Opinion by
This is an action in trespass by Joseph E. Harris, a tenant, under a month to month lease, and Sadie B. Harris, his wife, who was also his employee in a beauty shop maintained by him on the demised premises. Damages are sought for injuries sustained- by her as a result of the collapse of a cellar stairway. Named as defendants are the Lewistown Trust Company, individually and as trustee, and the beneficial owners. A verdict was directed against the husband because of his contributory negligence. Judgment non obstante veredicto wras entered against the wife. She alone has appealed.
Appellant places her principal reliance upon a promise by the agent of the owner to repair. It is conceded such promise was made at the time of the negotiation of the oral lease, and subsequently repeated, and that it was never kept. The accident happened thirteen months after the tenant took possession. The stairway was in an obviously defective and decayed condition. Of this the tenant was fully aware. The wife claimed that she had no knowledge of it; that she had used the stairway *147 but four times. We assume for tlie purpose of this appeal that she was not guilty of contributory negligence, although there is evidence that she was. Giving her case the aid of this assumption, we meet directly the question whether or not the owner is liable in tort by reason of this promise.
The general rule in this country, and also in England, is that an agreement to repair does not impose upon the owner a liability in tort at the suit of the tenant or others lawfully on the land in the right of the tenant:
Cavalier v. Pope,
[1905] 2 K. B. 757;
Cavalier v. Pope,
[1906] A. C. 428;
Cameron v. Young,
[1908] A. C. 176;
Jacobson v. Leaventhal,
Fundamentally this view is based upon the conclusion that liability in tort should follow as a legal incident of occupation and control: Restatement of the Law of Torts, section 357, Comment (a). By the great weight of authority, occupation and control are not reserved through an agreement by the owner to repair: Cavalier v. Pope, [1906] supra; Pollock, Torts, (13th ed.) 532; Salmond, Torts, (8th ed.) 251 et seq.; Cullings v. Goetz, (1931) supra. As was said by the then Chief Judge Cakdozo in the Cuttings case, “The tenant and no one else may keep visitors away till the danger is abated, or adapt the warning to the need. The landlord has at most a privilege to enter for the doing of the work, and at times not even that if the occupant protests. ‘The power of control necessary to raise the duty . . . implies something more than the right or liability to repair the premises. It implies the power and the right to admit people to the premises and to exclude people from them’: (Cavalier v. Pope, [1906] A. C. 433).”
*148
A minority of jurisdictions takes an opposite view, holding that the promise to repair is a reservation of control over the premises:
Barron v. Liedloff,
Appellant relies upon
Zimmerman v. Homer Building and Loan Association,
There is no appellate decision directly on the point in this Commonwealth. 1 We adopt the prevailing doctrine because it is sound in reason and supported by a preponderance of juridical opinion in this country and in England.
Where the cause arises merely from failure to keep a promise to repair the remedy is in assumpsit. To found an action in trespass there must be some breach of duty apart from non-performance of the promise. When the action is assumpsit and the promisee the plaintiff, under certain circumstances recovery has been allowed for damage to the tenant’s goods:
Ehinger v. Bahl,
From what has been said it must be obvious the tenant could not recover if he had been injured. We have held repeatedly that a tenant takes the property as he finds it, with all existing defects which he knows or can ascertain by reasonable inspection.
2
This is so even though the premises are in a condition called ruinous:
*150
Robbins v.
Jones, 15 C. B. (N. S.) 221, 240. Where the entire possession and enjoyment of property are transferred by landlord to tenant, the rule of
caveat emptor
applies. As was said by Mr. Justice Sharswood in
Moore v.
Weber,
A well-recognized exception to this rule exists where the landlord gives the tenant possession of land containing, to the landlord’s knowledge, dangerous hidden defects unknown to the tenant and which by reasonable inspection he cannot discover. In such a case the landlord is guilty of active wrongdoing, because he commits an act which almost inevitably draws the tenant into a hidden trap: Restatement, Torts, section 358; see
Carson v.
Godley,
It is equally well-established that where the tenant has no redress against the landlord, those on the premises in the tenant’s right are liketvise barred. So, in Pennsylvania, it has been held a member of the tenant’s family
(Robinson v.
Heverin,
Appellant insists she is entitled to recover on the authority of
Deutsch v.
Max,
In our cases
(Cunningham v. Rogers,
supra;
Harte v. Jones,
The doctrine of
“condition amounting to a nuisance ”
as mentioned in the
Deutsch
case, does not apply as between landlord and tenant:
Jackson v. Public Service Co.,
86 N. H. 81. It was inapplicable to that case as it is here. The authorities there cited to support it were not actions brought by a tenant or anyone on the premises in his right against the landlord. In
Knauss v. Brua,
The doctrine of “condition amounting to a nuisance” is confined to third persons or strangers to the premises, those “either the owners or occupants of near-by property, persons temporarily on such property, or persons on a neighboring highway or other public places”: 1 Tiffany, supra, 674; 16 R. C. L., (1917) Pages 1074 to 1076. The word “nuisance,” as used in the law, implies the transmission of the effects beyond the boundaries of the land upon which the objectionable condition exists. As Chief Justice Gibson said in Knight v. Abert, 6 Pa. *154 472, “A man must use Ms property so as not to incommode his neighbor; but the maxim [sic utere tuo ut alienum non laedas] extends only to neighbors who do not interfere with it or enter upon it." (Italics added.) For a general discussion of the subject, see Eldredge, “Landlord’s Tort Liability for Disrepair,” 84 U. of Pa. Law Review, (1936) 467.
From what has been said it is clear that our decision in Deutsch v. Maw cannot be followed. It is a bar to a proper decision in this case. For this reason it is now necessary to overrule it. There being no liability on defendants in this action, the judgment of the court below must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
In Weidner v. Roeper, 25 D. R. 876, and Hahn v. Roach, 7 Northampton County Rep. 21, it was held that a covenant to repair, of itself, imposed no liability in tort.
Levin v. Philadelphia,
Anderson v. Robinson,
