315 Mass. 244 | Mass. | 1943
This is an action of tort brought in a District Court to recover compensation for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff upon the premises of the defendant by reason of the negligence of the defendant. There was a finding for the plaintiff, but there were no special findings. Upon a report to the Appellate Division, the finding for the plaintiff was ordered vacated and a finding for the defendant was ordered. The plaintiff appealed.
The defendant made seven requests for rulings which are numbered 1 to 7, inclusive. The report, signed by the judge, states: “The 7th subdivided request for ruling had to do with the evidence and were denied or given in conformity with my findings thereon. Because of the denial of said requests this Report is requested,” and that the defendant “being aggrieved by the finding and the refusal of the court to rule as requested, I hereby report the same to the Appellate Division for determination.”
“A finding of fact is not a proper subject of a report.” James B. Rendle Co. v. Conley & Daggett, Inc. 313 Mass. 712. Perry v. Hanover, 314 Mass. 167, 169. The only matter for our consideration is whether there was error in the disposition of the requests for rulings. And since no contention is made by the defendant that there was error in the disposition of the requests numbered 1 to 6, inclusive, we consider only the disposition of request numbered 7.
Request numbered 7 was for a ruling that upon “all the law and all the evidence a finding for the defendant is warranted, because” of six stated reasons lettered from (a) to (f), inclusive. These reasons constituted specified grounds upon which the request was based in conformity with the part of Rule 27 of the District Courts (1940) that provides: “No review as of right shall lie to the refusal of a request for a ruling 'upon all the evidence’ in a case admitting of specifi
The manner in which the judge dealt with request numbered 7 does not clearly appear in the report. In the absence of special findings his statement that the request was “denied or given in conformity with my findings thereon” does not show whether the request was “denied or given.” It is possible, however, that the statement in the report “Because of the denial of said requests this report is requested,” and the statement therein with reference to the defendant’s “being aggrieved by the finding and the refusal of the court to rule as requested,” import that request numbered 7 was denied. If, however, the statements do not so import, the disposition of the request does not appear, and it must be deemed to have been denied. American Congregational Association v. Abbot, 252 Mass. 535, 537-538. Bankoff v. Coleman Bros. Inc. 302 Mass. 122, 123.
The printed record, which contains not only the report of the judge but also an agreement of the parties, approved by the judge, for an amendment of the report, and which is accompanied by a copy of the docket entries, presents various procedural questions. These questions, however, need not be discussed. On the face of the report the defendant’s request for ruling numbered 7 must be regarded as denied. The question thus presented for decision is whether on any one or more of the specified grounds for this request the defendant was entitled to a ruling that a “finding for the defendant is warranted.” If the defendant was entitled to this ruling on any of the specified grounds, it is immaterial whether other specified grounds were insufficient to entitle the defendant to this ruling. Except in unusual cases a
According to the report the “plaintiff is the daughter of Mary Ryerson, a tenant, and at the time of the accident lived in the premises with the tenant.” At the trial there was the following evidence: “The premises consisted of a lot of land with a single family cottage and a detached automobile garage or storehouse.” The defendant “held a mortgage on the premises in question, and on July 21, 1939, became the owner thereof by a foreclosure sale. At the time of the foreclosure sale the plaintiff and her mother had lived in the house for several years as tenants of the previous owner.” “On the morning of September 1, 1939, while the plaintiff was going down the outside front stairs, her heel went through the second step and she fell, suffering injuries.” The mother of the plaintiff testified “that she occupied the entire premises.” The plaintiff testified “that a couple of weeks before the accident the step where the injury occurred was a little weak, but at the time of the foreclosure appeared to be in good condition.”
The specified grounds lettered (a) and (c) upon which, together with other grounds, request numbered 7 was based were as follows: “(a) The evidence does not warrant a finding that the parties agreed at the time of the letting that the defendant should retain control over the front stairway where the alleged injury occurred. ...(c) The evidence does not warrant a finding that the defendant agreed to keep the front stairway in a safe condition at all times.”
