The report to the Appellate Division from the First District Court of Barnstable sets out evidence tending to show the following facts: On September 4, 1962, the plaintiff signed a written lease with Dana M. Mar-ston for cottage No. 2 in Marston’s development of rental cottages. The lease was to run until the end of May, 1963. The cottage was rented with all furnishings except bed linen, including an apartment-sized gas stove. The plaintiff moved in on September 4,1962, and used the stove from that date. It was at least ten years old. On May 8, 1963, when the plaintiff sought to light a burner on the top of the gas stove (one of three she had extinguished five to seven minutes earlier, leaving a fourth top burner and the oven ignited) an explosion occurred injuring the plaintiff. This was the first time the plaintiff had used all four top burners and the oven at the same time.
*323 The trial judge found, with support in the evidence, including expert testimony, that “the oven . . . was insulated in a defective manner.” As a result, either because much of the available oxygen had been used or because the air over the stove had become overheated, the flame of the fourth burner had been extinguished. The wall cabinets and side cabinets were “too close to the burner, closer than allowed by law.” The combined effect of the defects was an accumulation of gas that exploded when the plaintiff struck a match.
The trial judge made a finding for the plaintiff, having found that the stove was not in a suitable condition for use. He ruled that there was a breach of an implied agreement that the house and its appointments were in a suitable condition for occupancy. The Appellate Division reversed the finding and held that it was error not to have ruled that the evidence required a finding for the defendant. The defendant does not contend that the defects did not exist at the time of the letting.
Ingalls
v. Hobbs,
In
Hacker
v.
Nitschke,
Littlehale
v.
Osgood,
In
Young
v.
Povich,
121 Maine, 141, 143-145, cited by this court in the
Davenport
case (
The Appellate Division and the defendant emphasize the statements in certain cases that the
Ingalls
ease is “limited . . . very carefully to its particular facts”
(Bolieau
v.
Traiser,
The Ingalls case and the Povich case cited English decisions, adjudicating a tenant’s liability to pay rent, in which a warranty was implied where the premises were not in a fit state to be inhabited. Smith v. Marrable, 11 M. & W. 5 (infestation of bugs). Wilson v. Finch Hatton, [1877] 2 Ex. D. 336 (defective drains, stagnant, malodorous sewage under basement). Collins v. Hopkins, [1923] 2 K. B. 617 (house recently occupied by a person suffering from pulmonary tuberculosis; action by tenant to recover rent paid and for damages). See also Edwards v. Etherington, Ry. & Mood. 268 (walls so dilapidated as to be unsafe).
The
Ingalls
and
Povich
eases could be understood to stand only for affording relief in respect of rent if the tenant could not safely and reasonably have had any use of the premises in their condition as rented. But the
Hacker
case,
supra
(
We think that the length of the term in the case at bar was not such as to place the risk of concealed defects on the tenant. Here, as in the Ingalls case, an “important part of what the hirer . . . [paid for was] the opportunity to enjoy . . . [the dwelling] without delay, and without the expense of preparing it for use.” We hold that the defendant impliedly covenanted on September 4, 1962, that cottage No. 2 and its furnishings were then suitable for their intended use.
We see nothing in the defendant’s contention that he has not been shown to be the Dana M. Marston who rented the cottage. The defendant is named in the writ as “Dana M. Marston dba Captain Marston’s Village, Main Street, Barn-stable (Osterville), Massachusetts.” Service was made “at the last and usual place of abode of Dana M. Marston at ‘ Captain Marston’s Village, ’ Main Street, Osterville, Massachusetts.” There was evidence, inter alla, as follows : ‘ ‘ The plaintiff met . . . Dana M. Marston, also called Captain Marston, on or about September 4, 1962, at the office of
‘
Captain Marston’s Village. ’ ” Marston identified himself as the owner of the cottages and “showed the plaintiff through Cottage No. 2.” The plaintiff signed a lease “with said Dana M. Marston.’’ On May 13,1963, a repairman for the Buzzards Bay Gras Co., in the presence of Dana Marston, made certain tests. The gas inspector of the town on May 10, 1963, made tests on the stove in cottage No. 2 of “Dana M. Marston’s ' Captain Marston’s Village,’ ” and thereafter “ordered Dana Marston, whom he had known for some time, to cut the overhanging shelves off as . . . this condition constituted a hazard endangering the public safety.” At the trial there was no testimony from the defendant. The evidence certainly showed more than “bald identity of name.”
Brockton Hosp.
v. Cooper,
The order of the Appellate Division is reversed. Judgment for the plaintiff is to enter on the finding of the trial judge. So ordered.
