24 A.2d 472 | Conn. | 1942
The facts found by the trial court in this case are these: For some time prior to June 28, 1938, *564 the plaintiff had been a month-to-month tenant in the defendant's premises. When the tenancy began, the ceiling of the kitchen within the leased tenement was in poor condition. About a month prior to June 28, 1938, a piece of plaster fell from the ceiling of the kitchen. The plaintiff spoke to the defendant's officer in charge of real estate two or three times and told him that a piece of plaster had fallen from the kitchen ceiling and that he, the plaintiff, would move out if the ceiling was not repaired, and the defendant's officer said, "By and by we'll fix it up" . . . "You stay and we fix it up." The conversation or conversations took place subsequent to the time when the first piece of plaster fell. The plaintiff remained in the premises after the conversations, and on June 28, 1938, another piece of plaster fell from the kitchen ceiling, striking the plaintiff and injuring him. Upon this state of facts, the trial court rendered judgment for the plaintiff from which the defendant has appealed. The defendant makes two claims of law. First, that no negligence is shown, in that it does not appear when the agreement to repair was made and that thereafter the defendant had a reasonable time to make the repair before the ceiling fell; and, second, that, as far as appears, the agreement was made after the tenant had entered upon a monthly term and within such monthly term and was unenforceable because of lack of consideration.
"`At common law the landlord is under no obligation to make repairs upon leased premises; any obligation in that regard must arise from contract or statutory provisions'; Lesser v. Kline,
In a case of this character brought by a tenant against a landlord and based upon an agreement to repair and a failure to do so, the basis of the action is not for the breach of contract to repair but for negligence growing out of the contract relationship. Dean v. Hershowitz,
Inasmuch as it does not appear when the claimed promise to repair was made or whether, if made, the plaintiff was induced thereby to hold for any other or different term than that to which he had agreed before the promise was made, it follows that there is no basis in the finding for a determination that there was any enforceable agreement to repair; nor does it appear that if there was such an agreement the defendant was negligent in failing to make the repairs within a reasonable time, or in making them in a negligent and unskillful manner.
There is error, the judgment is set aside and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.