96 N.J.L. 312 | N.J. | 1921
The opinion of the court was delivered bjr
This action was brought by a, husband and wife to recover compensation for injuries received by the wife through falling doiyn the cellar steps of a building in which they occupied an apartment rented from
The proofs show that on the occasion in question Mrs. Eooney had occasion to go into the cellar for the purpose of getting coal. There had been a snowstorm some little time before and the stairs were covered with frozen snow &nd ice. This condition was observed by her before she undertook tlieir descent, and she very frankly admitted in her testimony on the stand that she knew it was dangerous to attempt to go down them, but that, as she had a present need for the coal, she was compelled to take the chance.
This was the condition of the proofs when the plaintiff rested. A motion to nonsuit was thereupon made, based upon two grounds—first, that the proofs did not show that the defendant “was derelict in the duty she owed to her tenants by reason of her failure to have the cellar stairs cleaned, and second, that the female plaintiff was barred from a recovery because she assumed the risk of accident which might happen to her through the user of the stairway. The motion was refused ; the trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiffs, and the defendant appeals, the principal ground upon which she bases her right to reversal being the refusal of the motion to nonsuit.
We concur in the view of the trial court that, on the facts submitted, it was for the jury to determine whether the defendant was guilty of a neglect of the duty which she owed to her tenants (including the plaintiffs) to use reasonable care to keep' this stairway in a safe and usable condition, under the rule laid down in Gillvon v. Reilly, 50 N. J. L. 26, and reiterated in Riggins v. McGill, 72 Id. 263, and McCracken v. Meyers, 75 Id. 935. A nonsuit, therefore, could not have been properly ordered upon the first ground urged in support of the motion.
Rut, assuming the negligence of the landlord, still no right of recovery against her was established, for Mrs. Eooney,
The refusal of the motion to nonsuit on -the ground of assumption of risk by the female plaintiff was in disregard of these decisions. The judgment appealed from, therefore, must be reversed and the case sent back to the Common Pleas to be retried.