173 Mo. App. 722 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
—Appellant is the owner of a building which he erected and rented to a tenant for a garage. Respondent placed his new automobile in this garage to be cared for by the tenant for hire. Plaintiff claims that in the erection of the building the flat' roof thereof was not made strong enough, and no .sufficient outlei,
Appellant insists that, under the facts shown, there is no liability upon him to respondent. In order to properly determine this question we must bear in mind not only the nature and basis of the suit, but also the position and relation sustained by plaintiff to defendant. The suit is one based on negligence, that is, want of ordinary care in- the erection of the building. The position occupied by plaintiff is that of a, guest, licensee, or customer of defendant’s tenant, a man named Flack. There is no privity of relation or contract existing between defendant and plaintiff. The former leased the building to Flack with no representation or warranty that the building was safe nor clause agreeing to keep it ,in repair.
Whether a landlord is liable for an injury to a .third person caused by a defect in the demised premises depends, sometimes, on what the landlord has agreed or undertaken to do in his dealings with his tenant,
In the case now before us, the landlord had not agreed or undertaken- to do anything with regard to the premises, so that feature of the case is eliminated; and, therefore, all cases in which the landlord in the lease either warranted or represented the premises to be in good condition, or agreed to keep them in repair and failed to do so, or undertook to repair them and did so negligently, are not applicable to the question here presented. Such cases are La- Brasca v. Hinchman, 79 Atl. 885, where the landlord undertook to make repairs but made them negligently; Myers v. Russell, 124 Mo. App. 317, l. c. 328; Shute v. Bills, 191 Mass. 433 l. c. 437; Barman v. Spencer, 49 N. E. 9. In the cases where the landlord undertook to repair, he is liable for negligence in doing so as for any other negli
Also, in the ease before us, it must be remembered that the plaintiff is not a stranger, such as an adjacent property owner, or passerby on the sidewalk, deriving his rights, by operation of law, from his position as a member of the general public. Consequently the cases wherein a landlord has been held liable to a stranger are not in point. Such cases are Stoetzele v. Swearingen, 90 Mo. App. 589; Gordon v. Peltzer, 56 Mo. App. 599; Hilmes v. Jaidin, 53 Ind. 21; Pickard v. Collins, 23 Barb. 444.
We come then to the question of defendant’s liability within the precise limits ^presented by the facts in this case. The authorities are generally agreed that, in the absence of any representation or agreement to the contrary, there is no implied obligation or warranty on the part of the landlord to the tenant that the premises are habitable or fit for the use to which the tenant intends to put' them. [1 Tiffany on L. & T. p. 556; McKenzie v. Cheatham, 83 Me. 543; Jaffee v. Hartean, 56 N. Y. 398; Burdick v. Cheadle, 26 Ohio St. 393; Towne v. Thompson, 68 N. H. 317; Hart v. Windsor, 12 Mees & W. 68; O’Brien v. Campbell, 59 Barb. 497; Cowen v. Sunderland, 145 Mass. 363, l. c. 364; Dyer v. Robinson, 110 Fed. 99; Grant v. Tomlinson, 138 Mo. App. 222.] It follows from the above rule, and it is established by the authorities cited and others, that the lessee cannot assert a claim for damages against the lessor on account of the condition of the premises at the time of the demise. [1 Tiffany on L. & T. 559 and cases cited.] This rule, however, is subject to an exception that, if there is some hidden defect known to the lessor at the time of making the lease, but which is not apparent to the intending lessee, the lessor is bound to inform the latter thereof, and if he fails to do so, he is hable to
The same rules apply to persons other than the tenant rightfully on the premises by the tenant’s request or permission. In every such case the landlord is hable in so far as he "would be liable to the tenant, but no further. [1 Tiffany on L. &. T. 649.] And as regards defects existing at the time of the lease, the general rule is that the landlord is not liable for injuries to the person or property of any person who may thereafter be on the premises. [1 Tiffany on L. & T. 649 and cases cited supra.] - The same exception to this rule exists as to hidden or concealed defects or dangerous conditions existing at- the time of the lease. But, in order to make the landlord liable for such hidden defects under such exception, it must be shown that they were known to him, or that they were those the existence of which he had reasonable grounds to suspect. [1 Tiffany on L. & T. 651-2.] The statement contained in this last clause does not mean that if the landlord has no reason to suspect concealed defects or dangers, nevertheless he must make an examination in an effort to discover them, or else he will be held liable. It only means that if he had reason to suspect their existence, and did not exercise reasonable diligence to satisfy himself of their nonexistence before leasing without mentioning the matter to his tenant, he will be hable. [1 Tiffany on L. & T. 567.] So that the proper statement of the rule is that the landlord will not be liable for concealed defects or dangerous conditions existing at the time of the demise unless he knew of the defects or had knowledge of facts from which he ought to have known, or will be presumed to have known, of them.
Were the defects in the building in the case at bar concealed defects, and if so, did the defendant know of them or have knowledge of such facts as that he must be presumed to have known them?
But, even if it could be said that the defects were hidden, does 'the evidence show that defendant knew of them or ought to have known of them in such way as to be liable? In Whiteley v. McLaughlin, 183 Mo. 160, the defect was one of construction, and it was concealed by putty and paint, but the Supreme Court held that, unless the landlord knew of the defect,
There is no proof of concealed defects; but, should it be conceded that there was, there is no proof that the landlord knew of them or ought to have known of them. The evidence in this case shows that the defendant was not a contractor or builder but was engaged in an entirely different occupation. He employed a contractor and builder of thirty years ex-