Mahan Jellico Coal Co. v. Dulling

139 S.W.2d 749, 282 Ky. 698, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 236
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedApril 26, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 139 S.W.2d 749 (Mahan Jellico Coal Co. v. Dulling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mahan Jellico Coal Co. v. Dulling, 139 S.W.2d 749, 282 Ky. 698, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 236 (Ky. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Tilford

— Affirming.

The appellee recovered a judgment against appellant for $750 for injuries received on March 10, 1937, in a fall which she claimed occurred by reason of the breaking of the top tread of a flight of four steps leading from the ground to the porch on the rear of a cottage rented by her and her husband from the appellant. The steps were unusable at the time the lease, apparently a verbal one, was made, and it is not contended that the appellant was under any obligation to repair them. However, appellee testified that on several occasions prior to the date on which she received her injuries, she visited the office of appellant, by whom her husband was employed as a miner, and that pursuant to requests made by her on these visits, the appellant undertook to, and did, send Sam Petrie, Sr., one of its carpenters, to repair the steps, and that it was after Sam Petrie, Sr., had attempted to make the repairs and assured her that the steps were “all O. K.,” that she used them for the first time in descending from the kitchen porch to the yard, and that it was upon this occasion that the upper step broke and threw her to the ground on top of a bucket which she was carrying. No witness saw the steps break or the appellee fall; and while appellant admits that it repaired the steps, it claims that, the work was done by Sam Petrie, Jr., who testified that he put the steps in good condition but did not assure appellee that they were safe, or have any conversation with her. *700 He further testified that in Ma'y, following the alleged-fall, he visited the premises in company with Mr. H. C. Oillis, one of appellant’s attorneys, and found the steps unbroken and in the same condition he had left them after making the repairs; and several kodak pictures taken by Mr. Oillis on this occasion were introduced in evidence in support of these contentions. However, appellee and her husband had moved away from the cottage and the town in which it was situated a short time after the alleged accident, and no proof was introduced showing that the broken treads had not been replaced during the interim. Sam Petrie, Sr., was not introduced as a witness and one of appellee’s neighbors testified that it was Sam Petrie, Jr., who made the repairs, and that she had .a conversation with him. while he was doing the work. .Appellee claims that as a result of the fall she sustained two broken ribs and suffered a miscarriage, but her testimony is wholly unsupported. The only physician who treated her, apparently the company’s doctor, testified "that she came to his office the day following the day on which she was injured; that he did not take an X-Ray but found a contusion oyer the lower ribs and an abrasion on one leg; and that as far as he could discover, no ribs were broken, and he did not observe, and was not informed, that she was pregnant. Asked what treatment’ he applied, he said:

“For the contusion over the ribs I strapped it with adhesive tape. The abrasion on the leg was disinfected and dressed. I advised her if she was suffering to .remain in bed until I saw her the next day.”

On the following day, which was the only other occasion ■on which he saw her, he found her engaged in doing the family washing and getting ready to move. However, she testified that she was in bed on the day when he visited her home; that on the fifth day after the accident, «he miscarried, her pregnancy having existed for some six or seven months prior to that time; that the physician had told her that the ribs were broken, and that she ■continued to suffer four or five weeks from the broken ribs, during which period she remained strapped with the adhesive tape.

With the evidence in this condition, we are requested to adjudge that the damages awarded were ex *701 cessive. With more reason, perhaps, appellant might have urged that the weight of the testimony indicated that the steps did not break and that appellee’s injuries were sustained in some other manner. However, had this contention been made by appellant, we would have been unable to sustain it for the same reason that we are unable to sustain its contention that the damages awarded were excessive, namely, that the jury and not the court is the judge of the credibility of the witnesses. If appellee testified truthfully, not only did the steps break with her when she attempted to use them, but she received injuries which entitled her to greater compensation than she received at the hands of the jury. No witness testified that she received her injuries in a manner other than that related by her, and the steps were not so constructed or repaired as to make it impossible for them to have broken under the weight of a woman weighing 186 pounds. Whatever may be our view of the probabilities, it was, under the evidence in this case, exclusively within the province of the jury to determine the facts.

Appellant’s remaining and major contention is that conceding that the steps were insufficiently repaired by its agent, and that this negligence was the proximate cause of appellee’s injuries, nevertheless, it is not liable in damages because it was under no legal obligation to make the repairs, and this undertaking to do so was without consideration. In support of this argument, appellant’s counsel cite several cases decided by this court, in none of which, with the exception of Eblin v. Miller’s Ex’rs, 78 Ky. 371, had the landlord attempted to make repairs. No citation of authority was necessary to establish the well-settled doctrine announced in Franklin v. Tracy, 117 Ky. 267, 77 S. W. 1113, 78 S. W. 1112, 25 Ky. Law Rep. 1409, 25 Ky. Law Rep. 1909, 63 L. R. A. 649, that a landlord is not liable to a tenant for injuries sustained as a result of defects existing in the leased premises at the time the lease was made which were unknown to the landlord at that time, even though they were unknown to the tenant and could not have been discovered by him through the exercise of ordinary care. Neither is a landlord obligated to make repairs on the leased premises, unless, as part of the consideration for the lease, he has undertaken to do so. Any agreement by the landlord to repair made after the lease *702 has been executed is not binding upon him unless supported by a new and valuable consideration. Where such consideration exists and the contract is breached, the landlord is liable to the tenant for the reasonable cost of such repairs, but generally not for damages to his person or goods resulting . from the unrepaired defects.

It is obvious, however, that the principles above enunciated and the authorities cited by appellant in support of them can have no application to the facts in the case at bar. As said in Dice’s Adm’r v. Zweigart’s Adm’r, 161 Ky. 646, 171 S. W. 195, 197, L. R. A. 1916F, 1155, in which the landlord was held not liable for the death of a child drowned in a cistern on the leased premises:

“It is not a case where the landlord undertook to make repairs, and performed the work in a negligent manner. It is simply a case of the landlord’s promise to repair the cistern, and of his failure to do so.”

It is true that the case of Eblin v.

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Bluebook (online)
139 S.W.2d 749, 282 Ky. 698, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mahan-jellico-coal-co-v-dulling-kyctapphigh-1940.