51 N.Y.S. 430 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
The complaint having been dismissed, the inquiry on this appeal is whether, under the most favorable aspect in which the testimony can be viewed, there was anything to go to the-jury on the question of the defendant’s negligence. The accident which happened to the plaintiff was upon one of the common appliances of the building in which she was a tenant. That appliance was-under the sole management and care of the landlord. The plaintiff was entitled to, and found it necessary to, use it. The attention of the landlord had been called to the insecure condition of this appliance. It was a platform of slat work on the roof of the building, upon which tenants stood in order to hang out their clothes to dry, after washing them. The plaintiff had a right to assume that this appliance was-safe. The accident happened to her on the first occasion of her -using the platform. Notice of its condition was given to the landlord about two months before the accident happened to the plaintiff, but the notice did not relate to the particular part of the platform through which, the plaintiff fell, but to another part, which was repaired. The defect pointed out to him was that the boards or slats had become weather-worn and rotten; and, when his attention was called to that condition existing in any part of the platform, it was his duty to inspect it all, to ascertain whether repairs were required to any other part.. The plaintiff fell through a weather-worn and rotten slat in this platform. - This was but one appliance. It covered the roof of but one building. Its liability to be out of repair by reason of its exposure to the weather was as great in one part as in another. The case differs in no way from that of a stairway in a house. If one-
The judgment should be reversed, and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
O’BRIEN and INGRAHAM, JJ., concur. VAN BRUNT, P. J., and MCLAUGHLIN, J., dissent.