It is perfectly true, as contended by the plaintiffs in error, that a landlord is not liable to a tenant for the trespass or negligence of a cotenant to whom the landlord has surrendered control of another part of the premises.
J. B. White & Co.
v.
Montgomery, 58 Ga.
204(2);
Leonard
v.
Fulton Nat. Bank of Atlanta,
86
Ga. App.
635 (
The fact that the plaintiff’s lease contained the following: “Lessee agrees to hold lessor harmless against injury or damage to person or property of lessee, his agents, or employees, or of the public or any other person
because of defects in the condition of said premises,
be the same
structural or otherwise,”
is immaterial. A provision in a contract that the lessee releases the lessor “from any and all damages to person and property” sustained during the lease period, however 'occurring, will serve to exempt the landlord from liability based on simple negligence
(Capital Wall Paper Co.
v.
Callan Court Co.,
38
Ga. App.
428,
Code § 61-112 provides: “The landlord, having fully parted with possession and right of possession, is not responsible to third persons for damages resulting from the negligence or illegal use of the premises by the tenant, but he is responsible to others for damages arising from defective construction or for damages from failure to keep the premises in repair.” As between landlord and tenant, of course, this responsibility may be waived, but no such waiver results from a provision which merely refers to defective conditions (whether this be construed to mean defective construction or failure to repair or both) amounting to an affirmative *33 act of the landlord committed during the term of the tenancy and resulting in the creation of a defect which would not otherwise have existed. Likewise it does not comprehend an affirmative authorization to others to do an act tending to be naturally destructive of the plaintiff’s interest in the leased premises. Failure to correct a defective condition is an act of omission or nonfeasance ; the grant of authority to create an encroachment upon the tenant’s right of use in the leased property is an act of commission and misfeasance. The waiver provision in this lease is sufficient to cover the former but not the latter, for which reason it provides no defense under the allegations of this petition. Accordingly, count 1 sets out a cause of action for ordinary negligence, and count 2 sets out a cause of action based on a wilful trespass.
The special demurrers, while generally insisted upon, are not argued, and certain of those mentioned in the brief of counsel for the plaintiff in error have become moot by reason of the amendment to the petition. The special demurrers to the allegations of negligence above set out are not subject to the objection that it appears that the owners of the building had no right of control over the manner and performance of the work, for, as stated above, the liability of the complaining defendants must be based entirely on their own negligence in authorizing the tort, and not on imputable negligence of those who performed the work. The contentions raised by special demurrer were well answered in an interlocutory opinion of the trial court, part of which contains the following: “The gist of this action is (1) removing the roof (2) without providing a substitute to protect plaintiff against the elements. If the plaintiff sues for a trespass, then under the allegations of the plaintiff’s petition all the defendants participated in the trespass jointly because (1) [The owners] caused the trespass by authorizing (having no right to authorize the violation of the plaintiff’s fight to a roof); (2) Livingston procured, and (3) Barwick did the act. The trespass consisted of the two elements referred to: (1) removing the roof and (2) not providing a substitute. It is really the act of removing the roof. While providing a substitute roof to protect the plaintiff from the elements may have prevented the *34 removal from being a trespass, it was actually the removal of the roof per se which brought about the plaintiff’s'alleged damages. . . Each [set of defendants] is independently charged with negligence which is alleged to have concurred in bringing about the alleged damage to the plaintiff.” The overruling of the special demurrers is without error.
The trial court did not err in. overruling the demurrers to the petition.
Judgment affirmed.
