207 A.D. 230 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1923
This appeal illustrates anew the danger of a dismissal of the complaint upon the opening of plaintiff’s counsel jn an action triable by jury. Unless it is obvious that under no circumstances and in no view of testimony that might be adduced can the plaintiff prevail, the practice of dismissing on the opening of counsel alone should not be encouraged. Plaintiff was defendants’ tenant for over three years, occupying one-half of the second floor of a three-story tenement house in which there were six families, the defendants themselves being in occupancy of one-half of the third or top floor. Fire escapes were in the rear of the building. Of their presence and manner of construction no complaint is made. During all of the period of plaintiff’s tenancy the fire-escape platforms were used by the various occupants, including the defendants, as a balcony on which to stand while hanging out laundry or wash to be dried. The wash lines ran from the window casements of each floor to a pole at the rear of the premises and were manipulated by pulleys. The tenants were forbidden the use of the roof of the house for this purpose and were required to dry their laundry on the pulley lines so erected. On the plaintiff’s floor the fire escape had a balcony railing extending around its three outer sides with an opening of twenty-one inches in one corner. This opening had always been protected by an iron ladder which hung on a hook suspended from the fire escape attached to the third floor. The rungs formed an apparently adequate barrier across the opening left in the second floor fire escape. This ladder when taken off the hook referred to would slide down between two uprights and automatically attach itself to the second floor fire escape, thus, when down, forming the means of escape from the second floor to the ground. Some few weeks before the accident the defendant William N. Thomas, Jr., personally detached the ladder from the hook and allowed it to slide down, the result being that said opening of twenty-one inches in the railing was left unguarded. He gave no notice to the plaintiff of this act and she was in ignorance of it. She did not know the opening was present and unguarded. While using the fire escape, as customary, to hang her laundry on her pulley fine, she fell through the unguarded opening to the ground and suffered injury. These facts were stated and amplified by counsel for plaintiff in opening his case. At the conclusion of the opening the learned trial justice dismissed the complaint upon the ground that the plaintiff used the fire escape “ at her peril.” In this ruling we think there was error. To support the ruling the Tenement House Law (§ 16, subd. 2, as amd. by Laws of 1915, chap. 189) is invoked, the provision relied on reading, “No person shall at any
The judgment should be reversed upon the law, and a new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
Kelly, P. J., Rich, Kelby and Young, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed upon the law and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide the event.