320 Mass. 696 | Mass. | 1947
This is an action of tort to recover compensation for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff as a result of negligence of the defendant. At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence the judge allowed the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict in his favor, and the plaintiff duly excepted.
The material evidence may be summed up as follows: On June 1, 1942, the plaintiff became the tenant of a third floor apartment in a building in Brighton owned by the defendant. The roof of the building was flat, and was “part gravel and part wood.” The wooden part, consisting of a platform of boards or slabs, was about fifty by thirty feet in area and was enclosed by a railing “part wood and part stone,” and there were also cement posts for hanging clothes. This was the only place provided for hanging clothes, and all the tenants of the building hung their
It was the duty of the defendant landlord to exercise reasonable care to keep the platform on the roof, which, was used in common by all the tenants of the building and which remained in his control, “in the condition with respect to safety in which . . . [it was], or to a person of ordinary observation would appear to be, at the time of the letting.” Chambers v. Durling, 306 Mass. 327, 329. Sneckner v. Feingold, 314 Mass. 613, 614, and cases cited. McGeorge v. Grand Realty Trust, Inc. 316 Mass. 373, 375.
Exceptions sustained.