Hill v. Day

81 A. 581, 108 Me. 467, 1911 Me. LEXIS 113
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 28, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 81 A. 581 (Hill v. Day) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hill v. Day, 81 A. 581, 108 Me. 467, 1911 Me. LEXIS 113 (Me. 1911).

Opinion

King, J.

This case comes up on exceptions to an order of non-suit, and other exceptions by plaintiff to the exclusion of testimony. The action is to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by the falling of plastering upon the plaintiff from the ceiling in the kitchen of a dwelling house owned by the defendant Day.

Exceptions to the order of nonsuit.

The declaration alleges that the house was occupied by Clementine R. Foss (one of the defendants) under a contract with Day, and used by her as a dwelling house and for the letting of rooms. No evidence, however, was introduced as to any contract of tenancy between Mr. Day and Mrs. Foss. The plaintiff testified that she hired of Mrs. Foss a front room with the privilege of using the kitchen for passing through to the back yard, and for some cooking and light housekeeping, and began her occupancy on Nov. 10, 1908. On the 20th of November the plaintiff, having passed from the back yard through the kitchen with some clothes, came back into the kitchen and shut a door — presumably the door leading from the kitchen to the yard — whereupon a portion of the ceiling plastering fell upon her causing the injuries complained of.

If it be assumed that the relation of landlord and tenant existed between Mr. Day and Mrs. Foss with respect to the house in question, as alleged in the declaration, the fact that the plaintiff was using the kitchen by permission of Mrs. Foss would create no greater liability on the part of Day to the plaintiff than that which he was under to Mrs. Foss by virtue of the relation of landlord and tenant between them.

The law is well settled in this State that in the letting of a dwelling house there is no implied warranty that it is reasonably fit for [469]*469use, and no obligation on the part of the landlord to make repairs on the leased premises unless he has made an express valid agreement to do so; but the tenant, on the principle of caveat emptor, and in the absence of any fraud on the part of the landlord, takes the property in the actual condition in which he finds it. Bennett v. Sullivan, 100 Maine, 118; McKenzie v. Cheetham, 83 Maine, 548; Libby v. Tolford, 48 Maine, 316; Whitmore v. Pulp Co., 91 Maine, 297.

In the absence of any evidence in this case as to the terms of the tenancy of Mrs. Foss it must be held that the defendant Day was under no obligation to keep the premises in question in repair, and that Mrs. Foss, and the plaintiff occupying by her permission, there being no fraud on the part of Day, took the house in the condition in which it was for better or worse. Gregor v. Cady, 82 Maine, page 136. Accordingly the defendant Day was not liable to the plaintiff for her injuries if they resulted from neglect to keep the house in repair.

But the plaintiff claims that the defendant Day is liable to her on the ground that the insecure condition of the plastering and consequent danger that it might fall was a secret defect — a trap — in the premises, known to Mr. Day, and the existence of which he did not communicate to his tenant Mrs. Foss, and of which she had no knowledge. This claim is not supported by the facts and circumstances in evidence.

We need not here decide the question whether, if at the time Day let the house to Mrs. Foss there was an existing danger that the plastering might fall and he had knowledge of it, it was his legal duty to inform her of it, because there is no evidence that any such danger existed when the tenancy of Mrs. Foss began, or, if it did then exist, that Day had any knowledge of it which he did not communicate to her, or that she did not otherwise have knowledge of it.

As has been noted, there is no evidence in the case relating to Mrs. Foss’ tenancy, it does not appear how long she had been in occupation of the premises. It does appear, however, by the testimony of Judith K. Young that when she began occupying some [470]*470rooms in the house on Nov. 1, 1906 — two years before the plaintiff’s injuries— Mrs. Foss was then in occupation of the house. Day’s duty and freedom from duty to Mrs. Foss, and consequently to the plaintiff, in respect to communicating information of any defects or dangerous conditions in the leased premises, must be determined as of the time he let the property to Mrs. Foss. If it does not appear that he had knowledge of the defect at that time then no such duty is shown. If he then owed no such duty to his tenant, no subsequent knowledge on his part of a defective condition of the premises would create that duty. The only evidence tending to show that Day had knowledge of the condition of the plastering before the plaintiff’s injuries is in the testimony of Judith K. Young to the effect that while she occupied rooms in this house from November 1st, 1906, to April, 1907, she called Day’s attention to a place in the kitchen ceiling, near where the plastering fell upon the plaintiff, where there was a leak and from which some plastering had then fallen. But that was after the beginning of Mrs. Foss’ tenancy for the witness testified that Mrs. Foss occupied the tenement at the time she went there and that she "hired with her.”

Further the plaintiff alleged in her declaration "that the defendant Day had undertaken to remedy said dangerous condition and had done the work so unskillfully and incompletely as not to make said kitchen safe for occupancy.” In support of this allegation the plaintiff testified that about a week or ten days after her accident Mr. Day was> at the house and Mrs. Foss called his attention to the leak in the kitchen, which presumably caused the plastering to fall, and that he said he had been up there to work on the roof with men, and Mrs. Foss replied "You haven’t stopped the leak yet.” The plaintiff further testified that no work was done on the roof from the time of her injuries to the time of this conversation.

Assuming that this testimony would justify an inference that Day had, prior to the time of the plaintiff’s injuries, undertaken to repair the leak in the roof and, in the language of the declaration, "had done the work so unskillfully and incompletely as not to make said kitchen safe for occupancy,” that inference alone would not authorize the application of the principle which the plaintiff here invokes.

[471]*471That principle is thus expressed in Gregor v. Cady, 82 Maine, page 137: "And although the lessor’s attention, after possession taken by the lessee, was called by the latter to the rickety condition of a portion of the premises and he thereupon agreed to repair it, still he was under no obligation to fulfill his promise. But when upon the request of the lessee the lessor gratuitously undertook to make the repairs- and negligently and unskillfully performed the work, whereby the lessee was subsequently injured, the lessor became liable by reason of his misfeasance, provided he undertook to repair the particular part of the premises to which his attention was called and where the injury occurred.”

"If a party makes a gratuitous engagement and actually enters upon the execution of the business and does it amiss through the want of due care, by which damage ensues to the other party, an action will lie for this misfeasance.” 2 Kent’s Com. 570. "The confidence induced by undertaking any service for another is a sufficient legal consideration to create a duty in the performance of it.” Note in Coggs v. Bernard, Smith Lead. Case. (6th Am. Ed.) 335.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 A. 581, 108 Me. 467, 1911 Me. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-day-me-1911.