The evidence did not warrant either of these findings. In considering the evidence the distinction must be kept in mind between (a) an agreement “that the landlord shall
With respect to an agreement of the third class mentioned in Fiorntino v. Mason, 233 Mass. 451, the court there said that such an agreement is “a most onerous undertaking,” that it “is not made out by a simple agreement that the landlord will keep the premises in repair” and that it “can be supported and proved only by evidence far more explicit than a mere general agreement to maintain in repair” (pages 453-454).
There was no evidence of any written agreement between the tenant and the defendant with respect to the letting of the premises, the making of repairs thereon or the maintaining of the premises in a safe condition for the use of the tenant. There was, however, evidence of a conversation between the tenant, the mother of the plaintiff, and an agent of the defendant on the day of the foreclosure, the day of the letting from the defendant to the tenant. The tenant, the plaintiff, the daughter of the tenant, and a third witness, testified to such a conversation. The tenant testified that on the day of the foreclosure an agent of the defendant “informed her of the foreclosure and asked permission to inspect the interior of the property.” She testified that “dur
It was for the trial judge to find upon the evidence, as a matter of fact, whether any conversation took place and, if a conversation took place, what words were used and with what meaning the words were used so far as their meaning could properly be affected by evidence of extrinsic circumstances. The only question of law on this phase of the case for the decision of this court relates to the findings warranted by the evidence. And on this phase of the case the evidence must be taken in its aspect most favorable to the plaintiff. But the interpretation and legal effect of the words and their meaning in this most favorable aspect of the evidence are matters of law to be decided by this court. Rizzo v. Cunning
There was no evidence that the defendant ever agreed in express terms to keep the premises in a condition of safety for the use of the tenant. See Chelefou v. Springfield Institution for Savings, 297 Mass. 236, 239. In this respect the case differs from Crowe v. Bixby, 237 Mass. 249, 251, 252-253, and Eisenhauer v. Ceppi, 238 Mass. 458, 459, 460. The only place in the evidence in which the safe condition of the premises is expressly mentioned is in the testimony of the defendant’s agent with respect to the repairs that he ordered made after the accident, in which he said "that he ordered various repairs to be made at various times after the accident, and that the policy of the defendant was to take complete charge of the roof, piazzas and outside stairs of this house for repairs and keeping in a safe condition as it did in the case of roofs, stairways and piazzas of other tenement, business and residential property which was owned by the defendant on July 21, 1939; and that he as agent intended to, and did, comply with this policy, and that the step in question was fixed soon after the accident in accordance with this policy.” But there is no evidence that this policy of the defendant was known to the tenant at the time when, according to the evidence, the conversation took place between her and the defendant’s agent.
It could have been found on the evidence that the defendant’s agent told the tenant that the defendant would "make all necessary repairs now and in the future.” But such an agreement by the defendant, without more, would be merely a simple agreement to repair, which is an agreement to repair upon notice — an agreement of the second class referred to in the Fiorntino case, under which an omission to repair is not a ground for an action of tort. Fiorntino v. Mason, 233 Mass. 451, 453, 454. Giorgio v. DiLiegro, 285 Mass. 383, 385-387. Andrews v. Leominster Savings Bank, 296 Mass. 67, 68-70. Trainor v. Keane, 304 Mass. 466. An agreement of the third class "is not made out by a simple agreement
It could, however, be found upon the evidence that in the course of the conversation at the time of the letting the defendant’s agent told the tenant, according to the testimony of the tenant, “You don’t have to tell us what has to be done. . . . We are going to look over the whole place and will fix what has to be done. When the man comes, remind him of rat holes around the cistern,” or that the agent told the tenant that, according to the testimony of another witness, he “would send a man up to see to the repairs” and that “the man would be sent up in a short time.” The natural meaning of these words — and there is no evidence of extrinsic circumstances tending to show that they were used with a different meaning — is that the defendant would make an inspection of the premises for the purpose of ascertaining their condition at the time of the letting, and would make the repairs that such an inspection disclosed to be necessary without the tenant giving notice to the defendant of the specific repairs then required. The words do not naturally import an agreement on the part of the defendant to continue during the period of the tenancy to make inspections of the premises from time to time and to undertake the heavy responsibility of making repairs, without notice from the tenant, whenever in the future they should become necessary. The conclusion here reached is supported by the testimony of the tenant that she told the defendant’s agent that the premises “needed lots of repair,” but doubtless this testimony might have been disbelieved by the trial judge and, consequently, it cannot be used by us to limit the meaning of the words that could have been found by the trial judge to have been used by the defendant’s agent. But even if the words relating to inspection of the premises by the defendant meant, as we think they did not, that the defendant agreed to make inspections “from time to time,” such an agreement would not “impose any duty upon the” defendant “to maintain the . . . [premises] in a condition of safety at all times during the tenancy.” Trainor v. Keane, 304 Mass. 466, 467. On neither of these interpretations of
