141 Ill. App. 183 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1908
delivered the opinion of the court.
Plaintiff’s intestate, a child nearly four years of age, came to its death by falling out of a window of a flat rented by his mother from defendant, the landlord. The window it is claimed was ont of repair, in that the catch or fastening between the upper and lower sash was broken; that the sash weights caused the window to suddenly ascend, and the child fell out. Just how the accident occurred is not explained by the proofs. What the child was doing at "the window just before he fell to his death the proof fails to disclose. There were no eye witnesses of the accident who testified. The mother of the child was in the room with him at the time and had very shortly before talked with him, but while she was a witness she admits she did not see the occurrence. She was oblivious of the fact that her child had met with an accident until she heard a commotion in the street caused by the child’s falling out of the window to the .street below.
This suit is brought under the statute for compensation to the next of kin for damages suffered by them from the death of the intestate resulting, as it is contended, from negligence attributable to defendant.
On the motion of defendant made at the close of the plaintiff’s case, the court instructed the jury to find a verdict for the defendant. Upon such verdict a judgment of nil capiat was entered, and this action of the court is assigned as reversible error.
Mrs. Prince, the mother of the child, was a tenant by the month of the premises where the accident occurred, and at the time of its happening occupied the premises with her husband and children as a residence. From the testimony of Mrs. Prince it seems she rented the premises in the month of May, 1899, at a rental of seven dollars a month. She paid the rent monthly in advance. The renting rested in parol by a verbal agreement. Mrs. Prince testified that her rent day was on the eighth of the month. She paid one month’s rent on August 11, 1899, and the receipt offered in evidence by plaintiff recites that the seven dollars then paid was rent from August 11th, to September 11, 1899. Mrs. Prince further testified that defendant called for the next month’s rent on September 9, 1899; that defendant said to her, “Well Mrs. Prince, I thought you would take down the rent;’-' she answered, “I want you to come up for it this time.” He asked why, and she said, “I want you first to fix that window; do you see that catch or whatever you call it; it is broken off.” She told defendant further that the catch was half on the window and that half was broken on the left-hand side. Defendant examined it and said it was a little thing, and that he would fix it for her, saying, “I will do it as quick as I can. ’ ’ She paid him ‘four dollars and stated that she would pay the remaining three dollars when the catch was fixed. Defendant thereupon left, and the accident happened two days thereafter and before defendant fixed the catch.
Plaintiff grounds the right to recover upon the claim that the leasing was from month to month, and in law a new term commenced with each succeeding month of the tenancy, and that where a landlord leases premises with a known dangerous place in them, he is liable for resulting injuries as for negligence. That an agreement to repair unperformed makes the landlord liable for injuries following upon a failure to make such repairs.
We do not agree with any of these contentions. In the first place, while the tenancy was by the month, it does not follow that each month of occupancy created a new demise. Such a tenancy is not a reletting at the beginning of each recurring month. Hall v. Sherrod, 97 Ill. App. 298.
It is plain that under such a holding the right to occupy could not be terminated upon the part of the landlord except by his giving to the tenant a thirty day notice of his intention to terminate such monthly tenancy. This is the statute law of this state. R. S., chap. 80, sec. 6. Occupation and payment of monthly rent creates a tenancy from month to month. Sebastian v. Hill, 51 Ill. App. 272. This was the relationship between Mrs. Prince and defendant. That the landlord is not bound to repair the demised premises, but that such duty rests upon the tenant, in the absence of an agreement to the contrary, is so well settled in this jurisdiction that it must be regarded as no longer open to question or doubt. Sunasack v. Morey, 196 Ill. 569. In this case the court say: “In the absence of a covenant to repair, the landlord is not bound to keep the building inhabitable; and he is therefore not liable for damages resulting to the tenant by reason of the demised premises being out of repair.”
. But if the contention of plaintiff was well taken there is no evidence that at the commencement of the new monthly tenancy, September 8, 1899, there was any “dangerous place” upon the premises. When the catch got out of repair is not shown, although it fairly appears that the defendant first knew of the condition of the catch by Mrs. Prince’s calling his attention to it after the new tenancy had' commenced. Furthermore, having reference to the nature of the defect, we are not prepared to say that it was of such a character as to fall within the designation of a dangerous place. If the catch had been in a perfect condition of repair the act of leaving the window open might have resulted in the same kind of an accident. For can it be said from the testimony that even had defendant been liable to make repairs to the catch that the delay so to do after knowledge of the defect came to defendant was of sufficiently long duration as to charge him with negligence. It was but two days from the alleged promise to the lamentable accident. Neither can we say, after a careful reading of the testimony, that the accident is attributable to the defective catch on the window sash, or that such defect was the proximate cause of the accident.
It is also the law that an agreement upon the part of the landlord with the tenant to repair the demised premises after the making of the lease and the delivery of possession thereunder, is a nudum pactum and not binding npon the landlord. The agreement to repair, if ever made, was not made at the commencement of the relationship of landlord and tenant between defendant and Mrs. Prince, even upon the theory that a new letting occurred September 8, 1899, the rent day. As said in Borggard v. Gale, 107 Ill. App. 128, “If the defendant promised to repair, the floor after the execution of the lease, such promise was a mere nudum pactum, and no liability would exist for a failure on his part to make such repairs.” On further review this decision was affirmed in 205 Ill. 511.
To a like effect is Fowler Cycle Works v. Fraser & Chalmers, 110 Ill. App. 126.
The judgment of the Superior Court is affirmed.
Affirmed.