126 A. 314 | N.J. | 1924
These actions were brought in the Supreme Court to recover damages for personal injuries received by James Hussey and occasioned by the falling of a fire escape attached to a six-family apartment-house in Jersey City, the fall being claimed to be due to the negligence of the defendants. The Long Dock Railroad Company and the Erie Railroad Company leased to John Hussey the lower right apartment *381 of 347 Baldwin avenue under a written lease, and Hussey with his family, of which James Hussey, a son, was one, occupied it at the time of the accident on August 20th, 1923. Attached to the apartment-house was a rear yard into which a hallway ran from the front of the building and through it on the ground floor. On the day in question James Hussey was waiting in the yard for a friend with whom he was expecting to eat dinner. While standing under the fire escape a portion of it became loosened from the wall and fell upon and injured him. The fire escape was fastened to the rear wall and was maintained by the defendants and intended for the general use of all the tenants in case of fire. It was shown that the wall was old and crumbled and that it was not calculated to withstand the strain of weight of the fire escape; that this condition was one of long standing and knowledge thereof fairly chargeable to the defendants. There was also some evidence that the faulty condition of the wall had actually been called to the defendants' attention.
The first two points argued are that there was no evidence of the defendants' negligence. These contentions cannot be maintained in view of the proofs just noted.
The third and sixth points are that the plaintiff, James Hussey, was a mere licensee, and that, in consequence, the only duty owing was to refrain from willful injury. We think the learned trial judge rightly held to the contrary. This contention is predicated upon the terms of the lease and the injured plaintiff's relation to the leased premises. The pertinent provisions of the lease are:
"Said lessee for himself, his heirs, executors, administrators, successors and assigns, hereby assume all risk of loss, damage or injury by fire, accident, collision or otherwise, to property or person, on or about said leased premises, arising out of the condition or location of said leased premises, or the operation, maintenance or existence of the railroad operated by said lessor, its successors or assigns, or any of its appurtenances; and agrees to indemnify and save harmless said lessor, its successors and assigns, from all claims for any and all such loss, damage or injury, whether caused by the negligence *382 of said lessor, its successors or assigns, or by the negligence of its or their servants, agents or employes, or otherwise."
It must, of course, be recognized that the rights of the injured son could rise no higher than those of the father, the tenant. While conceding that whatever duty existed was owing equally to each, it was urgently insisted by the appellants that in using the yard as a waiting place for his friend James held the status of a licensee, inasmuch as the yard was only intended as a means of ingress and egress to the cellarway under the building. As before noted, the tenement had a rear yard into which a common passageway entered. It was there in pursuance of a requirement of law (Pamph. L. 1904, p. 115), which reads:
"Behind every tenement-house hereafter erected there shall be a yard extending across the entire width of the lot, and, except upon a corner lot, at every point from the ground to the sky, unobstructed," c.
It would be narrowing the purpose of the yard beyond any reasonable interpretation of the statute to hold that it was limited in its use to a means of getting into and out of the cellar. Part of its purpose is to afford light and air to the tenants, and we think also to serve any other reasonable use to which yards in cities are ordinarily applied. The act of the boy in waiting for his friend may well have been such. If so, he was in the yard, not as a mere licensee, but in the exercise of a right as a member of his father's family.
It was next argued that by the terms of the lease the boy assumed the risk of injury. A careful examination of the lease does not lead to this conclusion. As we read it the lessee assumed the risk of injury arising from the condition of the leased premises or by the operation of the railroad (which was located near it). The word "appurtenances," under which the appellants claim the assumption of risk to exist, appears at least two times in the lease. The lessors were two railroad companies which were operating a railroad in close proximity to the building. The clause already quoted indicated that the lessors were solicitous about claims *383 for damages by the tenants of this tenement-house by reason of the condition of the particular portions leased to them or by reason of the operation of the railroad so near the building, and it is more than doubtful if the word "appurtenances" was intended to apply to the leased premises, but rather to the railroad itself; the language being that the lessee assumed the risk of damages on or about the leased premises arising out of their condition or location, and then goes on to say "or the operation, maintenance, existence of the railroad * * * or any of its appurtenances." It would thus appear that the word "appurtenances" rather referred to the railroad than to the leased apartment. Without, however, resorting to this interpretation of the lease, and assuming that the word "appurtenances" applies to the leased premises, it cannot be construed to extend to those portions of the building and its curtilage which formed no part of the individual lease, but were under the care and control of the landlord, and as to which he assumed the duty of using reasonable care to maintain in a safe condition for the use of all tenants. That this construction is the correct one is evident from the provisions of paragraph 3, which require the tenant to keep the leased premises and "appurtenances" in good and sanitary condition, free from all accumulation of rubbish. It can hardly be contended that, by reason of the word "appurtenances" in this paragraph, the individual tenant assumed responsibility for the care of those portions of the general property not within his lease. The same word, being used in both cases, will fairly give rise to the presumption that its meaning was not dissimilar.
It is next contended that the construction of the fire escape was the work of an independent contractor for whose negligence the lessors would not be responsible. One difficulty with this claim is that the fault was not with the fire escape but with the wall. So far as appears the fire escape itself was without fault, and so was its method of attachment to the wall. The real defect was in the wall itself. This was insufficient for the burden placed on it by direction of the lessors, and for this insufficiency the lessors are responsible. *384
Even were the fault with the fire escape, its construction under contract by a third person would not relieve the landlord. Our decisions are emphatic that as to those portions of an apartment property reserved to the landlord for his care, preservation and repair, the landlord owes a duty to his general tenants which he cannot escape. This duty is to use reasonable care to see that such portions of the general premises are reasonably safe for the use of the tenants and those who are impliedly invited to come upon them. Siggins v. McGill,
The foregoing disposes of the substantial grounds of appeal. Finding them all without merit, the judgment in each case will be affirmed, with costs. *385 For affirmance — THE CHANCELLOR, CHIEF JUSTICE, TRENCHARD, MINTURN, KALISCH, BLACK, KATZENBACH, CAMPBELL, LLOYD, WHITE, GARDNER, VAN BUSKIRK, CLARK, McGLENNON, KAYS, JJ. 15.
For reversal — None.