1. It is the duty of a landlord, when he rents a tenement for a time to begin in the future, to have it, on the day when the term is to begin, in a condition reasonably suited for the purposes for which it was rented. Thompson v. Walker, 6 Ga. App. 80 (64 S. E. 336). Should there be a change in the condition of the tenement during its occupancy by the tenant, the landlord is bound to repair such defects as may be brought to his attention. If the tenant, is in exclusive possession of an apartment, it is his duty to give the landlord notice of the necessity for repairs; for the landlord’s duty to repair arises only when he has either notice or actual knowledge of the necessity for repairs. The mere fact that the landlord himself occupies one of the apartments in an apartment house is not of itself sufficient to compel the inference that the landlord has actual knowledge that the radiators in another apartment, occupied by his tenant, are defective in their operation.
2. In view of the evidence in the record, it was not error to charge the jury: “If you find that the furnace was in proper condition when the term of the defendant’s lease' began, and that the condition changed during the term of the lease, without fault of the plaintiff, then the plaintiff was entitled to notice from the defendant of such change in condition, and would have a reasonable time in which to fix the same.”
3. There was no reversible error in the rulings upon the admissibility of testimony; and the verdict and judgment of the municipal court are supported by the evidence. ■ Judgment affirmed.
