This is a negligence action brought by the plaintiff, a tenant of the defendant, for injuries received as the result of a fall from the second-floor porch of a building owned by the defendant. At the conclusion of the evidence the defendant moved for a directed verdict on which the court reserved decision. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff which was accepted by the court. The defendant moved that the verdict be set aside on the grounds that it was contrary to the law and against the evidence. The court granted the motion, setting aside the verdict, and rendered judgment for the defendant. From this judgment the plaintiff has appealed to this court.
The action of the trial court in setting aside the verdict on the ground that it was not supported by the evidence is tested by the evidence printed in the appendices to the briefs.
Prystash
v.
Best Medium Publishing Co.,
From the evidence the jury reasonably could have found the following facts. The defendant was the owner of a three-story tenement house in which there were five apartments, two on the first floor, two on the second and one on the third. The plaintiff, his wife and child, occupied a second-floor apartment on a week-to-week tenancy. The plaintiff’s apart
The defendant claims that the plaintiff did not sustain his burden of proving that control of the second-floor porch was retained by the defendant. Whether the defendant retained control of this area is essentially a matter of intention to be determined in the light of all the significant circumstances.
Dinnan
v.
Jozwiakowski,
The trial court determined that while there was evidence as to a general condition of disrepair on the porch there was no evidence of knowledge by the landlord of the specific defect which caused the injury. The defendant was under a duty to use reasonable care to keep those portions of the premises over which he retained control in a reasonably safe condition.
Douglass
v.
95 Pearl Street Corporation,
supra, 82. There could be, however, no breach of this duty unless the defendant knew of the unsafe condition or was chargeable with notice of it because, had he exercised a reasonable inspection of the premises, he would have discovered it.
White
v.
E & F Construction Co.,
There was evidence that the second-floor porch was dry, rotted and peeling for at least two years prior to the accident. Two weeks before the accident the railing was rotted and the side of it where the plaintiff fell was standing loose from the post to which it had been attached. The defendant came to the apartment once a week to collect the rent. He was on the second-floor porch one week prior to the accident. Reuben Shuller, a carpenter who conducted his own business, did carpentry work for the defendant. He was familiar with the premises and was there a week before the accident. On that day he repaired the porch railing on the first floor. He then went up to the second floor and looked at the condition of the wood on the porch. He shook the post to see if it was loose, and shook the railing as he walked along. He checked the whole building. Certainly on these facts it was permissible for the jury to infer that Shuller was the defendant’s agent.
'While the evidence was contradictory, the jury were entitled to believe that the railing on the porch was rotted, and that on the side where the plaintiff fell it was standing loose from the post; that the post on the corner of the porch was rotted; that the defective condition of the railing caused it to swing out when the plaintiff placed his hand on it; that this condition was the specific defect which caused the plaintiff’s injuries, and had existed for at least two weeks prior to the accident, a sufficient period of time within which the defendant, in the exercise of a reasonable inspection, should have discovered it.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
