272 Mass. 391 | Mass. | 1930
This is an action of tort for personal injuries sustained on February 18, 1927, by the plaintiff, a child about eight years of age, while entering the outer vestibule door of an apartment house which was under the control of the defendants and used in common by all the tenants. The door was equipped with an automatic closing device. The plaintiff, whose home was in an adjoining building, was entering the apartment house in company with and at the invitation of his cousin, whose father, named Goldsmith, with whom the cousin lived, was a tenant therein of the defendants. They were on their way
A witness called by the plaintiff testified that the automatic closing device had been out of order a few weeks before the accident, that she would not say it was two weeks, but two or three, causing the door to shut so violently that it shook the building; that she had notified the defendant Harris Rides by telephone that the door was not in good condition and he ought to “fix it up”; and that she talked to Harris Rides when he came for the rent which she paid him about the first of February. Another witness testified that the condition of the front door spring for about three weeks before the accident was such that when it closed the whole house would shake and that during that time she told the defendant Harris Rides that it was out of order. One of the defendants testified that as soon as he acquired title he examined the condition of the premises and found the door spring in perfect working order.
Goldsmith had been tenant of a former owner named Glazer. The defendants held a mortgage on the property, and on December 15, 1926, entered for breach of condition and sometime thereafter through their attorney notified the tenants in the building to pay all rents to the defendants instead of to Glazer, and the defendants saw some of the
The judge submitted two questions to the jury: (1) “When did the door check become out of order, if you find it was out of order?” to which they answered: “On or about February 7, 1927”; (2) “When was the first payment of rent made by Samuel Goldsmith to the defendants?” to which they answered: “February 7th, 1927.”
At the close of the evidence the defendants made a motion for a directed verdict, which was denied. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff, and before recording it the judge reserved leave to enter a verdict for the defendants if, upon the exceptions taken on the questions of law reserved, the trial court or the Supreme Judicial Court should decide that such verdict for the defendants should have been entered. After the return- of the verdict the trial judge denied a motion for entry of a verdict for the defendants in accordance with the leave reserved.
No exception was saved to the ruling of the judge that if the plaintiff was visiting his cousin he had the same rights as the cousin’s father had as a tenant of the defendants; that they were not bound to keep the door spring in better repair than when Goldsmith became a tenant of the defendants, apart from any special agreement to put it in better condition; that the landlord who retains control of halls and entrances used by tenants owes them the duty to use reasonable, care to keep them in the same condition as they were in or appeared to be in at the time of the letting; that after foreclosure the tenants became
Exceptions overruled.