Order unanimously affirmed, without costs. Memorandum: Defendant appeals from an order of Supreme Court, Monroe County which denied defendant’s motion for an order granting summary judgment. Plaintiff, Diane Howell, was injured when she fell from a porch attached to a home in which she and her husband were tenants of defendant, the owner, under the terms of a month-to-month tenancy. Defendant’s motion for summary judgment was based on the grounds that there were no facts in the record indicating that the defendant owed a duty to the plaintiffs to keep the leased premises in repair and that in the absence of such duty no liability attached to the defendant-owner relative to plaintiff’s injuries. The plaintiffs’ pleadings relied on two theories of negligence, namely, that the defendant was negligent under the common law and that defendant was negligent under the statutory law (Code of the City of Rochester, New York, ch 90 [Property Code]). The law is well settled in this State that in the absence of a statutory requirement or an express covenant to repair, there is no implied obligation or duty on the part of a landlord to make repairs to leased premises. The long established rule is "that the landlord is not generally liable for injury sustained by the tenant * * * through a defective condition of that part of the premises which is in the exclusive control of the tenant” (2B Warren’s Negligence, ch 61, § 4.10, p 383). Absent a covenant to repair, the owner of residential property is held liable for injuries to his tenant when premised upon a defective condition of the property only when the facts justify the conclusion that control has been
Howell v. Gagliano
384 N.Y.S.2d 576
N.Y. App. Div.1976Check TreatmentAI-generated responses must be verified and are not legal advice.
