8 N.Y.S. 614 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1889
This action is to recover damages for personal injuries which the plaintiff received by reason of the fall of a hoisting apparatus attached to the roof of a building owned by the defendant. The building is located in the business part of the village of Medina, and is three stories high. The ground floor is divided and used as stores, and the second story for business offices, and the third as an opera-house. The roof of the building is nearly flat, and the attic over the opera-room is about five feet high, and unoccupied, except a portion of the machinery used to move the curtains on the stage in the room below is operated therein. The rooms occupied as the opera-house are reached by stairways ascending from the street. The hoisting apparatus mentioned was used for the sole purpose of lifting the baggage of showmen and performers from the street to the floor of the opera-house, which was received through an outside window. The front wall’ of the building was on the line of the street, and the cornice projected over the sidewalk about two feet. The contrivance for hoisting was constructed by laying a plank six feet long, six inches wide, and two inches thick, flat on the roof, which projected over the cornice eighteen inches, with a hook fastened in the projecting end, to which was attached an iron pulley, ropes, and tackling. The plank was kept in position by placing on the other end thereof a keg Ailed with brick, and loose brick laid on the plank, and was not otherwise fastened. On the 5th day of November, 1887, while the tackling was being used to lift baggage up to the opera-house, it fell from the roof of the building, and struck the plaintiff, who was standing in the street, and severely and permanently injured him. He was without fault on his part. The foregoing facts are stated in the bill of exceptions, wherein it was also stated that there was evidence tending to show “that the appliances for securing the hoisting apparatus on the roof was defective, and that it fell because of said defects, and injured the plaintiff.” The bill also states that “previous to the erection of
All the stores and ether rooms in the building had been rented, and were in the possession of the tenants, but on what terms was not disclosed. At the time of the accident the rooms used as an opera-house were leased by the defendant to one Gates for one year, for the rental of nine dollars for each and every entertainment given in the rooms. The tenant promised to keep the stairway clean and clear, and the windows closed, and to take care of the hall in a careful manner, and in the winter season to remove the snow from the roof so as not to injure the same. The defendant did not agree to make any repairs on the demised premises. The hoisting apparatus was erected in 1881, while the same rooms were under a similar lease to a previous tenant, with the express consent on the part of the defendant that the lessee might construct the same, the lessee paying all expenses. The defendant was fully informed long before the accident as to the mode and manner the hoist was constructed and held in position. The lease under which the tenant occupied was executed two months before the plaintiff was injured. This statement includes every material fact set forth in the bill of exceptions, or which the evidence tended to prove.
On the case, as made by the plaintiff, most careful and prudent men would say, as we think, that the apparatus, when in use, was insecure and unsafe, and liable to fall and injure persons passing along the sidewalk in front of the building. It was not safely and securely attached to the roof or cornice. The cornice was the fulcrum, and whenever the weight of the goods to be hoisted was greater than the weight applied to the plank the structure would of necessity give way, and be pulled down to the sidewalk. It was not for the court to hold that it was in a safe and secure condition at the time the defendant made the lease which was in force when the accident happened. Although the charge to the jury is not a necessary part to the bill of exceptions, it is set out in full therein, and by the instructions given to the jury the plaintiff’s right to recover was made to depend upon the fact whether the apparatus was in an unsafe and insecure condition at the time the lease was executed. The fact being established that the apparatus was in an insecure and dangerous condition when the possession of the opera-house was surrendered by the defendant to hertenant, her liability cannot be doubted. It is settled in this state that if the owner of the premises demises them for a rent to be paid when they are in an unsafe and insecure condition, to hisknowledge, he is liable to any one of the public who may be injured in their person or property in. consequence of such premises being in a dangerous condition, although he is. not in the actual possession thereof at the time the injury happened. This precise proposition has been repeatedly affirmed, and is no longer open for discussion. Edwards v. Railroad Co., 98 N. Y. 247. Ahern v. Steele, 22 N. E. Rep. 193, decided by the court of appeals in October of this year, and not reported in the regular series, is very instructive on this subject. See, also, Albert v. State, 66 Md. 325, 7 Atl. Rep. 697; Nugent v. Railroad Co., 80 Me. 62, 12 Atl. Rep. 797; Joyce v. Martin, 15 R. I. 558, 10 Atl. Rep. 620. This, one view of the case fixes the defendant’s liability, and renders it unnecessary to consider whether her liability may not be placed upon another ground