128 A. 705 | Conn. | 1925
This action was originally brought against Abraham Shimelman, and it was alleged that he owned the premises in question. Later a stipulation was filed in which it was provided that the "writ, summons and complaint may be amended" by adding two other parties as defendants and that "said action may proceed to final judgment as if due and timely service had heretofore been made upon all of said above named parties." No action by the court was ever taken in regard to this stipulation nor was any amendment filed; and both the verdict and the judgment, following the only allegation of ownership in the pleadings, that above noticed, run against Shimelman alone. The evidence shows that the other two persons mentioned in the stipulation were joint owners of the premises with Shimelman, and, lacking any allegation of sole occupancy or particular obligation of oversight upon his part, a question might fairly arise as to the possibility, upon this record, of holding Shimelman alone liable.Low v. Mumford, 14 Johns. (N. Y.) 426; Baker v.Fritts,
The appeal is taken from the action of the trial court in directing a verdict for the defendant. There is substantially no dispute as to the facts and the jury might *385 well have found them to be as follows: The defendant owned two contiguous buildings which were divided into apartments rented to various tenants, four families living in one and three in the other. Between the buildings was an open space and one means of approach to both was a walk leading from the street into that space, with various offshoots to the side and rear entrances of the buildings. The renting of the apartments and the general care of the premises was in charge of a woman who occupied one of the apartments, and herself passed back and forth over a part of this walk. On the afternoon of January 3d 1923, the plaintiff made a call upon one of the tenants, her particular purpose having been to get two plates which she had left when attending a party held at the tenant's apartment some weeks before. Having completed her call, the plaintiff passed along the walk on her way to the street. The walk for a considerable space was covered with ice and frozen snow, and was in a slippery and dangerous condition, in spots smooth and in others lumpy, and no sand or ashes had been scattered over it. While there was little, if any, direct evidence as to the length of time this condition had existed, there were facts in evidence reasonably indicating that it had been there for some days and it also appeared that the woman in charge of the premises passed close by the spot in question in going to and from her own apartment and could see it as she sat at one of her windows. The plaintiff, because of the dangerous condition she encountered there, was not walking fast, but was "picking her steps." She slipped and fell, causing the injuries for which she is seeking a recovery. There was no evidence of any structural defect or want of repairs in the walk, nor was there any agreement between the defendant and the tenants as to the obligation to care for the walks on the premises; in fact, such care as *386 the particular walk in question had received had come from certain tenants to whose apartments it was the principal means of approach.
It is the law of this State, as elsewhere, that, speaking generally, the landlord who rents the apartments in his building to various tenants, reserving control of the common approaches, is obligated to use reasonable care to keep those approaches reasonably safe for the use of the tenants; and that it is no defense that some one else is charged by him with, or assumes the performance of, that duty, if it be not performed. Koskoff
v. Goldman,
The defendant made his appeal in the trial court, and now makes it, to a rule stated in Woods v. NaumkeagSteam Cotton Co.,
Approaching the question from the standpoint of principle, we are wholly unable to justify the Massachusetts rule. The duty of the landlord being to exercise reasonable care to prevent the occurrence of defective or dangerous conditions in the common approaches, the fact that a particular danger arose from the fall of snow or the freezing of ice can afford no ground of distinction. Indeed, the causes which are at work to produce it are no more natural causes than are those which, more slowly bring about the decay of wood or the rusting of iron. To set apart this particular source of danger is to create a distinction without a sound difference. 1 Tiffany, Landlord Tenant, p. 633. We had before us a very similar question when certain Massachusetts decisions limiting the obligations of municipalities as regards dangerous conditions in the highways produced by snow and ice were pressed upon us; but we then held that the mere fact of the origin of the defective condition in that particular way was insufficient to create an exception to the general rule of municipal liability; and we pointed out that the requirement of reasonable care established a standard sufficiently flexible to meet the varying characteristics of the particular defect in question. Congdon v. *389 Norwich,
That the walk in question was in so dangerous a condition that the defendant, knowing or bound with knowledge of it, was obligated to take steps to protect those rightfully passing over it, and that, despite the rather scant evidence of the length of time the condition had existed, the defendant was bound with knowledge of it by that which the person in charge of the premises must have had, were certainly conclusions that the jury might have reasonably reached upon the evidence. So, too, the question whether or not the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence presented an issue of fact for the jury. Lucy v. Norwich,
There is error, the judgment is set aside and a new trial ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.