238 Mass. 571 | Mass. | 1921
These four actions of tort were brought to recover damages for injuries received by Mrs. Harvey, hereafter called the plaintiff, by falling through an opening of a stairway leading from the Idtchen of her tenement. One action by her is against H. R. Crane (hereinafter called the -defendant) and one against the Horace R. Crane Company, owner of the building, of which company the defendant was president and manager. The other actions are brought by the plaintiff’s husband against the same defendants for consequential damages. The cases went to the jury on the count alleging gross negligence. The verdicts were for the plaintiffs and the cases are before us on the exceptions by the defendants to the denials of their motions for directed verdicts.
There was evidence that the plaintiff’s tenement consisted of five rooms on the second floor, access from the front of the building being by a stairway leading to the front hall and a door from this hall opening into the kitchen. The first floor of the building was occupied by the undertaking establishment of the H. R. Crane Company, the rear room of which was directly under the kitchen.'
On the morning of the accident the defendant said to the plaintiff if " she was going to be out in the afternoon ” he would oil the kitchen floor and asked her to unfasten the trap door so that he could get up stairs. In the afternoon, before leaving the tenement, she removed a stick from the door, which prevented it from being opened from underneath, the door at the time being closed. During her absence the defendant entered the tenement by the rear stairway and oiled the floor. When the work was finished he left the premises, but neglected to close the trap door. It snowed on the day of the accident, January 3, 1919, and when the plaintiff departed from the house it was daylight, although cloudy and dark. When she returned, about five o’clock in the afternoon, she entered from the front hall, there were no lights in the house and “ the kitchen was very dark.” She removed her hat and coat and after placing some bundles on the kitchen table, went to the window to draw the shade before lighting the gas, and as she reached for the curtain, she fell through the open stairway to the floor below, receiving severe injuries. The plaintiff testified that on her return there were papers on the floor which were not there when she went out; that she could have lit the kitchen light if she desired; that at night, unless there was a light, one could not see whether the trap door was up or down.
The defendant should have known that the open trap door was a source of danger to the occupants of the tenement, that they might return when it was dark, when the opening might not be observed and the danger seen. It was his duty to close the door, protect the opening, or to take some precaution so that the plaintiff would be warned against the danger. The conduct of the defendant was clearly negligent. Kent v. Todd, 144 Mass. 478,
It was not unreasonable for the plaintiff to expect that the defendant would close the door when leaving the tenement, and without considering St. 1914, c. 553, her due care was for the jury to decide. Riley v. Lissner, supra. Drennan v. Grady, 167 Mass. 415. McLeod v. Rawson, 215 Mass. 257, 260.
Exceptions overruled.