282 Mass. 255 | Mass. | 1933
The defendant excepted to the refusal of the trial judge to direct a verdict in her favor in an action of tort for bodily injuries to a three year old boy resulting from a fall on April 7, 1929, through two loose and weak pickets in a balustrade around a second floor piazza adjoining a tenement hired from the defendant by the plaintiff’s parents under a tenancy at will.
The jury could have found that the piazza was not a part of the tenement hired by the plaintiff’s parents, and was not hired by them in common with a family occupying another tenement on the same floor, but remained in the control of the defendant for the use of both families. Flanagan v. Welch, 220 Mass. 186. Sullivan v. Northridge, 246 Mass. 382. Conroy v. Maxwell, 248 Mass. 92. Compare Phelan v. Fitzpatrick, 188 Mass. 237; Conahan v. Fisher, 233 Mass. 234; Condon v. Winn, 252 Mass. 146.
The only evidence of the creation of the tenancy, and of the condition of the balustrade at the time, came from the plaintiff’s mother. About February 15, 1929, she obtained the key to the tenement from a real estate broker. and examined the premises. Thereupon she agreed with the broker that the rent was to be $30 a month and that the tenancy was to begin on March 1, 1929. The broker took her deposit and told her that “they could move in before that date, if she chose.” The plaintiff’s parents moved in a day or two later, not much after the middle of February. Although the balustrade appeared in good condition on February 15, 1929, the plaintiff’s mother discovered its actual condition within two or three days after moving in, and consequently a considerable time before the tenancy began on March 1, 1929. There was no evidence that its condition grew any worse.
Until a tenancy at will actually begins an executory oral agreement to enter into it creates no property rights and may be avoided without liability. Mathews v. Carlton, 189 Mass. 285. Flanagan v. Welch, 220 Mass. 186, 189, 190. Freedman v. Gordon, 220 Mass. 324. Currier v. Barker,
One further point remains. The plaintiff’s mother testified that when she discovered the actual condition of the pickets in February, she complained to the defendant’s agent, who promised to repair them but failed to do so. Even if the promise was founded upon a valuable consideration, its breach by mere omission to act gave rise only to an action of contract and not to an action of tort. Tuttle v. George H. Gilbert Manuf. Co. 145 Mass. 169. Lane v. Raynes, 223 Mass. 514. Wierzbicki v. Thacher, 273 Mass. 346. Cormier v. Weiner, 277 Mass. 518. Those were cases, it is true, of promises to remedy defects in the tenement let, and not in parts of the premises remaining in the control of the landlord. But where the liability, if any, depends upon the promise to repair, that makes no difference.
Exceptions sustained.
Judgment for the defendant.