Action for damages for ■ personal- injuries from plaster falling upon plaintiff’s head and back. - Plaintiff had a verdict for $20,000. However, the trial court sustained defendant’s motion for judgment .in accordance with her motion for directed verdict. From the judgment thereafter entered for defendant, plaintiff has appealed. The question involved is the tort -liability of an owner for injuries caused by a defective - condition in the interior of a building which is in the exclusive control of a tenant.
Defendant purchased the building June 19, 1944. -At that time, Mrs. Katherine Steele was a month to month tenant of the entire building. She used the first floor as a tavern, known as the “ Congress' Grill”, where liquor was sold by the drink. She also occupied the two residential flats above. No meals were served and there was no prepared place for dancing. There were “No Dancing” posters up but there was evidence that some of the patrons did dance, occasionally, when Mrs. Steele was out of the room. There was a coin operated juke box and a small portable radio in the tavern. Later, a coin operated pinball machine was added. (Mrs. Steele said this. was after plaintiff was injured.) The place was described as a “neighborhood tavern.” Most of the people who came there were-regular customers who were long-time acquaintances- of Mrs. Steele. These patrons would frequently sit there reading newspapers, listening to baseball broadcasts and occasionally singing with the music.
Mrs. Steele paid the rent, both before and after defendant purchased the building, to Mr. Carl 'Mueller of the Hauschulte Real Estate Company on the tenth of each month. On July 10, 1944, Mrs. Steele showed Mr. Mueller a place in the ceiling (from which the plaster later fell) and he said he was going to make a report of it. On August 10th, she told him the ceiling was getting -worse and “it ought to be looked after.” She said; “The next day or two after that Mr. Fry (defendant’s husband) came On in and looked at it.” On August 18th, plaster fell on plaintiff while he was seated at a table drinking beer in the tavern. The plaster that fel'1 was about 6 or 8 feet in diameter, about two and a half inches thick, and was enough to fill three tubs. Its weight was estimated at 30 to 40 pounds. The ceiling was 19 feet high. There was no evidence as to the condition of the ceiling on the date defendant bought the building.
A lease is regarded as equivalent to a sale of the premises for the term, so the general rule is that a lessor is under no obligation to repair leased premises (unless he has contracted1 to do so, which was not true in this case) an,d that he is not liabie for' injuries to the tenant or his invitees caused by defects therein, regardless of whether they existed at the time of the demise or thereafter came into existence.
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(1 Tiffany, Landlord and Tenant 556, Sec. 86, p. 649, Sec. 96; A. L. I. Restatement of Torts, Sec’s. 355-356; Prosser on Torts, Sec. 81; Roach v. Herz-Oakes Candy Co.,
In Missouri, as shown by the cases above cited, we have made no distinction between premises leased for residential or commercial purposes; the same general rule has been applied to both. (See also Clark v. Chase Hotel Co.,
We applied the principle of Restatement Section 359 in Brown v. Reorganization Investment Co.,
The basis of such liability undoubtedly must be that under such circumstances the nature of the use intended by both parties creates a duty upon the owner to have the premises in a reasonably safe condition before leasing for such a purpose. We think this is the true basis of the “public use” rule and that an owner’s duty in respect thereto is similar to his duty to persons outside the premises in other cases. (See Junkermann v. Tilyon Realty Co.,
The judgment is affirmed.
