Reynolds v. Land Mortgage & Title Co.

159 A. 282, 114 Conn. 447, 1932 Conn. LEXIS 48
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 8, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 159 A. 282 (Reynolds v. Land Mortgage & Title Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reynolds v. Land Mortgage & Title Co., 159 A. 282, 114 Conn. 447, 1932 Conn. LEXIS 48 (Colo. 1932).

Opinion

*449 Haines, J.

The plaintiff with her husband and children were tenants from month to month of the upper apartment of a two-tenement house on Preston Street in Hartford owned by the defendant. On the southwest corner of the house was an open verandah. In the middle of the south side of the verandah which was in the possession and exclusive control of' the plaintiff tenant, was a post carrying the verandah railing and extending and attached to the roof. On the outside of this post was a pulley which carried a clothes line to a tree in the yard. The roof of the verandah was of tin and around the outer edges of the roof was a tin gutter designed to drain off the water from the roof. This roof with gutter was in the exclusive possession and control of the defendant landlord, was a part of the main roof of the house and a part of the drainage system for the entire building. This gutter was designed to care for the water from the entire southwest portion of the house. On the morning of September 1st, 1930, about eleven o’clock, the plaintiff went upon the verandah to hang out a washing. While so employed and in pushing out the line with clothes upon it, the post gave way, precipitating the plaintiff to the sidewalk below, causing her serious injuries. The plaintiff claimed that the defendant was negligent in failing to repair the roof and gutter; that a hole in the latter allowed the water draining from the roof to run through onto the top of the post and down its sides, rotting it out at both ends and resulting in its collapse as stated.

The assignments of error relate to the denial of the motion to set aside the verdict, motion in arrest of judgment, and the refusal of the court to direct a verdict for the defendant; in charging and in failing to charge upon certain features of the case; in certain rulings on evidence; in refusing to strike out the *450 testimony of two witnesses, and in failing to correct the finding in certain particulars.

The complaint was predicated on the negligence of the defendant in permitting a defective roof drainage system to be out of repair, causing the rotting and weakening of the post which gave way precipitating the plaintiff to the ground and causing the injuries from which she suffered. By amendments the plaintiff set up another cause of action in the failure of the defendant to repair this roof after promising to do so. The plaintiff called her husband who testified, over the objection of the defendant, that a man named Delaney had, as agent of the defendant, made certain promises to repair. The record shows this second cause of action was afterward abandoned, and the court charged the jury that there was no evidence for them.to consider upon this claim, but they were to consider the cause of action alleged in the complaint itself. This renders it unnecessary to make further reference to the testimony of the plaintiff’s husband on this point. The plaintiff called two witnesses, Kramer and Williams, a sheet metal worker and an engineer, respectively. The former was a man of forty-five years experience in roof and tin work who was permitted to testify to conditions he found on this roof and in the gutter some months after the plaintiff’s fall, and his conclusions as an expert as to the action of the elements and the results to such roof and gutter, and the cause of the condition of the gutter and of a piece of tin which he took therefrom and which was admitted in evidence. He was also allowed to testify regarding the condition and effect of this flow of water upon a post which had been substituted some time before for the one which had broken off and caused the plaintiff to fall. Williams, the engineer, described the conditions he found about two months after the *451 fall of the plaintiff. It appears from the record that counsel did not seriously claim that there had been a material change in conditions upon the roof prior to these examinations, but in any event, the admission of the evidence of these two witnesses was within the discretion of the court, any proper objection thereto going rather to its weight than to its admissibility. State v. Leopold, 110 Conn. 55, 66, 147 Atl. 118; Banach v. Bohinski, 107 Conn. 156, 158, 139 Atl. 688; State v. Saxon, 87 Conn. 5, 8, 86 Atl. 590; Barry v. McCollom, 81 Conn. 293, 299, 70 Atl. 1035. The specific objection to the admission of the piece of tin was not well taken. Testimony as to the fact and effect of a leakage of water upon the new post, was properly admitted. The fact and nature of the leakage was not affected by the further fact that the post had been substituted for the original one.

The defendant excepts to the statements in the charge as to the duty of the defendant to “inspect” the roof and gutter, insisting that the jury were in effect directed that the defendant was under two coequal duties (1) to inspect and (2) to repair, and that a failure to perform either was negligence. Counsel correctly draws the distinction which we explained in Vinci v. O’Neill, 103 Conn. 647, at page 656, 131 Atl. 408: “It is often said that a landlord is bound to exercise a reasonable supervision over the portions of apartment buildings, used in common by the tenants, to see that they are in proper repair. The primary duty of the landlord is to use reasonable care to see that the premises are kept reasonably safe, and his liability can only arise out of a failure in that duty. Reardon v. Shimelman, 102 Conn. 383, 386, 128 Atl. 705. To give rise to it, however, it must appear that he either knew of a defect or was chargeable with notice of it, because, had he exercised a reasonable *452 inspection of the premises, he would have known of it. Reardon v. Shimelman, p. 389. In this sense only-can it be truly said that the landlord is under a duty to inspect the premises, and a failure to inspect them cannot give rise in itself to a liability for injuries resulting from a defective condition.” We added, however, that “evidence as to an inspection of the premises by him has its place in the case as bearing upon the issue of actual knowledge of their condition.” In the present case, the defendant claimed to have had no actual knowledge of the defective condition of this roof and gutter. Ignorance of the condition is not in itself a legal excuse, and if want of actual knowledge was the result of its own negligence, knowledge will be imputed. Lindsey v. Leighton, 150 Mass. 285, 288, 22 N. E. 901; 2 Underhill, Landlord & Tenant, p. 805, § 488; 16 R. C. L. p. 1042, § 561; Vinci v. O’Neill, 103 Conn. 647, 657, 131 Atl. 407. If the defendant failed to keep the roof and gutter in reasonable repair for the reason that it did not know of the rotten condition of the gutter, and if the evidence showed that the defendant failed to make a reasonable inspection of the premises and that such inspection would have disclosed that condition, then knowledge of the condition will be imputed to him because of his failure to make that inspection.

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Bluebook (online)
159 A. 282, 114 Conn. 447, 1932 Conn. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-v-land-mortgage-title-co-conn-1932.