Rankin v. Elizabeth Kountze Real Estate Co.

158 N.W. 378, 100 Neb. 69, 1916 Neb. LEXIS 126
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1916
DocketNo. 18846
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 158 N.W. 378 (Rankin v. Elizabeth Kountze Real Estate Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rankin v. Elizabeth Kountze Real Estate Co., 158 N.W. 378, 100 Neb. 69, 1916 Neb. LEXIS 126 (Neb. 1916).

Opinion

Hamer, J.

This is an appeal from the judgment of the district court for Douglas county. The plaintiff and appellee, Prances A. Rankin, leased from the defendant, the Elizabeth Kountze Real Estate Company, a corporation,, a certain apartment in a building containing six apartments. The apartment which she rented was on the first floor and on the south side of the building. On the north side of the same floor was another apartment. Between the two apartments was a hall extending east and west. It was a common hallway for the use of the two [71]*71apartments, and led to a toilet room which was also for the nse of the occupants of both .apartments. There was no direct connection with the toilet room from either of these two apartments. Access to the toilet room from the apartment leased by the plaintiff was through a door which led from the kitchen into the hall. The lease was obtained by the plaintiff from the defendant through its agent, Payne & Slater Company. It was an oral lease and included the use of the hall and toilet room. As a part of the terms of said lease, the defendant, through one Porter, acting on behalf • of Payne & Slater Company, agreed with the plaintiff to .put said premises in repair and in good tenantable condition, and to keep the same in such repair during the term of the lease. On the 1st day of January, 1911, the plaintiff moved into said apartment. About 9 o’clock in the evening of the same day, and after having removed her shoes, she- started to go to the toilet room through the door communicating from the kitchen of said apartment with the said hall. In doing so she stepped with her left foot on the threshold of the door. She had only just moved in and was not familiar with the premises. This threshold had been repaired by placing a board lengthwise over the same and nailing it fast to the original threshold, which was worn aAvay in the central part, leaving a concave space which the board covered. This board was elastic and springy, and there was no support under its center, and the board would go down as pressure was placed upon it and would spring back again when the pressure was removed. The nail used to repair said threshold had been driven through said board near the center and went down into the threshold and the floor which was underneath said board. The head of the nail was broken off so that it left a sharp point on the upper end of the nail, and when the weight of a person was placed upon said board the board would spring downward and then, coming back, would cause the nail to work up and down through the hole in the board and to extend above its surface. This condition existed at the [72]*72time the plaintiff rented the apartment. It was not known to the plaintiff at the time that she moved into the apartment nor was it known to her at any time until she received the injury. On the evening when she moved into the apartment, the plaintiff stepped upon this board, which was a part of the threshold, and when she did so the nail came up above the surface of the board and the point thereof ran into the plaintiff’s heel the distance of about a quarter of an inch. The defendant had not advised any person of the condition of said threshold prior to the injury received by the plaintiff, but negligently and carelessly permitted the dangerous condition of said threshold to remain, and neglected to put the same in repair or in a safe condition^ and wholly failed and neglected to notify the plaintiff of the condition of said threshold. The plaintiff- testified that she saw Mr. Porter,- an employee of of Payne & Slater Company, and asked him if he would put the place in good repair so that it would be fit to live in, and he said that he would fix everything- up in good repair for her. He also stated that he would keep it fixed up: He fixed some boards in the floor and papered and painted two rooms. There was a janitor in this-building-named Norlen. He was under instructions to make ordinary repairs. He was to receive his rent free. He put the board over the threshold through which the nail worked’ that injured the plaintiff. He made ordinary repairs without submitting the matter to anybody. Norlen testified that he moved out of the apartment into which Mrs.' Rankin moved, and went down into the basement, which had formerly been occupied by Mrs. Rankin. They appear to have exchanged apartments late in the afternoon of the same day. He said that, as far as he knew, there was a carpenter there every spring to set up- the screens and do a little, repairing. Norlen seems to have done whatever- repairing was necessary to be done, at least he so testified. “Q. In the threshold leading from the kitchen to the hall there was a board placed on the original threshold. Tell the jury who put that board on there. [73]*73A. I put one board on there myself.” Later Norlen testified that he put the board along the threshold shortly after he moved in, and that the board was there until he moved out, and that that was the time when Mrs. Rankin moved out of the basement and moved upstairs into the apartment occupied until that time by Norlen. He further testified that there was a big space, and he put the board there because the cold weather bngan, perhaps in November. It was a strip of board which rested on the floor or threshold, he could not say which. “Q. How far did that extend? Did it go clear across the door? A. Clear across, from one jamb to the other. Q. Did that piece that you put down rest on the floor clear across? A. It rested on the floor or threshold, I could not say which. I do not remember which way I put it. * * * Q. Did it extend above the bottom of the door? A. In one side-it did, at one corner of the door. The door is kind of sagged; the door was not level. It was open underneath in one corner about an inch space, and on that corner it was flush with the threshold. Q. Where this fitted up against the jamb, was the' end sawed off square? A. Yes, sir. Q. And extended the full width of the — from jamb to jamb? A. Yes, sir. Q. And how did you fasten that down, Mr. Norlen? A. With nails.”

Norlen put this dangerous board with the concealed nail in it over the threshold. The threshold, when repaired, was not such a thing as a competent carpenter would have constructed. Norlen knew, or should have known, what he had there. He was in the apartment a year and’ two months after he repaired the threshold. Norlen testified that he could not say whether the board over the threshold was in a condition to move up and down if any-body stepped on it, when he was questioned he said: “I could not say. I never noticed it. I did not pay any attention to it.” This answer was somewhat evasive. The jury saw the witness and heard what he said, and they were in a position to judge understandingly about his' testimony. When Norlen, as the servant of the owner [74]*74of the property, drove the nail through the hoard which he placed over the cavity in the threshold, so that it went down through the hoard and into the solid body of the threshold, leaving the upper part of the nail so that the board would play up and down upon it, exposing the sharp end of the nail to the danger and risk of injury to any one stepping upon the threshold, he knew, or should have known, that the strange and. unusual thing which he constructed was dangerous, and that the threshold after he undertook to repair it was uncouth and a wicked sort of trap full of threatening destruction to any one who might step upon it. The danger was concealed because the nail was invisible. It only protruded when the board was pressed upon, and then it rose above the surface.

Mr.

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Related

Rankin v. Elizabeth Kountze Real Estate Co.
162 N.W. 531 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
158 N.W. 378, 100 Neb. 69, 1916 Neb. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rankin-v-elizabeth-kountze-real-estate-co-neb-1916.