52 Pa. Super. 467 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1913
Opinion by
The plaintiff was injured by the collapse of a grandstand at a baseball park owned by the defendant. The evidence offered in support of the action tended to show that some of the upright timbers supporting the structure had become decayed and unfit for the purpose and that the stand fell because of that condition. The defendant while denying that the accident occurred because of the rotten condition of the upright supports contends that he is not liable for the consequences of the accident because of the fact that the park was leased by him to an amusement company and that the latter is alone responsible if there be liability anywhere. The defendant leased the premises to George Cockill and others on May 22, 1911, for a term of two years. The lease contained a covenant that the lessees would maintain in good repair the grandstand, bleachers and building and fences on the premises. The position taken by the appellant is that the grandstand was properly constructed by a former tenant; that it came to the appellant on a reversion of the property to him at the termination of the lease; that he never used it himself and that when he again leased he bound the tenants to assume responsibility for the condition of the structure by placing on them an obligation to repair; that the defect was curable by ordinary repair and that the landlord neither assumed, nor was chargeable with, liability for injuries resulting from the neglect of the tenants to make the necessary repairs and put the structure in fit condition for the use for which it was intended. He concedes that if the defect were one of original construction of which the landlord knew or of which he should have known, his liability would continue after the lease
The judgment is affirmed.