The statement of the defendant’s agent to the tenant, “You don’t have to tell us what has to be done,” like the statement about inspection, naturally relates to the necessity of repairs at the time of the letting rather than to any such necessity that might arise in the future. The plaintiff’s case, therefore, must rest upon an agreement testified to in various forms of words that the defendant was “taking complete charge,” “would take care of everything,” “would make necessary repairs and take complete charge of the place,” was “going to take full charge” and there was “nothing to worry about.” This language, like most of the other parts of the conversation testified to, naturally relates to the repairs that would be ascertained to be necessary upon the proposed inspection of the premises by the defendant. See Collins v. Humphrey, 314 Mass. 759, 762. If by reason of the reference in the conversation to “necessary repairs . . . in the future” this language relates to such repairs, it naturally means that the defendant agreed to take full charge of such repairs, that is, to make all such repairs, or to keep the premises in repair; in other words, made a general agreement to repair, which is an agreement to repair upon notice from the tenant, “or possibly, if the defect came under . . . [the defendant’s] own observation.” Fiorntino v. Mason, 233 Mass. 451, 456.
The language of the conversation, according to the aspect of the evidence most favorable to the plaintiff, is not “fairly susceptible of the inference that the landlord assumed the obligation to retain such control of the premises” [“a lot of land with a single family cottage and a detached automobile garage or storehouse,” occupied, so far as appears, solely by the tenant and her daughter, the plaintiff] “as would enable . . . [the defendant] continuously to make sufficient inspection to detect and correct incipient defects” (Fiorntino v. Mason, 233 Mass. 451, 456), a control like that of a landlord over common stairs and passageways carrying with it a like obligation to maintain the premises in a condition
The parties appear to have contemplated a contract for the doing of work in making repairs (see Miles v. Janvrin, 200 Mass. 514, 516), breach of which would be ground for an action of contract by the tenant, rather than a contract to keep the premises in a safe condition for the use of the tenant, breach of which would be ground for an action of tort by the tenant or by a person using the premises in the right of the tenant. The agreement between the tenant and the defendant was not "a contract which has reference directly to the condition of the premises as to safety, as well as in other particulars.” Miles v. Janvrin, 200 Mass. 514, 516. The language that could have been found by the trial judge to have been used in the present case falls short in this respect of the language considered in Miles v. Janvrin, 200 Mass. 514, 516, and the language considered in Crowe v. Bixby, 237 Mass. 249, 252.
As was said in Crowe v. Bixby, 237 Mass. 249, 253, "Where the language of a contract is open to doubt and the parties to it have adopted and acted upon a particular construction, such construction will be considered as of great weight by the court and will usually be adopted by it.” If, however, we assume that the words of the agreement that could have been found upon the evidence in the present case were ambiguous, the evidence of repairs made by the defendant had no tendency to show that the agreement was an agreement that the defendant would maintain the premises in a safe condition for the use of the tenant rather than a general agreement to repair. See Galvin v. Beals, 187 Mass. 250, 253; Shepard v. Worcester County Institution for Savings, 304 Mass. 220, 223.
It follows from what has been said that the evidence did
The question remains whether a finding for the defendant was rightly ordered by the Appellate Division. A ruling that the evidence warranted a finding for the defendant does not necessarily require such a finding. But in the present case the findings referred to in the specified grounds lettered (a) and (c) for requested ruling numbered 7 were essential to the maintenance of the plaintiff’s case, and for reasons already stated these findings were not warranted. The case, therefore, came within the provisions of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, §§ 110, 124, and a finding for the defendant was rightly ordered. Judgment upon the finding must now be entered. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, § 124.
Order of Appellate Division affirmed.
Judgment for the defendant.