9 Daly 371 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1880
In Thompson’s Monograph on Charging the Jury, it is said that it is error for the judge to submit to the jury a fact, or state of facts, which there is no evidence tending to prove, or to give an instruction with reference to a state of facts not in evidence. Though the author refers to no case decided by the courts of this state, he might have cited Storey v. Brennan (15 N. Y. 524) and Rouse v. Lewis (2 Keyes, 352).
In this case, the judge gave to the jury two instructions for which the evidence gave no warrant, and they were both of a character likely to prejudice the plaintiff. The first was: If the jury believe that the house was already infected with disease from the sewer or drains, or otherwise, and the landlord had
The jury did award the defendant damages. There was not a scintilla of evidence to justify a finding that the plaintiff or his agents did purposely conceal the hole in the cellar, or that he or they had any suspicion that there was such a hole. Hor was there a scintilla of evidence that the plaintiff knew that the house was infected with disease, or that he had reasonable notice of it, or that the defendant’s household were made ill by such disease. Upon both points, I shall collate all the evidence. First, as to the hole in the cellar. The defendant swore that he had never any conversation' with the plaintiff about the hole; and that he first saw the hole about a week after he moved in ; he discovered it in cleaning the cellar ; it was concealed by a stone and rubbish, and the ooze from the waste-pipe from the water-closet almost filled the hole; that the rubbish so covered the hole that it could not be seen before the cellar was cleaned, as the cellar was in a generally dirty condition; that on sweeping it out, a smell was discovered, and on lifting the stone the cause of the smell was ascertained; that the hole could not possibly be seen till the rubbish had been removed. It appeared also that the house had been vacant from May 1 till Hovember 1; that for several years prior to the 1st of May, it had been occupied by a Dr. Kearney, who left on bad terms with the plaintiff, and who was examined as a witness for the defendant. There is not in the whole case another word respecting the hole in the cellar, or the plaintiff’s knowledge that it was there. How, therefore, could the jury find from the evidence, that the plaintiff personally, or by the hand of his agents, had purposely concealed the hole? It does not remove the error that the judge said, when the instruction was asked for, “ in case the evidence sustains the proposition.” He still left it to the jury to find, if they chose, though there was no evidence to support the find
As to the house having been infected with disease, to the knowledge of the plaintiff, and as to the suffering of the defendant’s family or household therefrom, the evidence was the following: near the back parlor, in which the defendant and his wife slept, there was a pantry, -and whenever the pantry door was opened there was a bad stench, which required a disinfectant to counteract it, and which compelled them to leave the windows open for ventilation, and to have the pantry frequently scrubbed; there was also a bad smell on the third floor, and a bad smell in the water-closet, though that was not so much noticed; the defendant stopped up the flues, to prevent the exhalations from the cellar from coming up into the living rooms; this last statement must be taken in connection with another to the effect that the flues were stopped because the furnace could not be used. The defendant’s wife said that after moving in, she noticed an odor in the back parlor, and in a sink which was in a liall-room on the third floor; there was an odor of sewer gas in the closet in the back parlor; a Dr. Reynolds swore that he had detected a smell of sewer gas in the house whilst visiting a patient there; a gentleman who came to the house with .the defendant as a boarder, and who was sick when he came, died in the house of a malarial disease; and Dr. Reynolds thought that the malady of the patient whom he attended, might be ascribable to sewer gas. This was all the evidence which bore on the infection of the house with disease emanating from the sewer or drains. Dr. Kearney, the former occupant of the house, a witness hostile to the plaintiff, was not interrogated as to the prevalence of sewer gas during the period of his tenancy, nor was any question put to Mary Moore, the servant .of the defendant, or to Susan Thompson, a boarder -with him, as to sewer gas in the house. The defendant said his wife was sick whilst living in the house, but no evidence was given as to the nature, or the cause, of the disease ; he also said that his children did not get down, but were under treatment, though he did not state what they were under
Upon this evidence, how is the submission to the jury of the question as to whether or not the defendant’s family or household was made sick by sewer gas to be justified ? The court had very properly thrown out of the case the defendant’s claim for injury to his boarding-house business, for there was ño evidence to support it, and the question that was submitted referred simply to the damages caused by illness produced by sewer gas. Assuming that the illness of the boarder Calhoun was occasioned by the mephitic vapors of the house, how could the defendant recover damages for the sickness of a boarder ? The fact that a boarder became sick was admissible in evidence, to show that the house was dangerous to health, but it could not be an item of the defendant’s damages.
Furthermore, there was no evidence whatsoever to show that the plaintiff knew, or had reasonable notice, that the house was infected with disease. The defendant and his wife went through the house before they hired it, and they did not discover the smell of sewer gas. If they did not how is it to be presumed that the plaintjff did? The defendant proved that the foul odors came from a pantry next to the back parlor, and from a sink in a hall room on the third floor. Is it to be presumed that the plaintiff, before the house was let, had gone into the pantry and into the hall room ? Why is not the presumption just as strong that the defendant, in his examination of the house, had nosed the stench in both places ? It is also in evidence that the smell from the hole in the pipe in the cellar was discovered by the defendant after the cellar had
I think the learned judge also erred in instructing the jury that the plaintiff was presumed to know the condition of the house.
The judge said, if Jackson represented the house to be in good repair, Odell had a good right to rely upon it, and it is no answer to say that he did not know, because it is a representation of a fact which was presumed to be within his own knowledge. If I represent for some purpose that I have got $100 in my pocket as my own, and obtain credit upon the strength of that representation, and it turns out that I do not have $100, it is a false representation, and it is no excuse that I do not know the fact, because it is a fact which, it is presumed, is within my own knowledge, and it is a misrepresentation which you have a right to rely on as being within my own knowledge. So with regard to Mr. Jackson; it being his property, he residing next door, he would be presumed to have knowledge of the particular condition of these premises, seeing that they had been vacant for six months; and it is no defense, if you find they were out of repair, that he did not know it.
Although the illustration given by the learned judge was correct as an abstract proposition, it was not at all applicable to the facts of this case, and was calculated to mislead the jury, There are undoubtedly instances in which the law imputes knowledge to a person who makes an affirmation respecting the subject of a negotiation, and will hold him accountable for the
The charge was not excepted to on this point, but nevertheless, a new trial should be granted. This seems to me to be a peculiar case. On reading, with great care, all the evidence, I am satisfied that the defense was utterly without merits. Testimony which was not only irrelevant and immaterial, but of a character likely to prejudice the minds of the jury, is to be found in all parts of the printed case, and the result is to be seen in the verdict, which not only deprived the plaintiff of his rent, but gave judgment for damages against him, though I have been unable to discover what the damages are for.
The judgment and the order appealed from should be reversed, and a new trial ordered, with costs to abide the event.
■Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to abide event.