Beaulac v. Robie

107 A. 107, 93 Vt. 275, 1919 Vt. LEXIS 161
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 6, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 107 A. 107 (Beaulac v. Robie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beaulac v. Robie, 107 A. 107, 93 Vt. 275, 1919 Vt. LEXIS 161 (Vt. 1919).

Opinion

ITaselton, J.

This is an action of tort for injuries that befell the plaintiff in consequence of her stepping through a defective part of a platform owned by the defendant Robie while she was making her way as a customer across the platform into a store owned by the defendant Robie and occupied by the defendant Slayton under a lease from Rcbie. The case has once before been here on exceptions taken at a former trial. On that trial the plaintiff had judgment against both defendants, but on review here that judgment was reversed, and the cause remanded by reason of errors in the instruction of the court to the jury.-92 Vt. 27, 102 Atl. 88.

On the trial under review, the plaintiff, at the close of her [278]*278evidence, discontinued the suit as to the defendant Slayton, and the jury gave a verdict against the defendant Robie, who will hereafter be spoken of by name or as the defendant. Judgment was rendered on the verdict, and the defendant brings a bill of exceptions. The trial under review will hereinafter be designated as the trial, and whenever there is occasion to refer to the former trial it will be so designated.

The transcript of evidence taken on the trial is made a part of the bill of exceptions, and, notwithstanding the testimony of certain witnesses somewhat at variance with the statement of facts in the former opinion in the case, there is before us substantial evidence tending to show the facts narrated in such statement; and for this reason an extended account of what the evidence now tends to show is unnecessary. Such references to the testimony as is required will be made as the exceptions are taken up.

At the close of all the evidence the defendant moved that a verdict be directed in his favor. His motion was overruled, and he excepted. Two grounds of the motion are briefed.

The first ground is that, as matter of law on the evidence, Robie did not have control of the platform, and that the burden of repairs was not on him. This ground of the motion we now consider.

The platform in question was in front of and appurtenant to a store building that Robie had leased, and had Robie leased the entire building to one tenant the sole control of the platform would, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, have been that of the tenant.

But such was not this case. A part of the ground floor of the building in question, the store proper, was under a lease to Slayton which made no mention of the platform, and a tenement over the store was occupied by one Chaffee under a lease which gave him also the use of the basement or room therein for storing wood and coal and a right of access to the basement through a trapdoor which consisted of three planks of the platform. Robie’s own testimony tended to show that this lease to Chaffee was made after the lease to Slayton, and that the right to use a part of the platform in the way indicated was his to grant notwithstanding the lease to Slayton, in which no mention of the platform was made. The evidence as to the order of time in which the leases were given was contradictory, but, in considering the de[279]*279fendant’s motion for a verdict, the view most favorable to the plaintiff is to be taken. Under both leases, which were oral, the obligation to keep in repair the premises 'leased fell upon the tenants respectively. The question here is what was leased. Was the platform leased or did it remain under the control of Robie, the owner? The terms of the lease, as testified to, do not determine this question. When this case was before here, the familiar and well settled doctrine was announced that “if the landlord while renting premises, retains portions thereof under his control, the responsibilities for injuries to persons rightfully there is his.” In each case the landlord as owner owes to his tenants and their invitees the duty of reasonable care to keep safe the part of the premises over which he retains control. The doctrine finds its common application in the case of passages, platforms, steps, stairways, and the like used by various tenants of a single structure. B. Shoningen Co. v. Mann, 219 Ill. 242, 76 N. E. 354, 3 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1097; Sawyer v. McGillicuddy, 81 Me. 318, 17 Atl. 124, 3 L. R. A. 458, 10 Am. St. Rep. 260; Coupe v. Platt, 172 Mass. 458, 52 N. E. 526, 70 Am. St. Rep. 293, 16 R. C. L. 1036-1039, 1072, 1073.

When the case was formerly here, it was held that, in all the circumstances enumerated in the opinion, it was for the jury to say whether or not Robie, the owner, retained control of the platform. There was some attempt on the trial to show circumstances somewhat or slightly different from those mentioned in the former opinion, but there was substantial evidence tending to show the material facts and circumstances which, in the. opinion of this Court as heretofore given and now adhered to, made it impossible for the defendant to have a verdict directed, in his favor on the ground that' he was not in control of the platform.

The other ground of the defendant’s motion that is briefed' is this: That, even if he did retain and have control of the platform, there was no evidence tending to show negligence on his part. There was evidence tending to show that the part of the platform constituting the trapdoor had been in an unsafe condition, considering its uses, for a month or so, by reason of the looseness of the boards, and though there was no direct evidence that Robie actually knew of the unsafe condition, there was evidence which made it for the jury to say whether Robie, who occupied a connecting building and an extension of the plat[280]*280form, was not wanting in reasonable care in respect to the safety of the platform, since he had so much time and opportunity for ascertaining its condition and making needed repairs. Robie was not an insurer of the safety of the platform, but on the theory of his control over it, on which the second ground of the defendant’s motion proceeds, he owed to one there, as the plaintiff was, the duty of reasonable care in respect to its safety.

The exception to the refusal of the court to direct a verdict for the defendant was properly overruled.

Without restriction as to time or to any particular tenant the plaintiff was permitted to show by Robie himself that his upstairs tenants frequently used the trapdoor to put wood down through into the cellar. This particular piece of testimony was received under objection and exception on the ground that it was not confined to the time of Chaffee’s tenancy upstairs. But all the testimony on the point was to the effect that such use was made of the trapdoor by Chaffee. There was no dispute about this fact, and if there was any technical objection to the testimony so far as it related to other tenants than Chaffee, the testimony was entirely harmless, and the exception thereto is of no avail. _

Exceptions that are in effect one were taken to the argument of counsel for the plaintiff. As a circumstance, taken with other circumstances, tending to show, not negligence on the part of Robie, but his control over the platform, the plaintiff had been permitted to introduce evidence tending to show that, immediately after the accident, one Dunbar, who was in the employ of Robie, set about and made repairs on the trapdoor; that Robie saw something, of the work and, in effect, treated the making of the repairs by his servant as a matter of course.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 A. 107, 93 Vt. 275, 1919 Vt. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beaulac-v-robie-vt-1919.