This is an appeal by the defendants, Harry Katz and Herbert Katz, father and son respectively, from a judgment of the Supreme Court which affirmed a judgment against them in the amount of $2,335.04 entered in the Passaic County Common Pleas on a jury verdict. The action grew out of personal injuries received by William Sohn on September 9th, 1931, in falling from a ladder which had been struck by the Katz family automobile, owned by Harry and driven by Herbert.
The Katz residence was owned by Rose Katz, wife of Harry and mother of Herbert, but not herself a party to the action. The family lived in usual intimate domestic relations and all occupied the property as a home to the exclusion, so *Page 107 far as appears, of all other persons, except a maid. The lot was narrow, and if the automobile was driven forward into the garage, as it had been preceding the accident, access again to the street could be had only by backing. The son had accasion to take out the car, first to go on an errand of his own and then, in accordance with instructions given by his mother, to meet his father at the railroad station. Sohn, a house painter, was engaged in painting the house on the neighboring lot and had placed the base of his ladder on the Katz lands inside the boundary hedge and on a grassed space near the concreted drive. As Herbert was backing towards the street the rear of the car hit the ladder, causing Sohn to fall and to receive the injuries sued upon.
The complaint was grounded in gross, willful and malicious negligence, and the trial proceeded on that theory until the taking of the testimony had been completed. At the close of plaintiffs' case defendants had moved, and been refused, a nonsuit. At the close of the entire case defendants moved for a direction of verdict. The trial court considered that the proofs did not sustain the complaint and, in effect, granted the motion as directed toward the pleadings as they then were, but, of its own motion, ordered that the pleadings be amended so that the complaint would charge the defendants with the duty of using reasonable care towards the plaintiff as a licensee and the answer would deny negligence and set up as a defense that the defendants owed plaintiff no duty except to refrain from willful and wanton injury. No new or amended pleadings were actually submitted or filed. The court assumed, however, that the pleadings had been amended in accordance with its instructions and charged the jury upon the basis of the proofs already taken and the pleadings as amended.
In so ruling the court held that Herbert Katz was, at the time of the accident, acting in and about the business of his father; that the father, though the husband of Rose Katz, did not occupy the same status as the wife and that while Mrs. Katz, as owner of the property, would have been liable only for willful and wanton acts, of which (so held) there *Page 108 was no evidence in the case, the husband was nevertheless under the duty of exercising reasonable care toward Sohn whether the latter was a trespasser or a licensee. The same legal concept was more succinctly stated in the charge as follows:
"If he [viz., the plaintiff Sohn] came upon the premises without the consent or permission of the owner, he was a trespasser — if he came upon the premises at his request and with the permission of the owner, he was a licensee, and in this case, it makes no difference whether he was a trespasser or a licensee, and I charge you as a matter of law, that the defendants, Harry and Herbert Katz, not being the owners of the property, owed him at this time and place in question, the duty of exercising reasonable care."
The case went to the jury on the further theory expressly charged by the court that "the son was the servant of the father who was the master * * *," and that Herbert Katz and Harry Katz were "the same in contemplation of law in this case." Therefore any liability of Herbert independent of the relationship of servant to his father was not before the jury and is not now in question.
Respondents now come forward with a form of amended complaint that they ask to have incorporated in the record. That request can scarcely be granted, nor indeed need it be. For the purposes of the appeal we shall assume that the pleadings were amended in the manner and to the extent directed by the trial court. Respondents also argue that the defendant Herbert Katz was guilty of gross negligence; but the jury was not permitted to consider the case on that theory, and a verdict erroneous on the theory adopted in the trial court cannot be sustained on a theory excluded in that court and which the jury had no opportunity to consider. Flammer v. Morelli,
The general rule with regard to the duty which a landowner owes to persons coming upon his premises is that where the entry is made by his invitation, either express or implied, he is required to use reasonable care to have his premises in a safe condition; but that where the entry is made merely by his permission (and,a fortiori, where it is an actual trespass) the landowner is under no obligation to keep his premises in a non-hazardous state; his only duty to a licensee or a trespasser is to abstain from acts willfully injurious. Delaware, Lackawanna and WesternRailroad Co. v. Reich,
While the cases have been concerned chiefly with the liability of the owner, whether of real estate or of personal property, the principle has been applid to one who stands in the place of, or under the right of, the owner and, in some jurisdictions, quite broadly to one who is in the lawful exercise of a right superior to that of the trespasser or the licensee. 45 C.J. 787 states that "ownership of the property trespassed upon is not an absolute test, for the rule of non-liability may be successfully invoked by one who, although not the owner of the property on which the injury occurred, had rights therein superior to those of the trespasser who was injured * * *." In McManus v.Thing,
The husband is the head of the family, in duty bound to support his wife and children and furnish them a suitable home or house in which to reside. The fact that the title to the property where the home in maintained is in the wife does not indicate that the husband is remiss in any of his marital duties or that any of his correlative rights have been relinquished. He is an occupant of the property in a sense that is none the less real because his occupancy coincides with that of his wife and is entirely subordinate to her title and possession. We find no self-contradiction in the thought that the husband, as an incident to the marriage relation, is, as to those of lesser right, an occupant of the family residence property the title to and the possession of which is, and remains unimpaired, in the wife. That the domestic relationship may be severed, or that the wife may, by asserting her title and superior right of possession, terminate the husband's right of occupancy is not controlling, or indeed of bearing. The significant fact, in the case at bar, is that there had been no such severance or termination, and that the intimacies and closely intermingled rights and duties of married life continued. Inconsistency would, we think, be strikingly apparent if the rights and liabilities of a husband in and about the residence were held to be of a kind with those of a mere licensee; one of the respondents' arguments being that the husband is himself a licensee and within the rule stated in Duel v. Mansfield Plumbing Co.,
The respondents would limit the application of the rule to instances of passive negligence and apply the broader liability of "reasonable care" to cases where active negligence is charged; but this runs contrary to our cases. Sullivan v. Delaware,Lackawanna and Western Railroad Co., supra; Faggioni v. Weiss,supra; Rose v. Squires, supra; Hoberg v. Collins, supra.
Van Winkle v. American Steam Boiler Co.,
The duty, and the only duty, of Harry Katz, the owner's husband, as occupant of the property, towards Sohn, a mere licensee, was to abstain from acts willfully injurious. The learned trial court misconceived the pertinent legal principle.
The judgment below will be reversed to the end that a venirede novo may be awarded.
For affirmance — None.
For reversal — THE CHANCELLOR, CHIEF JUSTICE, TRENCHARD, PARKER, LLOYD, CASE, HEHER, PERSKIE, VAN BUSKIRK, KAYS, HETFIELD, DEAR, WELLS, DILL, JJ. 14. *Page 115
