297 P. 881 | Cal. | 1931
This is an action for damages for personal injuries. Defendant was the owner of a two-story building containing four flats, two on the first floor and two on the second. There was a single entrance for all tenants and an inside stairway used in common by all tenants. Plaintiff rented a lower floor flat on February 20, 1926. On April 27, 1926, she visited an acquaintance on the upper floor and in returning slipped on the stairs and fell to the bottom, sustaining various injuries.
The evidence tended to show that she had caught her foot in the worn rubber covering of one of the steps and had stumbled. There was no hand-rail on the stairway, and plaintiff had been aware of this fact from the beginning of her tenancy. The trial court nevertheless found that the accident would not have happened had there been a hand-rail, and concluded that the failure to install such a protection constituted negligence which proximately caused the injury. Judgment was therefore rendered for plaintiff, from which judgment the defendant landlord appealed.
It is clear that in the absence of some special statute the landlord cannot be held liable under the above facts. [1] It is his duty to keep stairways or other parts of the building used in common by tenants in repair, but he is under no duty to remove structural defects which are visible and known to the tenant. The latter takes the premises as they are at the time of the commencement of the tenancy. (Miller v. Hooper,
Whatever be the reason for the difference in these sections, the statute distinguishes between tenement houses hereafter constructed, and stairways hereafter constructed. The stairway involved herein was not newly constructed at the time the building was remodeled, but remained in its original state. It was not, therefore, within the terms of section 49. None of the other sections, however, contain any requirement of a hand-rail. The plain meaning of the statute appears to be that in new buildings, new stairways shall have hand-rails; in old buildings, only new stairways need have such hand-rails, whether or not the building is remodeled. In other words, in reconstructing the building, the owner came within other provisions of the act, but was not required to place hand-rails on a stairway already constructed.
In view of the above provisions of the statute, defendant was not guilty of a violation thereof, and no question of negligenceper se arises. Hence is it unnecessary to consider the highly doubtful proposition that the absence of the hand-rail was the proximate cause of the injury. It appears that the trial court has placed a liability upon the landlord *87 beyond that established by our statutes and decisions. It follows that the judgment must be and is hereby reversed.
Richards, J., Shenk, J., Waste, C.J., Curtis, J., Seawell, J., and Preston, J., concurred.