341 A.2d 25 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1974
In the main action the jury rendered a verdict of $25,000 in favor of the plaintiff on the complaint against the defendant owners, who owned the building where the plaintiff fell and was injured. The owners had filed a third-party complaint against Loring Studios, Inc., hereinafter referred to as Loring, the lessee of the portion of the building where the accident occurred and the employer of the plaintiff. On the claim for indemnification in the third-party complaint, the same jury rendered a second verdict of $27,750 for the owners against Loring, that amount representing *98 attorneys' fees incurred by the owners in defending the first suit in addition to the damages awarded in that suit.
The evidence, as construed most favorably to the injured plaintiff, would have allowed the jury to conclude that the plaintiff had fallen on a wooden ramp at the entrance of a back room of the premises leased to Loring. That room, which was used for storage and for making coffee for employees, was located off a hallway which also led to a bathroom. It does not appear from the evidence that customers of the studio ever used that bathroom or would have any occasion to enter the back room.
The plaintiff, who was the manager of the photographic studio, fell as she was exiting from the room and was walking up the ramp. The ramp had been installed in order to eliminate a step down from the hallway, the floor of which was higher than the floor of the back room. The plaintiff testified that she fell when her left foot stuck on a metal strip at the higher end of the ramp adjacent to the threshold of the doorway. She claimed that the metal strip was rough and uneven with protruding screws and nails so that it did not make a smooth joint with the doorsill. She also claimed that the absence of handrails made the ramp dangerous.
The complaint refers also to the defective condition of the ramp as "concealed and dangerous." The conditions claimed were, however, apparent on even a cursory inspection and were as obvious to Loring as to the owners.
The case was submitted to the jury on the only viable theory of recovery which the court could conceive, the doctrine of Webel v. Yale University,
In Webel, the question of whether an employee of a tenant might recover against a landlord was discussed but not decided. Id., 522. In Tammany
v. Wooldridge Bros., Inc.,
The policy considerations, notably the deep pocket theory, which have led to the adoption of the public use exception to the general rule of nonliability of a lessor for accidents on wholly demised premises do not apply so clearly to injuries sustained by employees of a tenant. This case, in which the plaintiff's employer, Loring, or its insurer, is, in fact, the real party in interest, since the amount of the recovery did not exceed the workmen's compensation payments, is an illustration of some absurdities which may arise from such an extension of the doctrine. On the third-party complaint the owners have been awarded indemnification against Loring or its insurer. The Workmen's Compensation Act affords sufficient protection to the injured employee, and no further expansion of established legal doctrine can be justified. The loss has been properly allocated to Loring or its insurer, and there is no reason to shift that burden to the owners or their liability carrier.
Even if the plaintiff were accorded the same status as a member of the public under the public *101
use exception, there is a further reason which precludes a recovery in this case. The fall took place on a portion of the premises not used by the public and not intended for such use. As the plaintiff's counsel conceded during argument of these motions, there is no evidence that the back room, where the fall occurred, was ever used by the public. the court charged the jury on this element of the case, but the instructions were not followed. In retrospect, the issue should not have been submitted to the jury because there was insufficient evidence of public use. In Brenner v. Central Realty Co.,
There is no reason to suppose that the plaintiff might remedy the deficiencies in her case on a retrial. Therefore, the motion of the owners for judgment notwithstanding the verdict is granted.
The right of the owners to indemnification would not vanish merely because they were successful in defending the main action. Calamita v. DePonte,
Loring claims that it is protected from the indemnification claim by a provision of the Workmen's *102
Compensation Act, General Statutes §
"The Workmen's Compensation Act, however, is not a bar to indemnity where such a right can be predicated on some legal relationship between the third party and employer giving rise to a duty on the part of the employer to the third party which is either contractually or tortiously breached."Ranta v. Bethlehem Steel Corporation,
In this case the owners claim a breach of a separate obligation to them created by the terms of the lease, viz., the agreement of Loring "to make and pay for inside maintenance and repairs." If the jury concluded that the plaintiff's fall was caused by improper maintenance of the ramp on which she fell, it follows that the provision of the lease was breached and that the owners would be entitled to redress for any losses sustained by them as a result of that breach. The situation is similar to that involved in McFall v. Compagnie MaritimeBelge, supra, where it was held that a stevedoring contract carrying an implied obligation for the stevedore to perform the work carefully afforded a sufficient basis for indemnification in the absence of an express covenant of indemnity. It is concluded that the Workmen's Compensation Act does not bar this action for indemnification.
Another claim of Loring is that, if the action were maintainable on the basis of the special relationship created by the lease, it would have to be a contract action relying on breach of an express provision of the lease with an implicit promise to indemnify for such a breach. Although the lease is significant in establishing the relationship between the parties, the right of indemnification asserted here is based on the equitable principle that one who has been held liable for the personal neglect of another is entitled to indemnity from the actual wrongdoer. The right asserted here is not based on the lease but on the relationship between the parties with respect to the duty of care owed to the plaintiff.
This case falls squarely within the rule enunciated in § 98 of the Restatement of Restitution: "Where two persons were liable in tort for an injury resulting . . . from the condition of land . . . and *104 one of them made reasonable expenditures in the discharge of the liability, he is entitled to indemnity from the other therefor, if he was without fault and if . . . (b) the other, because of a relation between the two, was as between them primarily responsible for the . . . condition."
The motion of Loring Studios, Inc., to set aside the verdict on the third-party complaint is granted except for the sum of $2750, as to which the clerk may enter judgment on the verdict for that sum.
The motion of the defendant owners for judgment notwithstanding the verdict on the plaintiff's complaint is granted.