304 Mass. 468 | Mass. | 1939
The single question in this case is whether there was evidence that the defendant was in control of an awning, located in front of a store upon her premises, when the plaintiff, on August 6, 1935, while a pedestrian on the highway, came in contact with a chain attached to the awning.
The defendant became the owner of these premises in 1931. They consisted of a store upon the first floor and tenements upon the second and third floors, the one on the second floor being occupied by the defendant. The store was leased to a tenant, in 1932, who put up some part of the awning but not the frame. This tenant quit the premises after an occupancy of four months and left the awning attached to the building. There were subsequent tenants of the store and at the time of the accident it was occupied by a tenant at will whose tenancy had commenced on January 3, 1935. There was evidence that for more than two years prior to the accident the awning had never been rolled up against the building, as required by the regulations of the building department of Boston, and that it extended over the sidewalk at a height of six and one half feet, which was lower by a foot than the height .permitted by said regulations.
The jury could find that a chain ran from a crossbar of the awning frame to the side of the building where it was connected with a TJ-shaped metal piece fastened to the building by screws, but that the screws, on account of the decayed condition of that portion of the building in which they were inserted, were unable to hold the metal piece and permitted it and the chain to fall and hang suspended from the crossbar. The accident happened when the chain and the metal plate were in this position. The defendant had a liability policy covering the entire premises in which the store was located.
The declaration set forth a cause of action in negligence and the case was tried upon that basis. The defendant
The fact that the defendant had procured a policy of liability insurance covering the whole of her premises, including the part occupied by the store, is not sufficient to show that she had charge of the awning at the time of the accident. Calabresa v. Lynch, 271 Mass. 58. Salsman v. Frisch, 276 Mass. 228.
There was no error in excluding evidence that, after the store and awning had been damaged by fire in December, 1936, the defendant’s husband directed another to remove the cloth from the awning. There was nothing to show that the defendant’s husband was acting as her agent. The mere relation of husband and wife is not sufficient to show that one spouse is acting as agent of the other. Barker v. Mackay, 175 Mass. 485. Harvey v. Squire, 217 Mass. 411.
Exceptions overruled.