109 A. 561 | N.H. | 1920
The plaintiff was a tenant of the defendants, and had occupied the tenement some nine years when the defendants installed a bathtub in it. This bathtub, which was about four feet long and two feet wide, was set in a corner of the room, close up to the west and north walls and within an inch therefrom. In the west wall of the room, and directly over the tub was a large window. The evidence tended to prove that after the installation of the tub the defendants made and put in the tenement a wooden cover fifty-one inches long and twenty-seven inches wide, designed and intended to serve as a cover for the tub; that the cover was made of pine boards held in place by three cleats which were fastened to the boards with screws; that the cleats were fastened across the boards and were so long that they rested upon the sides of the tub, and did not fit inside the upper rim of the tub; that the plaintiff about a month after the cover was installed stood upon it to wash the window over the tub; that when she had finished this task, she went to the north wall, and attempted to get down onto the floor by stepping down from the cover, with the intention of sitting on the edge of it; that in so doing, the cover which projected beyond the edge of the tub tipped, letting the plaintiff fall to the floor and injuring her.
Although in the absence of any warranty, deceit or fraud on the part of the defendants, they would not be liable for injuries caused by any defects in their premises (Towne v. Thompson,
Even if it could be found that the defendants were negligent in the construction or installation of the cover and were liable for such negligence, it could not be found that the injury was occasioned thereby. The accident was caused by the tipping of the cover. The edge of the cover projected so far over the side of the tub that when the plaintiff attempted to sit upon it, it tipped and threw her to the floor. Nobody but the plaintiff, so far as disclosed, had to do with the cover after it was installed, and there was no evidence tending to show whether the plaintiff had placed the cover too far over the edge of the tub, or it had slipped there. Under such circumstances a verdict could not be returned for the plaintiff because it would be a mere conjecture whether the injury was caused by inevitable accident or by the fault of the plaintiff or of the defendants. Deschenes v. Railroad,
Exception overruled.
PEASLEE, J., was absent: the others concurred.