31 Ind. App. 433 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1903
Appellee was a tenant of appellant, and was injured by the breaking of alleged defective steps leading to the house. This action was to recover damages resulting from such injuries. The complaint was in two paragraphs, to each of which a demurrer was overruled. Answer in denial, trial by jury, verdict and judgment for appellee.
Errors relied upon for a reversal are the overruling of the demurrers to each paragraph of complaint, and overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial.
The amended first paragraph of complaint avers that appellant was the owner of a certain lot upon which was a dwelling-house of two apartments; that each of said apartments. consisted of three rooms down and one room upstairs ; that appellee rented one of the , apartments, and was occupying it as a tenant of appellant; that the other
Appellant predicates her right to a reversal upon the theory that a landlord is not hound to make repairs in the absence of a covenant to do so, and further that there is no implied warranty or covenant that the demised premises are fit, or shall continue to be so, for the purposes for which they are leased. There is no doubt but that this is the general rule, as applicable to ordinary tenancies, for all of the authorities so hold. We mean by the expression of “ordinary tenancies” where property is leased to a single tenant. In such case the lessee has the exclusive possession of, and exercises absolute dominion over, the entire leased premises, in the absence of any reservation or exceptions expressed in the contract. We need not stop to cite authorities in support of this familiar proposition.
We quote the following from 18 Am.-& Eng. Ency. Law (2d ed.), 220: “Thus it is held by the weight of authority that an implied duty is imposed upon the landlord to keep in repair common passageways and approaches retained under his control and'used by the several tenants as
This court in the case of Hamilton v. Feary, 8 Ind. App. 615, 52 Am. St. 485, discussed fully the general rule of a landlord to keep in repair leased premises, and to what extent he became liable for injury to a tenant by reason of defects, and then said: “To this general rule there are, however, several exceptions. Thus the landlord is liable where the premises contain some hidden defect or defects, or are infected with some noxious disease, rendering them dangerous or uninhabitable, and of which dangerous element or defects the landlord had some knowledge or information, but which were not open to the view of the tenant and of which he was ignorant or uninformed. And so the landlord is answerable where he controls or retains possession of a portion of the premises, or a portion is used in common by two or more tenants, and an injury occurs through some negligence or fault of the landlord upon that portion over which he has the control or which is used in common.”
In a well-considered case the supreme court of Maine, upon facts similar to those at bar, decided the exact question before us, and held that the owner of several tenements leased to different tenants, with one stairway or passageway for the accommodation of all, and used in common
The case of Inhabitants of Milford v. Holbrook, 9 Allen (Mass.) 17, 85 Am. Dec. 735, was where an awning was made' for and attached to a block containing three shops leased to different tenants. It was there held that though all had the use of the awning, yet the possession remained in the landlord, and he was liable for any defects in it.
Readman v. Conway, 126 Mass. 374, is also in point. That was where three tenements, with a platform in front of all, were leased to different persons. It was held that there was no presumption, in the absence of an agreement to that effect, that the tenants were to keep the platform in repair; that neither tenants required any exclusive right to use or control the part in front of his shop; and that there was no such leasing of the platform as would exonerate the landlord from responsibility for defects in it.
In the case of Looney v. McLean, 129 Mass. 33, 37 Am. Rep. 295, it was held that where a landlord lets rooms in a building-to different tenants, with a right of way in common over a staircase, he is bound to use reasonable care to keep such staircase in repair, and for failure to do so he became liable for injuries resulting from defects, provided the tenant was in the exercise of due care.
In Coupe v. Platt, 172 Mass. 458, 52 N. E. 526, 70 Am. St. 293, it was held that a landlord who maintains outside steps and platform for the use in common for different parts of the building, and a visitor to one of the tenants, expressly invited by the tenant to come on a particular day for a particular purpose, is injured by a defect in the platform while passing over it, the landlord was answerable, for the visitor was using the platform in the tenant’s right. The same rule is applied to a stairway which is kept and used in common by different tenants. Sawyer v. McGillicuddy, supra. See note to Lindsey v. Leighton, 15 Am. St. 201; Notes to Poor v. Sears, 26 Am. St. 272;
In the case of Payne v. Irvin, 144 Ill. 583, 33 N. E. 756, it was held that the landlord was required to keep in repair that portion of the building over which he retained control for. the protection of all persons, including his tenants.
Our attention has been called to cases in support of appellant’s contention, but they are not sufficient to overcome the authorities of the numerous cases here cited. Some of those cases hinge upon temporary obstructions, such as accumulations of snow, ice, etc., and the principle there involved is not applicable to the facts here pleaded. The better reason and sounder principle are with the cases in support of appellee’s contention. Each paragraph of the complaint was sufficient to withstand a demurrer.
Under the motion for a new trial two questions are discussed, viz.: (1) That the evidence is not sufficient to support the verdict; and (2) that the trial court erred in giving and refusing to give certain instructions. We can not disturb the judgment upon the evidence, for the reason that there is some evidence in the record to sustain it.
The parties each timely rendered to the court written instructions, and requested that they be given to the jury. To all of the instructions tendered by the appellee, which the court gave, the appellant objected and excepted. To the refusal to give some of the instructions tendered by appellant, she objected and excepted, and to all the instructions given by the court on its own motion, appellant excepted. Out of the numerous instructions so given and refused, counsel have discussed three and six, given by the court on its own motion; two, five, and nine, tendered by appellee and given; and nine and sixteen, tendered by appellant and refused. All of these instructions except nine and sixteen are in harmony with the authorities cited and the rule de
Judgment affirmed.