This is an action of tort, to recover for personal injuries received by the plaintiff while standing upоn a chair on the back piazza of a dwelling house, washing a window. One leg of the chair broke thrоugh the floor near the wall of the building, and the plaintiff fell. The defendant was the owner of the house whiсh the plaintiff’s husband occupied as his tenant. The declaration is for negligence of the defendant in allowing the floor to become rotten and defective. The plaintiff and her husband and his family had lived in the house about five months at the time of the accident. The question before us is whether therе was evidence on which the plaintiff could recover.
It is plain that there was no implied contract or duty on the part of the defendant to keep the premises in a safe condition while they were in possession of the tenant. Galvin v. Beals,.
There was no implied warranty that the house or the piazza floor was safe and fit for occupancy at the time of the letting. Bowe v. Hunking,
In the plaintiff’s declaration there is an averment “ that the defendant expressly warranted the prеmises to be fit and safe
The rule caveat emptor applies to the purchase and hiring of real estate, and the question before us is whether this testimony, having reference to the subject and nature of the conversation between the parties, wоuld warrant a finding that the defendant expressly warranted the house to be in perfect condition in аll its parts, so that no accident could happen through any imperfection in it, from any proper use that could be made of it. We are of opinion that' it would not. The statement was that the hоuse was good, safe and fit to live in. This was of the most general character. It was in the nature of rеpresentation and recommendation, or “ dealer’s talk,” which should be treated as the exрression of an opinion about the effect of conditions which in general were open аnd obvious, rather than as a warranty as to the details of construction or soundness. As to these matters the plaintiff and her husband could observe and judge as well as he could. It is not to be supposed thаt they took the house, relying upon these representations as express stipulations in a
Another question, which has not been argued, is whether, if there were an exprеss warranty in the contract with the plaintiff’s husband, this plaintiff could maintain an action of tort founded on а contract to which she was not a party, for an accident that occurred five months aftеrwards, when the defendant was under no legal obligation to keep the premises in repair. The case differs materially from Farrell v. Manhattan Marhatten.
The exceptions must be sustained, and under the St. 1909, c. 236, the entry must be
Judgment for the defendant.
The case was submitted on briefs.
Notes
The case was submitted to the jury by King, J., and there was a verdict for the plaintiff for $75. The defendant alleged exceptions.
