Rivera v. Selfon Home Repairs & Improvements Co.

439 A.2d 739, 294 Pa. Super. 41, 1982 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3105
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 5, 1982
Docket2145
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 439 A.2d 739 (Rivera v. Selfon Home Repairs & Improvements Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rivera v. Selfon Home Repairs & Improvements Co., 439 A.2d 739, 294 Pa. Super. 41, 1982 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3105 (Pa. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

WICKERSHAM, Judge:

On September 20, 1976 at about 10:00 a.m. appellant, Delia Rivera, stepped onto a wooden landing at the top of a wooden stairway which provided means of ingress and egress to her apartment at 529 Terrace Road, Lancaster, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. She fell through the landing onto the pavement below and sustained serious personal injuries. The owner of the property was the appellee herein, Selfon Home Repairs and Improvements Company (hereinafter Selfon) and Delia Rivera was a tenant at that location. In March of 1978 she filed a complaint in trespass alleging, inter alia, that her fall and consequent injuries were caused by Selfon in failing to properly maintain the residence, failing to provide a satisfactory means of ingress and egress to the apartment and permitting the wooden structure of the stairway and landing to become decayed, rotten and otherwise unstable and in failing to provide a workman to repair this condition despite previous requests to do so. Complaint, paras. 1-7.

On October 16, 1978, Delia Rivera’s case came to trial before the Honorable Paul A. Mueller, Jr. and a jury and the lower court granted defendant’s motion for compulsory non- *43 suit after Delia Rivera rested on liability. A subsequent motion to take off the nonsuit and a companion motion for reconsideration of a motion to amend the complaint were denied on August 11, 1980 with an opinion filed by the Lancaster County Court en banc. 1 On September 8, 1980, judgment was entered on the order of August 11, and this appeal followed. 2

At trial, Delia Rivera and her friend, Mrs. Flora Rivera testified. Flora testified that she accompanied Delia to the office of Selfon where they met Mr. Selfon and discussed the possibility of leasing a property at 529 Terrace Road, Lancaster. After looking at the property, Flora testified they returned to see Mr. Selfon and,

Q. Well, was there any mention about the condition at 529 to Mr. Selfon?
A. Just we mentioned to him the stairs and we also mentioned to him about the condition of the house as far as painting, and he said to us that he was going to send somebody over to take a look at it.

Trial Transcript at 20.

Flora Rivera testified further that:

*44 Q What was next done with respect to lease arrangements for 529 Terrace Avenue or Terrace Road? Did you sign a lease or did Mrs. Rivera sign a lease?
A Well, when we went back to his office, Mr. Selfon’s office,—
Q. Where is that office incidentally?
A. It is in the pawn shop here on West King Street. Q Is that where you met with Mr. Selfon?
A Yes.
Q And did you sign a paper on that day?
A Yes, we signed a lease.
Q And is there a date on there?
A The twenty-third of August of 1976.

Trial Transcript at 21-23.

Flora Rivera also testified as follows:

Q Mrs. Rivera, did you at some time assist Delia Rivera because of a fall that she had at 529?
A Yes, I did.
A It was about 8:00 o’clock in the morning.
Q What day of the week?
A I don’t remember. It was during the week but I can’t remember.
Q Okay.
A And she was home that day because they were going to install her telephone that same day, so somebody had to be home.
I went to take her kids to school but then I call back for a cup of coffee; and when I knocked on the door, nobody answered but I heard a scream from the back, and she was calling me, you know, and crying. I went through the back and I saw her just laying there. I saw what happened and I said, oh, my God, you know, what happened. She said, well, I fell. So I looked up and I saw, you know. *45 the hole and everything broken down. She was just laying there. She couldn’t move.

Trial Transcript at 27-29.

Delia Rivera testified:

A On our way back up I mentioned to Flora that the stairs were kind of shaky and she kidded me about it. She said it was just that I wasn’t use to wood stairs coming from the city; and I said, well, they just don’t seem right, but that was the house that I had decided to rent and we went back to Mr. Self on.
A We went back to Mr. Self on and told him that I had made a decision that I wanted 529. and I asked him then if he would paint for me, and he said no, he had painted the house not too long before that and that I would have to be responsible for paint.
I then also mentioned the stairs and told him that they were kind of shaky ....

Trial Transcript at 47, 48-49.

Delia then testified as follows concerning the accident of September 20, 1976:

THE WITNESS: I stayed in the house; and since by then my girls had dirtied some of the clothes and things, I decided to do a load of wash. Flora’s brother had come in to my washing machine, so I took some clothes downstairs. Then I remembered that I hadn’t emptied—excuse me— my children’s hamper, so I went upstairs again and took their things and started out the door. When I stepped on the landing, it just gave way and it fell away from the house, and I just sank through.
After that, I was found by Flora.
Q Where—or let me ask first—how did you land when you fell through the landing?
A I think on my feet. I went straight down. I remember thinking, oh, my God, my legs, and trying to think of something to grab onto but there wasn’t anything.
*46 Q What was the surface underneath?
A Concrete.
Q When you landed, did you remain standing?
A No, I fell over.
Q How did you fall?
A On my chest.

Trial Transcript at 67.

In Pugh v. Holmes, 486 Pa. 272, 405 A.2d 897 (1979), decided more than a year before the decision of the lower court en banc denying plaintiff’s motion to take off the nonsuit and motion for reconsideration of the motion to amend plaintiff’s complaint, our supreme court adopted an implied warranty of habitability in residential leases. The court said:

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Bluebook (online)
439 A.2d 739, 294 Pa. Super. 41, 1982 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rivera-v-selfon-home-repairs-improvements-co-pasuperct-1982.