42 Mo. App. 619 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1888
The plaintiff tenant recovered in the trial court a judgment for six hundred and fifty-one dollars against the defendant landlord, for damages caused to him by the falling of a wall, which was part of the premises let. No question is made on this appeal as to the extent of the recovery, but the landlord, appealing, contends that, on the facts conceded by the record, any recovery was unwarranted, as a proposition of law, regardless of other errors intervening in the trial of the cause. As this contention, if well founded, disposes of the entire controversy, we shall proceed to examine it in the first instance.
The facts upon which the defendant’s liability is claimed are thus stated in the petition :
That on April 30, 1886, the defendant leased to the plaintiff for the term of twenty months from May 1, 1886, two rooms, numbered 1 and 2, on the second floor of a building, numbered 812 Olive street, in the city of St. Louis, Missouri; that on May 1,1886, the plaintiff took possession and occupied the premises until the accident mentioned in the petition, as tenant; that the defendant was the owner of the building at the times thereinafter mentioned, and had the possession and control of the same ; that on April 30, 1886, and for a long time prior thereto, the foundation of the west wall of the building was in a weak, unsubstantial, unsafe, insecure and dangerous condition ; that on April 30, 1886, and for a long time prior thereto, the foundation of said west wall of the building was unsafe and insecure, and defendant
The answer denied the allegations of the petition) and averred that the damage complained of, if any, was caused by the negligence of the plaintiff.
The defendant, it seems, had demurred to this petition, and, upon the trial, again objected to the introduction of evidence, on the ground that it failed to state any cause of action, and the objection is now renewed.
The defendant’s argument on that head is, that it is the gist of plaintiff’s complaint that the wall was defective at the date of the letting, and so insecurely constructed as to be dangerous, and that, as the petition neither avers that the defect was a secret defect, nor that the defendant concealed it from the plaintiff, nor that there was any duty on the part of defendant to disclose it, the petition fails to state a cause of action.
If the view taken by a majority of this court in Ward v. Fagin, 28 Mo. App. 116, be the correct one, which, for the purposes of this case, we are bound to assume, then the petition does state a good cause of action. We there held that, while a renting does not imply that the premises are fit for occupancy, and while .the landlord is under no implied obligation to the tenant to repair the premises, yet the tenant, who is restricted by the terms of his letting to one part of the premises, and who has no possession, control or right of interference with other parts, which are in the exclusive possession of the landlord, occupies no worse position than a stranger.
Here the petition does charge that the defendant was the owner of the building at the times thereinafter mentioned, and had the possession and control of the same, and it will not be questioned that, if he negligently and knowingly permitted the building to remain in an insecure condition, whereby it fell, injuring the
The lease given by the defendant to the plaintiff, and introduced in evidence by the latter, provided among other things,: “All repairs deemed necessary by the lessee to be made at the expense of said lessee, with the consent of the said lessor-and not otherwise.” This covenant, on part of the plaintiff can, in the nature of things, have reference only to such part of the premises as are covered by the lease and in the lessee’s possession. A covenant to repair walls immediately bordering the space occupied by the lessee, and forming part thereof, cannot be extended by any. reasonable implication to include a duty on part of the lessee to repair the foundation walls of a building, which are in possession of his landlord, even though such walls serve as supports to the walls in possession of the lessee.
Upon the trial of the case the following facts were shown: The defendant was lessee of a building fronting on the south side of Olive street and on the east side of an alley, seven and a half feet wide, and had sublet two rooms in the second story of the building, and on its western side, to the plaintiff ; the tenement on the ground floor immediately below the premises occupied by plaintiff being sublet to one Gregory.
