Mylander v. Beimschla

62 A. 1038, 102 Md. 689, 1906 Md. LEXIS 20
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 11, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 62 A. 1038 (Mylander v. Beimschla) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mylander v. Beimschla, 62 A. 1038, 102 Md. 689, 1906 Md. LEXIS 20 (Md. 1906).

Opinion

Boyd, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellee sued the appellant for “negligently permitting the waste and rain water from her property to be thrown up against and upon the north wall of the plaintiff”, thereby causing the injury set out in the declaration. The appellee relied especially upon the ground that the appellant had permitted the rain-spout, which was supposed to carry the water from the roof of her house, to become and remain in such condition that it turned the water upon the house of the appellee, injuring the wall and foundation, and causing the cellar to be damp and unhealthy. ' The appellant’s defense was based mainly upon the fact that her house had been occupied by tenants during the time the damage was alleged to have been sustained, and claimed that the property was in proper repair when she rented it. A verdict was rendered against her and she appealed from the judgment entered thereon. Exceptions were taken to the granting of the ist, 2nd and 4th prayers of the plaintiff and to the rejection of the ist, 2nd and 5th of the defendant. The bill of exceptions containing the rulings on those prayers present the only questions for review by us, as the exception to the refusal to grant two prayers offered at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case was waived by the defendant proceeding with her testimony.

There was legally sufficient evidence tending' to prove that the plaintiff’s house was injured by reason of the condition of the rain spout of the defendant and the way the yard of the *691 latter was graded — turning the water from the spout against the plaintiff’s house. The “shoe” or elbow at the bottom of the spout was off. There was some testimony that this condition of the plaintiff’s property had existed for four or five years, but the plaintiff did not ascertain the cause of the injury for sometime after it was first noticed. The evidence shows that Charles E. Smith & Co. rented the house of the appellant on October 16th, 1899, at $20.00 per month. W. F. Mylander, a son of the appellant, testified that it was then rented by the year. In the fall of 1902, A. G. Fiedler bought the business of Charles E. Smith & Co., who were florists, and with the consent of the appellant took possession of the property and became her tenant. He testified distinctly that he was a monthly tenant and that the appellant accepted him as such. W. F. Mylander said, “they consider Fiedler is a yearly tenant and not a monthly tenant”, but, however that may be, there is evidence tending to show that a new tenancy was created with Fielder. Charles E. Smith & Co. had no written lease and the term seem to have been an indefinite one, although Mr. Mylander said they rented by the year. But Fiedler and the appellant entered into an arrangement by which he was accepted as the tenant and after that paid the rent monthly in advance, as Smith & Co. had done, and the exact terms of his tenancy are not material under the view we take of the case.

The plaintiff’s first prayer instructed the jury that if they found that at the time of renting to Fiedler the down-spout and gutter were in such improper and neglected condition as to be a nuisance, or were in such condition that they would in the nature of things become so by their user, and the defendant received the rent from Fielder, then the defendant was liable, if the jury believed the plaintiff’s property was damaged by virtue of such condition, and as a direct consequence thereof. The evidence is not very clear about the actual condition of the down-spout and gutter when Fielder became tenant, but there was some evidence reflecting on it, and at 'any rate there was no special exception to the prayer for the as *692 sumption of any fact or the want of evidence. Sec. 9 of Art. of the Code provides that “no instruction actually given shall be deemed to be defective by reason of any assumption therein of any fact by the said Court * * * unless it appear from the record that an objection thereto for such defect was taken at the trial; nor shall any question arise in the Court of Appeals as to the insufficiency of evidence to support any instruction actually granted, unless it appear that such question was distinctly made to and decided by the Court below.” The defendant’s second prayer did ask the Court to instruct the jury that as the defective condition of the rain-spout and yard in the defendant’s premises is only shown to have existed during a period when said premises were in the possession of one Fiedler, a tenant of the defendant, and as the said defective condition is not shown to have existed when possession of said premises was delivered to Fielder, the plaintiff has not made out her case and the verdict must be for the defendant. There was some evidence tending to show that such condition did exist four of five years before the trial (April, 1905), which was before Fiedler became tenant, and the prayer was therefore properly rejected. The statute just quoted does not apply to rejected prayers, and hence the assumption of a fact would make it defective. The plaintiff’s first prayer was properly granted. Her second was very much to the same effect as the first, being somewhat fuller in the statement of questions submitted, and it will not be necessary to now say anything further about that.

The plaintiff’s fourth prayer was on the measure of damages and was under the circumstances of this case calculated to mislead the jury. It was as follows: “That if the jury find a verdict for the plaintiff under the instructions of the Court, then the plaintiff is entitled to recover such damages as will fairly compensate her for the injuries to her property according to the evide7ice in this case, provided the jury believe the plaintiff has sustained such injury, by reason and as direct consequence of the improper and neglected condition of the downspout and gutter in the defendant’s yard.” Under the evidence *693 some of the injuries complained of were sustained before Fiedler became tenant — while Charles E. Smith & Co. were tenants. The rule of law in this State is that the landlord is not obliged to make repairs during the tenancy, unless he has agreed to do so, and “the common law has always thown the burden of repairs upon the tenant, though it imposes no obligation on him to' make them unless he covenants to do.” Gluck’s case, 81 Md. 326. Of course it may become necessary for the tenant to make the repairs for his own protection, as he is not relieved of paying the rent, unless his landlord has agreed to make the repairs, and the property has become untenantable by reason of his failure or neglect to do so. Under those circumstances one of the tenant’s remedies is to abandon the property and thereby relieve himself from liability for rent: In Gluck’s case as there was no agreement on the part of the landlord to keep the property in repair and the tenant was consequently still liable for rent, the latter was bound to repair for his own protection, and hence we held he was entitled to recover as part of his damages (in the opening of a street by the city of Baltimore) the sum required to rebuild a front wall in the condemnation proceedings, and to restore an elevator which had to be removed. In this case neither the appellant nor the appellee nor Smith & Co.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 A. 1038, 102 Md. 689, 1906 Md. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mylander-v-beimschla-md-1906.