314 Mass. 161 | Mass. | 1943
This case has been here once before. Sodekson v. Lynch, 298 Mass. 72. At the second trial the plaintiff got a verdict for personal injuries caused by a fall at • about half past eight o’clock in the evening, when it was “dusk turning to dark,” of August 29, 1931, on a common stairway in the defendants’ six-family apartment house in Boston. There was evidence that the fall was due to the failure of the defendants to light the stairway, as the declaration alleged. The plaintiff’s father had been a tenant of an apartment on the third floor since November, 1930, at which time the automatic device which turned on the lights on the stairway at a certain hour every day was
Statute 1924, c. 136, amending St. 1907, c. 550, § 45, applicable to the city of Boston, provides as follows: “Public halls and main stairways in all tenement houses, now existing or hereafter erected, three stories or more in height and accommodating four or more families who are served by a common main stairway and hall shall be provided with proper and sufficient lights to be kept lighted during the night. The words 'main stairway’, as used in this section, shall mean the staircase so designated by the building commissioner.” This statute in our opinion required not only provision for lights but also that the lights shall be “kept lighted during the night” — a question left open in Brodsky v. Fine, 263 Mass. 51, 54.
A witness named Glover, who was employed in the building department of the city of Boston and was in charge of the records of the department (G. L. [Ter. Ed] c. 66, § 6), produced a paper which he testified was an original record kept in the department in the usual course of business. It was dated June 30, 1930, and purported to be a notice from the building commissioner to the defendant Maurice B. Lynch to comply in the apartment house in question with the statute already quoted. It recites that the front stairways of the building are the “main stairway designated by the building commissioner.” The signature of the building commissioner was by a facsimile stamp and not his manual signature. The witness testified that it was the practice of the department for an inspector employed in the department to examine the premises and make a written report to the building commissioner who then made the designation, and that three copies of the designation were regularly made out and signed using a facsimile stamp. One of the three copies was kept on file, and is the document produced. The statute does not require service of any notice on the owner, although it is proper to give him notice of a designation, as was the practice.
It sufficiently appeared that the person whose facsimile signature was attached was the building commissioner. It
The statute already quoted required lighting of the main stairway only “during the night." By G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 278, § 10, “If a crime is alleged to have been committed in the night time, night time shall be deemed the time between one hour after sunset on one day and one hour before sunrise on the next day; and the time of sunset and sunrise shall be ascertained according to mean time in the place where the crime was committed." At common law, in criminal cases, night meant “a period when the light of day had so far disappeared, that the face of a person was not discernible by the light of the sun or twilight." Commonwealth v. Williams, 2 Cush. 582, 589. In the statute before us, it would be a possible construction to hold that “during the night" means during the period when stairs cannot plainly be seen by daylight. But we need not determine this point, for upon any construction the evidence warranted a finding that night had begun at the time of the injury. The injury happened at half past eight in the evening of a day less than a month before the autumnal equinox.- There was evidence that “it was dusk turning to dark," and that the plaintiff could not see. There is nothing to suggest that her eyesight was abnormal or defective. Payne v. R. H. White Co., ante, 63.
In answer to an interrogatory the defendant Maurice B. Lynch said that he was “part owner" of the premises at the time of the injury. He objected to being called to the witness stand and required to testify without being paid a witness fee, but he took no exception to this. He testified that his father died in 1917 leaving his mother, hii sister and himself; that his mother died in 1932, leaving his sister
In the brief for the defendants it is conceded that the defendant Maurice B. Lynch was a landlord, “since there was direct evidence of control by him.” But it is contended that his sister Maude A. Lynch is not liable. This point does not appear to have been raised at the trial. The motion for a directed verdict for the defendants did not distinguish between them. Neither did any of the requests for rulings. We think there was evidence that the two defendants owned the premises at the time of the injury, and that the plaintiff’s father was their tenant. The defendants did not except to the charge which allowed the jury so to find.
'The defendants introduced evidence that on March 17, 1931, the defendant Maurice B. Lynch had recovered judgment for possession against the plaintiff’s father in an action of summary process relating to premises on the top floor of the apartment house in question. But the plaintiff’s father testified that after the trial of the action of summary process he paid the defendant Maurice B. Lynch $30 and it was agreed that the plaintiff’s father and his family might remain on the premises as tenants and that the plaintiff’s father continued to live in the same apartment for a long time. He produced regular rent receipts signed by the defendant Maurice B. Lynch. He testified that it was after the summary process case that the lights in the hall became
A physician testified that he had treated the plaintiff for her injuries, but had lost or misplaced his notes. To refresh his memory he was shown a letter which he had sent to the plaintiff’s attorney. After that the witness testified as to the treatment that he had prescribed. But on cross-examination he testified that the letter did not refresh his memory. There was no error in refusing to strike out his testimony. It did not appear that he had no memory apart from the letter. The case of A. T. Stearns Lumber Co. v. Howlett, 239 Mass. 59, is distinguishable.
The defendants contend that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. They could not, by failing to light the stairs, require her to remain in the house in the night time. She knew that the stairs were dark, but she was entitled to descend them, using due care. She guided herself by putting her hand on the rail. Nothing in her conduct amounted to contributory negligence as matter of law. Barnes v. Berkshire Street Railway, 281 Mass. 47, 50. McCarthy v. Goodrum, 292 Mass. 567. Barton v. Boston, 301 Mass. 492. Sullivan v. Saugus, 305 Mass. 127, 131, 132. Barttro v. Watertown Square Theatre, Inc. 309 Mass. 223.
Exceptions overruled.-