Louis Depaoli was the owner of real property which he leased to the mother of Doris Hale, a minor. The railing on the back porch of the house collapsed when the girl, then 18 years of age, leaned against it, and she received serious injuries as the result of her fall to the concrete walk some 10 feet below. The appeal is from a judgment which followed an order granting a nonsuit.
The first count of the amended complaint charged Depaoli with liability for the accident by reason of negligence in the construction of the railing. A second count alleged that as lessor he had fraudulently concealed a known defect on the premises.
The evidence offered in support of these allegations, stated most favorably to the appellant, shows that the house was constructed in 1925 by Depaoli and L. Ferreiros, as partners. In their building activities, Ferreiros supervised the building operations and Depaoli handled the sales. The railing which gave way was built with finishing nails and one witness stated that he did not think it had been “properly nailed in the first place.” He testified that from another portion of the railing he took out one 6-penny and one 8-penny finishing nail. In his opinion, the railing had not been toenailed correctly; proper construction, he said, required four 8-penny finishing nails at each corner. It also appears that if the railing was improperly constructed the defect was a latent one because the nail heads were concealed by putty and paint.
The property was sold in 1926. Depaoli acquired it in 1937 by purchase from the then owner. Before that time, Ferreiros died.
Upon this evidence the trial court granted, a motion for nonsuit. The appellant contends, as a ground for reversal of the judgment subsequently entered, that a building contractor is liable to a third person for negligence if the work performed results in a defective condition which makes the use of the building imminently dangerous. As justifying recovery upon the second cause of action, it is argued that a lessor is liable for a latent defect in the premises, known to him and unknown to the lessee, if he allows the lessee to occupy the building in ignorance of the risk.
Bach cause of action pleaded in the complaint charges Bepaoli with liability for damages in a separate and distinct capacity. The first count rests upon his asserted liability as a contractor for defects in the erection of the house. The basis of the second count is the liability of a lessor of real property for failure to warn the lessee of known defects in the premises. The rules of law applicable to these relationships are quite different.
Generally speaking, after a contractor has completed a building and it is accepted by the owner, “he is not liable to a third person for damages suffered by reason of the condition of the work even though he was negligent in carrying out the contract”
(Johnston
v.
Long,
The purpose of the railing was to prevent one using the porch from stepping or falling from it. A structural defect in this protection would be “reasonably certain to place life and limb in peril,” and there was evidence from which a jury might infer that the railing was not erected in accordance with sound building practice. Under these circumstances, the question' for decision is whether or not the injured child is entitled to the benefit of the exception to the general rule of nonliability of a contractor.
Depaoli relies upon the statement in Johnston v. Long, supra, page 837, that “the contractor is liable if the work done and turned over by him is so negligently defective as to be imminently dangerous to third persons, provided the contractor knows, or should know, of the dangerous situation created by him.” According to this language, he declares, the liability of a builder depends upon proof of (1) defective construction; (2) a defect known to the contractor; and (3) a defect creating an “imminently dangerous” condition, and that there is no evidence to establish the first and second of these requirements. However, there was testimony as to the condition of the railing after the accident, from which it reasonably may be inferred that a sufficient number of nails of proper strength had not been used, and the record does not show any alteration in the railing between the time of its construction and the accident either by Depaoli or others. Further, if there was a defect, the carpenters had knowledge of it and such knowledge is imputable to the members of the partnership.
As to the third requirement of liability, some of the cases have limited the exception to liability of the contractor to those things “inherently dangerous,” as in
Dahms
v.
General Elevator Co., supra,
or “imminently dangerous” in cases like
Kalash
v.
Los Angeles Ladder Co., supra.
Depaoli argues that as “the railing gave way eighteen years after it was constructed, having been exposed to the elements throughout that period and having been the property of
As to the second cause of action, the appellant concedes that the lessor owed a duty to disclose to the lessee only known latent defects in the premises. Admittedly, Depaoli had no actual knowledge as to the means used to fasten the railing. But, the appellant argues, as a partner in the building enterprise, he is chargeable with constructive notice of the condition. Having acquired such notice, it fixes his liability as lessor-owner of the property after it was conveyed to him.
The doctrine of imputed notice does not justify such compounding and extension of the rule. Imputation of knowledge is based upon the necessities of general commercial relationships, and where a principal acts through an agent, a third person dealing with such agent is entitled to rely upon his knowledge and notice and it binds the principal. “Ordinarily [such third persons] are persons who have dealt with the principal through the agent in question; but it is not essential that they shall have dealt with the agent. The rule respecting notice may apply although they have not known of or dealt with the agent,
if they have had dealings with the principal
or with some other agent of his, which make the matter material to the protection of their interests.” (2 Meecham on Agency (2d ed.) § 1827, p. 1413, emphasis added.) But the rule has never been applied to protect one who has had no dealings with the principal through an agent or otherwise. In his capacity as a builder, Depaoli had no
The judgment is reversed.
Shenk, J., Traynor, J., Schauer, J., and Spence, J., concurred.
Gibson, C. J., concurred in the judgment.
I agree with that part of the majority opinion which reverses the nonsuit as to defendant’s liability as a contractor but cannot agree that the nonsuit is sustainable on the theory of his liability as the lessor.
The facts are simple—a house was constructed by defendant and Perreiros, as partners, presumably for sale. Perreiros had charge of and supervised the construction. The railing on the back porch was negligently and defectively constructed. The defect was hidden. Perreiros either actually knew or should have known (the legal effect is the same) of that defect. Defendant had no actual knowledge of it. The partnership sold the house to a third person. Prom that person defendant purchased it, individually, not as a partnership transaction. Defendant then leased the property to plaintiff’s mother. By reason of the defect the railing gave way and plaintiff was injured.
It is conceded by the majority opinion that a lessor (defendant) of real property is liable to the lessee (plaintiff) for injuries resulting from defects in the property which are hidden or latent but concerning which the lessor had knowledge when the property was leased. It also concedes that constructive or imputed knowledge of such defect is equivalent to actual knowledge and that defendant’s partner and agent Perreiros knew of that defect and was responsible for it. It refuses, however, to apply the rule that knowledge of the agent, Perreiros, is imputed to the principal-defendant, and thus holds defendant is not liable.
The rule above mentioned is stated in our statutes without qualification: “As against a principal, both principal and agent are deemed to have notice of whatever either has notice of, and ought, in good faith and the exercise of ordinary care
Suppose the case where the owner of a house hires an inspector to examine it for defects. His discovery of a hazard is not communicated to the owner, who then leases the property to a person who is injured by reason of the dangerous condition. Can liability be doubted? The result would be no different if the inspector had been engaged to make the inspection because of the owner’s concern for his own safety as an occupant of the house with no thought of leasing it, and later he decides to and does lease it, and an injury follows.
Finally, I see no reason for the discussion of the liability of defendant on the landlord-tenant theory inasmuch as the forepart of the opinion holds that the judgment following the nonsuit must be reversed as a cause of action has been established. That reversal is the end of the ease, so far as the present appeal is concerned.
