupying it used reasonable care to avoid being injured.
The general rule which we have stated requiring the lessee to use reasonable diligence to ascertain whether the premises he is hiring are defective or unsuitable for the purpose for which they are hired, does not relieve the landlord from liability *177
in an action for negligence in concealing from the tenant a secret defect in the premises which renders them dangerous for occupancy, and with a knowledge of the existence and of the character of which he is chargeable, and which the tenant could not discover by reasonable diligence.Minor v. Sharon,
Whether a landlord would be relieved from liability for an injury sustained by a tenant from the absence of a fire-escape upon the building when required by statute, or for an injury sustained by a tenant while properly using a defective fire-escape, when the absence or defective character of the fire-escape could by reasonable diligence have been discovered by the tenant at the time the premises were leased, we do not decide.
The rule relieving the landlord, in the absence of special agreement, from making ordinary repairs during the term of the lease, does not release him from liability in cases of injuries resulting from his failure to keep in proper repair such portions of a tenement house as are not leased to any particular tenant, but are retained in the control of the landlord for the common use of several tenants. Peil v. Reinhart,
Although the complaint in this case does not allege the facts necessary to make it the duty of the defendant, under Chap. 254 of the Public Acts of 1895, to maintain a fire-escape for the common use of several tenants in case of fire, and seems to base his claimed liability upon a supposed duty of the defendant to keep in repair the entire premises hired by the plaintiff, the fact seems to have been clearly proved that the structure which fell was a part of a fire-escape upon the outside of the building, designed to be used in common by different tenants as a fire-escape and for no other purpose.
Neither the averments of the complaint nor the facts claimed *178 to have been proved, seem to us to present the question of the liability of a lessor for negligence in the concealment of a secret defect in the fire-escape. It is not alleged in the complaint that the fire-escape was in an unsafe condition at the time the premises were leased to the plaintiff, nor, if it was, that the defendant concealed that fact or had any knowledge of it at that time, nor that the plaintiff could not then have discovered it. The complaint does not state when the premises were leased, nor that the fire-escape was then attached to the building. The allegation is that on the fifth of December, which was the day of the accident, the fire-escape was unsafe and insecurely attached to the building, and that the defendant knew or ought to have known of its condition at that time. So that we regard the main questions in the case to have been: Was the fire-escape in an unsafe condition at the time of the accident; and if so, did the injury to the plaintiff result from the failure of the defendant to fulfill his obligation to keep it in sufficient repairs.
That the platform in question was at that time unsafe to be used, either as a fire-escape or for the purpose for which the plaintiff used it, is beyond any question. It had apparently either become weakened by uses for which it was not designed, or the materials of which it was constructed or with which it was fastened to the building had become decayed or rusted, so that is was incapable of sustaining any considerable weight.
Upon the question whether the accident was the result of the failure of the defendant to perform his duty, the charge — as affecting the subject of contributory negligence — was incorrect, in stating to the jury that under the oral lease, before described, they were to consider the plaintiff the same as a tenant for only one month, and the condition of the premises at the commencement of that month as their condition when the plaintiff went into possession; since this part of the charge may be interpreted as meaning that the jury were to consider that the plaintiff had had but one month of the time of her occupancy of the premises to learn the condition of the fire-escape, and as withdrawing from the consideration of the jury *179 the very important fact, which should have been considered in deciding the question of contributory negligence, that the plaintiff had had, for at least seven years, an opportunity to observe the condition of the fire-escape.
If the jury had been clearly instructed that in deciding whether the plaintiff had herself been guilty of negligence, they should consider the opportunity which she had had during the entire time of her occupancy of these rooms, of learning the condition of the fire-escape and the manner in which it was attached to the building, and that they should also consider the fact that at the time of her injury she stepped upon the platform without having attempted to ascertain whether it was in a safe condition or not — we think the jury would not have been justified in returning a verdict for the plaintiff.
There was error in the charge to the jury as above stated, and no error in the denial of the motions in arrest of judgment and for a new trial for a verdict against evidence.
Error and new trial granted.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.