On this appeal the Plaintiff, Margaret Nichols, challenges an order of summary judgment entered against her in Superior Court, Kennebec County, in an action against her former landlords, the Defendants, Robert Marsden and Patricia Mars-den, to recover for injuries the Plaintiff sustained when she fell through the front steps of a house which she was renting from them on Hancock Street in Augusta.
In addition to arguing that the record presents a genuine issue of material fact concerning the Defendants’ duty to maintain the premises in good repair, the Plaintiff urges the adoption of a different legal standard for determining a landlord's liability for injuries caused by defective conditions on leased premises.
The Plaintiff, along with her co-tenant, John Frost, agreed orally to rent the single family Hancock Street residence from the Defendants on a month-to-month basis, beginning in late June, 1981. Twice during the period before these tenants moved in, while the Defendants themselves were living in the house, the Defendant, Robert Marsden, had re-nailed the top board of one of the front steps because it was warped and had pulled loose from its frame. On neither occasion did he observe any cracks or other defects in the stairway. Nevertheless, according to their deposition testimony, both Robert Marsden and the Plaintiff became aware during the course of the summer that the front steps were in poor condition and needed additional repairs. Finally, on the evening of September 2, 1981, when the Plaintiff stepped out the front door to retrieve an object on the lawn, the top board on the second stair broke under her feet, causing her to fall and injure her ankle.
The Plaintiff did not tell the Defendants what had happened until several weeks or months after the incident. In February, 1982, she entered a complaint against the Defendants alleging that they had breached their duty to maintain the premises free of defects and had thereby caused her injury. The Defendants answered, denying liability. After depositions of all the parties were complete, they filed the motion for summary judgment which gave rise to this appeal.
In granting summary judgment for the Defendants, the presiding justice applied the traditional common law rule that a landlord is not liable to a tenant for personal injuries caused by a defective condition in premises under the tenant’s exclusive control.
Cole v. Lord,
In the ease at bar the condition of the front steps clearly was not a latent defect since both parties were well aware of it before the incident occurred; nor could the steps be considered a common area since they were attached to a single family residence under the Plaintiff’s exclusive control. Furthermore, the gratuitous repairs exception does not apply here because the Defendants did not attempt to repair the steps
while
the premises were in the Plaintiff’s possession.
See Gregor v. Cady,
In his affidavit in support of the motion for summary judgment, the Defendant, Robert Marsden, stated that at no time
Such material questions of fact cannot be resolved on a motion for summary judgment which may be granted only where the facts before the court so conclusively preclude recovery by one party that judgment in favor of the other is the only possible result as a matter of law.
Beaulieu v. City of Lewiston,
Accordingly, the entry must be:
Judgment vacated.
Remanded for further proceedings consistent with the opinion herein.
All concurring.