The Odd Fellows Hall Company owned the'ground on the west side of this alley, and were proceeding in March, 1886, to excavate their ground to a considerable depth for the purpose of building the fqundation of an extensive structure thereon. Before doing so, they served a notice upon the defendant, advising him of the proposed excavation, and requesting him to take such action as he deemed necessary to protect his building and premises from possible injury by reason of such excavation. The defendant thereupon filed his petition in the circuit court, stating, among other things, that he was the owner of this alley, seven and a half feet
It does not appear by any record evidence what action the circuit court took on this petition of the defendant. It does appear, however, by the testimony of the contractor who made the excavations for the Odd Fellows Hall Company, and who was one of plaintiff’s witnesses, that he was enjoined from interfering with the alley in the commencement of his operations, and that, notwithstanding this fact, he extended his excavations into the alley until the eastern line of his excavations was about four feet, eleven inches, westwardly of
The wall, which fell, was not erected by the defendant but by other parties. There was no evidence in the case that the defendant knew of the insecurity of that wall when he let the premises to the plaintiff, even conceding that there was substantial evidence that said wall was insecure at that time, on which we deem it unnecessary to express an opinion.
The conclusion, that the wall would have fallen, even if the Odd Fellows .Hall Company had confined its excavation to the western boundary of the alley, and not extended it, as plaintiff’s own evidence shows, two feet. and seven inches into the alley, rests upon the merest conjecture and surmise, and is not shown by even inferential evidence. We have decided repeatedly that juries must base their findings on substantial legal evidence, direct or inferential, and cannot base it on mere conjecture.
These being the undisputed facts of the case, the court, at the close of the case, instructed the jury as follows:
“1. The court instructs the jury that there is no evidence, adduced in this action, to prove that, at the time of the leasing of the rooms mentioned in the petition by defendant to the plaintiff, the defendant knew the west wall of the building mentioned in the petition was unsafe or insecure, and the jury cannot find from the evidence that plaintiff was deceived by defendant into leasing or occupying said rooms, even if the jury should believe from the evidence that said west wall was at the'time unsafe and insecure.
“2. The court instructs the jury that, if the jury believes from the evidence that, at and after the leasing of. the rooms by defendant to plaintiff under the lease read in evidence, and after the plaintiff took possession of the leased premises, there was an alley west of the*626 west wall mentioned in the petition, and that, without the authority or consent of defendant, third persons-made an excavation into said alley, and that the wall before said excavation into said alley was secure and not apt to fall from its own inherent defects, and that, by reason of said excavation by third persons, without defendant’s consent, into said alley, said wall was caused to fall, then the plaintiff cannot recover in this action,: and the jury will find for the defendant.”
These instructions correctly declared the law, and, as the plaintiff had given no evidence which took the. case beyond their scope, we are at a loss to see why the court refused to instruct the jury, as the defendant requested, that, under the pleadings and evidence, the plaintiff was not entitled to recover in this action, and the jury should find for the defendant.
It results -from the foregoing that the defendant’s contention is correct, and that, on the facts conceded by the record, any recovery was unwarranted, as a proposition of law, regardless of other errors intervening in the trial of the cause.
The accident is the same complained of in the case of Ward v. Fagin, supra, in which a recovery by another tenant was upheld upon a record substantially different in many particulars. The different disposition-made of the two cases results from the fact that courts-must determine controversies not upon facts actually existing, but upon facts as disclosed by the record before them. The sole question for our decision .in Ward v. Fagin, as appears by the opinion of the court,, was whether the duty of a landlord to. his tenant in the use of premises, which are under the exclusive control of the landlord, and form no part of the premises, let, but are essential to the enjoyment of such premises, was: different from his duty to a stranger. We held that.it. was not, and that the views entertained by the courts of Massachusetts and Maine on that subject were more-in harmony with the dictates of justice, than the views
The landlord, in the absence of an express contract ■obligation, is liable to third persons only on substantial evidence of negligence or deceit, He is not an insurer of ■the safety of his property to the lessee or a third person. When it affirmatively appears, as in this case, that the -accident was due to the acts of a trespasser, to guard against which the landlord used reasonable diligence, the case is devoid of any element of negligence, on which the landlord’s liability can be submitted to a jury. That it is devoid of all elements of deceit is conceded.
It results that the judgment must be reversed. So ■ordered.