188 S.E. 748 | W. Va. | 1936
Charging the landlord with knowingly maintaining an unsafe water-heater in his tenement house, the plaintiff recovered a verdict for injuries allegedly occasioned by the heater. The trial court set the verdict aside.
Several rental apartments had a common bathroom. The bath water was heated in a tank by a gas stove, located about fourteen inches off the bathroom floor near the spigot end of the bathtub. The stove door had no latch and without a fastening of some kind would not remain closed. According to evidence for defendants, the door was provided with an effective wire hook; according to evidence for plaintiff, the hook had been off, *54 to the knowledge of the landlord, for several months before her accident. She is the child of an apartment tenant and was aged three years and four months. On the occasion of her injury, she was sent by her mother, unattended, from their apartment to the bathroom. Mrs. Marsh stated she knew at the time that the heater door was ajar. A few minutes later, the child appeared at the door of another tenant near the bathroom, with her clothing in flames. He smothered the flames, but she was terribly burned. Some time afterwards, it was found that the bathtub was full of running water, a shoe and stocking of plaintiff were in the water, the stove door was open, and the gas was burning.
The authorities are not entirely harmonious on the duty of a landlord in such cases; so we state with some particularity our conception of his duty. In the absence of a special contract, the law imposes on the landlord the duty to exercise ordinary care to maintain in reasonably safe condition the premises owned by him and used in common by different tenants.Weaver Mercantile Co. v. Thurmond,
Counsel for defendants contend that since a latch for the heater would have cost but a few cents, such a trifling repair should have been made by the tenant. "But such is not the law. The rule is that the landlord cannot shift the responsibility assumed by him to his tenants to make the common ways and equipment reasonably safe in so far as ordinary care can effect that result." Horan v. Harris, 12 N.J. Misc. 513, 172 A. 730. Accord: Quisenberry v. Gulf Production Co., (Tex.Civ.App.)
Counsel for defendants complain especially of an instruction given on behalf of plaintiff which told the jury it was the duty of the landlord to exercise ordinary care to maintain the heater so that it "would not constitute a danger not only as regards the adult members of the Marsh family, but also so far as regards the infant plaintiff." The circuit court, in a written memorandum stating that this instruction places too great a burden on the landlord, held the instruction to be erroneous. We concur in that view. The phrase "would not constitute a danger" is not synonymous with the phrase "reasonably safe condition." The instruction would make the landlord a virtual insurer of the Marsh family against danger from the heater. This is not the law. The landlord was required only to exercise ordinary care to maintain the heater in reasonably' safe condition.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.