This ease comes before us on an agreed statement under rule 126. Prom this statement it appears that plaintiff and appellant Lisa Gustin is a minor who at the age of two
Under common law the general rule is that there is no liability upon the landlord either to a tenant or others for defective condition of the demised premises whether existing at the time of the lease or developing thereafter. (Prosser, Law of Torts (3d ed.) p. 412; Goddard, California Landlord and Tenant Law and Procedure, p. 179 et seq.; Priver v. Young (1923)
This rule applies in California in the absence of (1) concealment of a known danger, (2) an express covenant to repair, or (3) a statutory duty to repair.
Plaintiff here stands in the shoes of the tenant insofar as the landlord’s liability or nonliability for failure to make repairs is concerned. (Hanson v. Luft (1962)
The first exception to the common law rule has no application to this case. As the tenant had full knowledge of the condition and had requested its repair (see finding 7) there was no concealment. (Dorswitt v. Wilson (1942)
Although the trial court found that defendants had promised to repair the screen (finding 7) it also found that the oral lease by which the tenant occupied “did not provide a covenant to repair” (finding 3). Where there is no covenant in the lease, supported by the consideration which supports the lease itself, a subsequent promise to make repairs, unsupported by any further consideration, imposes no liability on the landlord for injuries arising from the unrepaired condition. (Metcalf v. Chiprin (1963)
Plaintiffs rest their claim mainly on the third exception. No state law imposing a duty upon the landlord to repair is pointed out by appellants. It is established that a landlord’s breach of the statutory duty to repair contained in Civil Code, section 1941 does not give rise to liability for injuries caused by such failure. (Priver v. Young, supra
Appellants place much reliance on Ordinance No. 1773 of the City of Pomona and the case of McNally v. Ward (1961)
An obvious question which immediately arises is safe for what? Safe to protect a two-year-old child that brushes casually against the screen; safe to protect the same child if it fell or pushed with its full weight against the screen; or safe to protect a two-hundred-pound adult who fell against the same screen ? A lead may be found both in a prior California case and in the State Housing Act. From both of these it appears that, in the absence of other statutory requirement, a safe screen is one sufficient to keep insects out.
In Schlemmer v. Stokes (1941)
In light of the foregoing, the divided court opinion in Gould v. DeBeve (D.C. Cir. 1964)
Such out-of-state eases as Saturnini v. Rosenblum (1944)
While we are aware that there is a growing tendency to find exceptions to the general rule and allow tenants and their guests recovery in this class of cases (see Prosser, supra, p. 411 et seq.) and that strong arguments can be made for a shifting of the burden of repairs to the lessor (18 Stan. L. Rev. 1397), as an intermediate appellate court we are bound by the law, both statutory and case, as it now exists. Further modifications must come, if at all, from the Legislature or reinterpretations by the highest appellate courts.
The judgment is affirmed; respondents to recover their costs on appeal.
Aiso, P.J., and Meyer, J., concurred.
