Shindelbeck v. Moon

32 Ohio St. (N.S.) 264
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1877
StatusPublished

This text of 32 Ohio St. (N.S.) 264 (Shindelbeck v. Moon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shindelbeck v. Moon, 32 Ohio St. (N.S.) 264 (Ohio 1877).

Opinion

Wright, J.

The petition and demurrer involve questions relating to the liability of landlord and tenant, lessor and lessee, where a third person has been injured in consequence of some defect in condition of the premises. Moon was the owner of certain property in the village of Defiance, which he had leased to Brooks, who was in possession of and using the same for a post-office. A pipe or gutter attached to the building had become obstructed or stopped up, and the water, instead of running through it, flowed over the roof. This water, falling upon the steps of the post-office, in winter, ice was formed. Coming from the post-office, plaintiff stepped upon this ice, fell, and was hurt. Moon, the landlord, and Brooks, the tenant, were both sued. Brooks was dismissed from the action, and the question to be decided is, is Moon, the landlord, liable upon the statements made in the petition ?

The liabilities arising from the relation of landlord and tenant are these: Liability generally accompanies occupation, and when a landlord leases and parts with the possession, his liabilities are in certain instances devolved upon the tenant.

The principle which runs through cases, determining the responsibility of the one or the other, maybe thus defined r Whoever had control of the premises at the time the cause of injury originated, that person is liable in damages which simply means that the party in fault must respond.

Hence it is that where, at the time of tbe lease, the property is in a ruinous or defective condition, and by reason thereof the injury happens, then the owner or lessee is liable [268]*268generally, though there are cases which make this liability dependent upon the covenants of the lease. And, upon the other hand, when this defective condition arose after the lease, then the tenant is responsible, with, perhaps, exceptions upon covenants. And when there has been a nuisance of continued existence, lessor and lessee may both be liable for damages resulting therefrom. The lessee in actual possession of the premises, if he continues the nuisance after notice of its existence, and notice to abate it; the lessor, if he at first created it and demised the premises with the nuisance upon them, and at the time of the damage done is receiving a benefit therefrom by way of rent or ■otherwise.

In Roswell v. Price, 12 Mod. 685, it is held that if an owner erect a nuisance, for which damages are recovered, and the nuisance is continued in the hands of his lessee, an .action for the continuance of it may be against either. Here the nuisance or original trouble was occasioned by the owner, and he is held responsible, even after the lease. The court say that both may be liable, the landlord for originating, and the tenant for continuing. It is said, in the case, that the erecter of the nuisance can not discharge himself by assigning over, and more especially when he grants over, reserving rent, by which he continues the nuisance, having a recompense for it in such rent.

This case illustrates the idea that control is the criterion of responsibility, for control means that power which occasions and which can prevent. The nuisance was erected, that is, originated, by the owner, who manifestly should, therefore, be responsible for its consequences.

But it will be observed that not only the owner, but the tenant also, is held liable, upon the ground that every continuance of a nuisance is a fresh nuisance. Taylor Land. & Ten., § 175; Vedder v. Vedder, 1 Den. 257; Little Miami R. R. Co. v. Comm’rs Greene Co., 31 Ohio St. 338. This fresh nuisance the tenant might abate, if he saw fit, being in control of the premises, and, for failure in this, h e is responsible.

[269]*269In Todel v. Might, 9 Com. B. (N. S.), 377 (C. J. Scott, N. S.), there was a demurrer to a declaration. Defendant leased to a tenant a lot, on which stood a stack of old chimneys in a ruinous and dangerous condition at the time of the lease, and defendant knew it and so maintained them. The chimneys fell on plaintiff’s house, and defendant was held liable in the declaration.

Earle, J., says, p. 390 : “ It is alleged that the defendant let the houses when the chimneys were known by him to-be ruinous and in danger of falling, and that he kept and maintained them in that state, and thus he was guilty of the wrongful non-repair which led to the damage, and after-the demise the fall appears to have arisen from no fault of the lessee, but by the laws of nature.”

The owner of premises who leases them when they are-in such want of repair or bad condition as to be a nuisance, or when, from the ordinary course of events, they must become so, and receives rent for their use, is liable to a third person for injury happening in consequence of this defective condition or nuisance. In such case the landlord had the control of the property at the time the trouble was occasioned, and he might have removed it.

It is the party who does the wrong who should be made-responsible for the consequences it entails.

But if the nuisance arises solely from the act of the tenant, the landlord can not be held. Owing v. Jones, 9 Md. 108; Staple v. Spring, 10 Mass. 79; Waggoner v. Jermain, 3 Denio, 306; Fish v. Dodge, 4 Denio, 311; House v. Metcalf, 27 Conn. 632; Smith v. Elliot, 9 Barr, 345.

Rich v. Basterfield, 4 Com. B. 783, was a ease much discussed and decided for plaintiff at nisi prius, but unanimously reversed in full court. ' The owner of a house-standing back from the street built a low shop between his house and the street, with a chimney, and rented out the shop. The tenant used the chimney for a fire, and when the wind was from the east or southeast smoke was blown into the plaintiff’s windows, causing him great annoyance. Defendant, the owner, was sued on the ground that he [270]*270■built tbe chimney, which made the nuisance, and was an.swerable for the ordinary use of it.

The court held that the chimney itself was not a nuisance, but it was the fire made by the tenant; that coke might have been used, or he might have abstained from having a fire when the wind was in the wrong direction, and the •owner therefore was not liable. He had no control of the fire.

Upon the other hand, in House v. Metcalf, 27 Conn. 632, an owner had leased a mill situate so near the highway that 'its revolving wheel frightened horses. The owner was held responsible, although it would seem that not the mill itself, but its operations in the hands of the tenant, occasioned the difficulty.

Gandy v. Jubber, 5 Best & Smith, 485: A grate over the sidewalk, long there, had the bars so wide apart that a woman slipped her foot through and lamed herself. The premises were rented at the time from year to year, and the landlord, the heir of the original owner and builder, was held liable, on the ground that the grate was a nuisance in its original construction. Declaration avers that the tenant “ was not under obligation to alter, repair, and keep 'in repair,” and that it had been many years so that one might fall through. The jury found that the grate was a nuisance, “ both from the faultiness of its construction and from want of repair. Crompton, J., says: “ It must be a nuisance in its very nature and essence

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 Ohio St. (N.S.) 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shindelbeck-v-moon-ohio-1877.