HOUSING AUTHORITY OF THE CITY OF ATLANTA v. JEFFERSON
A96A0912
Court of Appeals of Georgia
SEPTEMBER 11, 1996
RECONSIDERATION DENIED OCTOBER 3, 1996
223 Ga. App. 60 | 476 SE2d 831
BLACKBURN, Judge.
Ernest Moss, pro se. Webb, Carlock, Copeland, Semler & Stair, Robert M. Ethridge, Thomas M. Boyle III, for appellee. Corinne R. Rutzke, pro se.
Housing Authority of the City of Atlanta (AHA) appeals the trial court‘s denial of summary judgment on the issue of whether it had the duty to inspect for the presence of a smoke detector when qualifying a house for use under federal Section 8 Housing Assistance Payments Program for Existing Housing (Section 8).
Three-year-old Calvin Jefferson, Jr. was severely injured when his family‘s home caught fire on January 3, 1990. The aunt who was babysitting Jefferson was able to escape the burning house, but Jefferson remained inside. He was later rescued by emergency personnel. Jefferson‘s mother had leased the house approximately six months earlier. Prior to the rental, the house was inspected by AHA, acting in its capacity as the area Section 8 administrator. AHA found the house was suitable for participation in the program, and Jefferson‘s family received Section 8 assistance to rent the dwelling.
Jefferson, acting through his guardian ad litem, filed the underlying action against AHA for approving the dwelling for Section 8 use even though it lacked a smoke detector. AHA filed a motion for summary judgment asserting it had no duty to ensure that the dwelling contained a smoke detector and, alternatively, that the failure to comply with such duty was not the proximate cause of Jefferson‘s injuries. The trial court denied AHA‘s motion, and we granted AHA‘s application for interlocutory appeal.
1. In its first two enumerations of error, AHA contends that it had no duty to inspect the dwelling for the presence of a smoke detector. While at the time of this incident, federal regulations did not directly impose a duty upon AHA to ensure the presence of a smoke detector in Jefferson‘s dwelling, they did require compliance with state and local regulations which did impose such
One such ordinance, adopted in 1984, requires owners to provide a working smoke detector in all residential dwellings prior to their sale or lease. See Atlanta Ordinance § 11-3032.1 (b). Moreover, the ordinance defines an owner as: “Any person, corporation or other legal entity who has legal title or control, in whole or in part, of any real property” (emphasis supplied) within the city. Atlanta Ordinance § 11-3032.1 (a) (2). Clearly, in its capacity as the area administrator, AHA exercised significant control over the Jeffersons’ dwelling. It even had the power to review and approve the landlord‘s proposed lease prior to its execution.
2. In its third enumeration, AHA contends that even if it had the duty to ensure the presence of a smoke detector, the breach of that duty was not the proximate cause of Jefferson‘s injuries based upon our decision in Wilkerson v. Alexander, 208 Ga. App. 83, 85 (429 SE2d 685) (1993).
In Wilkerson, a six-year-old girl was killed in a fire while sleeping at a neighbor‘s house. She had been sleeping on a couch in the den at the time the fire started, but her body was discovered behind the bathroom door. Several other children who had been in the house at the time of the fire were able to escape unharmed. In determining that the dead child‘s survivors had no cause of action against the owners of the home where the fire occurred, this Court first determined that, unlike the instant case, the owners had
Wilkerson is inapposite. In the subject case, a police officer who initially arrived on the scene after receiving an emergency call averred that she could not reach Jefferson due to the fire‘s intense heat. Jefferson was not rescued until later when the fire department arrived and a fireman went into the burning house with the aid of special equipment including “a breathing apparatus and full protective turnout gear.”
The purpose of a smoke detector is to provide an early warning of fire and to reduce the damages and injury resulting therefrom. Whether or not the lack of a smoke detector delayed Jefferson‘s rescue and contributed to his injuries is a jury question. Had a smoke detector been present to provide an early alarm, it is possible that Jefferson would have been rescued sooner, thereby avoiding or lessening the extent of his injuries. See Seibers v. Dixie Speedway, 220 Ga. App. 811 (470 SE2d 452) (1996) (summary judgment denied based on possibility that defendant‘s actions or omissions worsened injury).
Because questions of fact exist as to whether the presence of a smoke detector may have prevented or lessened Jefferson‘s injuries, the trial court correctly denied summary judgment on the issue of proximate cause.
3. In its final enumeration of error, AHA asserts that the trial court erred in denying AHA‘s motion for summary judgment because Jefferson‘s mother had equal or superior knowledge that the resi-dence lacked a smoke detector when she rented the house. This argument is without merit.
AHA relies on the general law that the owner or occupier of land has no duty to warn against obvious or patent dangers which may be readily observed. See Commerce Properties v. Linthicum, 209 Ga. App. 853, 854 (434 SE2d 769) (1993). Similarly, AHA also contends that a landlord is not liable for injuries to his tenant resulting from a patent defect existing at the time of the rental agreement as to which both the landlord and tenant had equal knowledge. See Hyde v. Bryant, 114 Ga. App. 535, 536 (151 SE2d 925) (1966). These general rules have no application in the face of a specific duty imposed on AHA by statute. “[L]andlords may not hide behind this general principle to avoid duties mandated by statutes or housing codes.” Roth v. Wu, 199 Ga. App. 665, 666 (405 SE2d 741) (1991); see also Bastien v. Metro. Park Lake Assoc., L.P., 209 Ga. App. 881 (434 SE2d 736) (1993). Furthermore, pursuant to
In light of the above, the trial court did not err in denying AHA‘s motion for summary judgment.
Judgment affirmed. Senior Appellate Judge Harold R. Banke concurs. Beasley, C. J., concurs specially.
BEASLEY, Chief Judge, concurring specially.
1. I concur in the judgment but not in the designation of the Atlanta Housing Authority as an “owner” of the residence which it approved for rental by a private owner to Jefferson‘s mother, as that term is used in Atlanta Ordinance § 11-3032.1. Nor is it necessary as a matter of statutory construction principles to construe the term so broadly. Doing so would mean that AHA was obligated to “provide a smoke detector to be placed in accordance with the manufacturer‘s instructions for each dwelling unit prior to any sale, lease or rental of such unit.” Ordinance § 11-3032.1 (b).
As the majority states, the ordinance defines “owner” for the purposes of the section
Plaintiff does not contend that AHA was required to provide a detector. In fact, he makes that clear in his appellate brief: “Plaintiff is not claiming that AHA had a duty to ‘provide’ (and therefore purchase and/or install) the smoke detector for the subject house. Appellee claims that because a smoke detector was required by this law to be in every house, AHA with this knowledge had a duty to require the landlord to install a functioning smoke detector before approving the Jeffersons’ move into the home under Section 8.” (Emphasis omitted.)
The alleged breach of statutory duty was in approving the home for rental under a federal program which provided the rent when the home did not comply with the law. The whole purpose of the minimum quality standards requirement before federal funds are available is to assure that housing for poor people is “decent, safe and sanitary.”
2. As to proximate cause and AHA‘s claim of remoteness as a matter of law in this summary judgment posture of the case, “(t)he inquiry is not whether the defendant‘s conduct constituted a cause in fact of the injury, but rather whether the causal connection between that conduct and the injury is too remote for the law to countenance a recovery.” Collie v. Hutson, 175 Ga. App. 672, 673 (334 SE2d 13) (1985), quoting Hercules, Inc. v. Lewis, 168 Ga. App. 688, 689 (309 SE2d 865) (1983).
The governing statute is
