Smith v. Preston

71 A. 653, 104 Me. 156
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 22, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 71 A. 653 (Smith v. Preston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Preston, 71 A. 653, 104 Me. 156 (Me. 1908).

Opinion

King, J.

On the first day of February, 1907, between'nine and twelve o’clock in the forenoon, the plaintiff, a lady past eighty years of age, while walking on the sidewalk on the southerly side of Washington Avenue in Portland, fell and received bodily injuries. She claims that the cause of her fall was a spot of ice which had formed there by the freezing of water wrongfully conducted by the defendant from his building upon the sidewalk, and which rendered the walk dangerous. In this action for damages she has obtained a verdict, and the case is here on defendant’s motion to have the verdict set aside as being against the law and evidence, and upon exceptions.

The defendant’s building is two stories high, gable roof, standing in the corner formed by Cumberland Avenue on the west and Washington Avenue on the north, with its end facing the latter avenue, and is so located that its northeast corner adjoins the sidewalk, but its northwest corner is back eight or ten feet therefrom. The building has wooden gutters, the one on the easterly side, at its street end, joining the projecting finish of the gable roof, so that this joint of intersection slightly overhangs the sidewalk.

Attached to the east side of this building, on Washington Avenue, is a one story building of the defendant, adjoining the line of the sidewalk, with its roof sloping back from the street. Both buildings were occupied by tenants, and all repairs were to be made by the defendant.

The plaintiff claimed, and introduced evidence tending to show, that the gutter on the easterly side of the two story building was defective and leaky, and that at its northerly end over the sidewalk there was an opening in the joint through which the water it accumulated was wrongfully discharged upon the walk where it froze forming a dangerous accumulation of ice, that was an obstruction of the walk, and caused her injuries" without fault on her part.

The defendant denied this claim, and testified that the gutter was not defective, that water was not discharged from it upon the [159]*159walk, and that on the morning of the day of the accident he passed over this sidewalk and saw there no accumulation of ice as the plaintiff alleged.

There can be little or no doubt, however, from all the evidence, that there was at the time of the plaintiff’s accident, and had been for some time prior thereto, a defect in the gutter through which water was unnaturally discharged upon the sidewalk causing ice to form thereon abreast the junction of the two buildings.

No one saw the plaintiff fall, and the defendant claims that she failed to prove due care on her part. She was found, with her hip fractured, at the place where the ice was. She says she slipped and fell on the ice. There is nothing in the case suggesting that she had any infirmity on account of which she should have refrained from using the public streets. On the other hand it appears affirmatively that she was accustomed to travel upon the streets, and was active and spry for one of her age.

Her statement as to her conduct at the time was: "I was walking along the sidewalk as I usually do, paying attention to my business.” The jury had a right to understand from that statement that she was "paying attention” to where and how she was walking. That is evidence of due care. Whether or not she did in fact exercise due care was an issue for the jury. That issue they must have decided for the plaintiff, and their decision should control.

It will serve no useful purpose to incorporate here any extended review of the evidence, which is somewhat conflicting. From an examination of the whole case we are of opinion that a jury would be warranted in finding that the sidewalk was obstructed by an accumulation of ice resulting from water artificially collected and discharged upon it by a defective gutter of the defendant’s building, over which he had control as to its physical condition and repair; and that while rightfully using the sidewalk as a traveller, and in the exercise of due care, the plaintiff was injured by that obstruction.

If upon these facts and conditions the action is maintainable then the defendant’s motion for a new trial must be denied.

But, notwithstanding those facts, the defendant contends that he did not create the obstruction by any wrongful act, or cause its [160]*160existence by the neglect of any duty owing by him to the plaintiff; and furthermore that he was a mere landlord, and not the occupant of the building, and that those in occupation as tenants are liable, if any one is liable, for the alleged obstruction.

We have already observed that the jury were warranted in finding as a fact that the building, at least that part of it including the defective gutter, was under the general care of the defendant, and that he had such control of the premises as was necessary to keep them in proper and safe condition. His own testimony established that fact. In answer to the question: "What arrangement, if any, had you made for the repairs of the two-story building?” he said: "Well, I made all repairs. When I was informed any thing was needed, or if I discovered any thing was out of repair, I had it fixed.” He not only retained the right to make repairs, but the liability to keep the building in proper and safe condition continued to rest upon him notwithstanding the letting.

Whenever ap owner is bound to repair his building, and has control of it sufficient for that purpose, he, and not the tenants, is liable to a third person for damages arising from a neglect to repair. Such liability rests upon the elementary principle that the party whose neglect of duty causes the damages is responsible therefor. Kirby v. Boylston Market Association, 14 Gray, 249; Shepley v. Fifty Associates, 101 Mass. 251, 254; and 106 Mass. 194 and 200; Larue v. Farren Hotel Co., 116 Mass. 67.

The same" principle governs in actions between tenant and landlord for damages arising from defects and want of repair of the premises. See Toole v. Beckett, 67 Maine, 544; Simonton v. Loring, 68 Maine, 164; McCarthy v. York County Savings Bank, 74 Maine, 315; Clifford v. Atlantic Cotton Mills, 146 Mass. 47. In all the cases the criterion of liability is, the obligation to maintain and repair with the right of control for that purpose.

As bearing upon the defendant’s liability it is also to be noticed that the duty here neglected was to repair the gutter and maintain it in a reasonably suitable condition to keep the water it collected from the sidewalk, and not merely to keep' the gutter free from such [161]*161obstructions of ice or snow as would be likely to occur from storms and sudden climatic changes in the winter season. The latter duty may rest upon the occupant, although the owner is bound to maintain and repair. But that is not this case. Here the neglect to repair allowed the water to fall upon the walk unnaturally. It was the defendant’s neglect, because the duty to repair rested on him.

Was the defendant’s failure to repair the gutter so that the water it collected should not be discharged unnaturally upon the public way the neglect of a duty he owed to the plaintiff?

The proprietor of land may maintain a structure thereon up to the line of a public way, but he can not thereby unreasonably obstruct such way with impunity.

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Bluebook (online)
71 A. 653, 104 Me. 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-preston-me-1908.