Sterger v. . Van Sicklen

30 N.E. 987, 132 N.Y. 499, 44 N.Y. St. Rep. 863, 87 Sickels 499, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1221
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 3, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 30 N.E. 987 (Sterger v. . Van Sicklen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sterger v. . Van Sicklen, 30 N.E. 987, 132 N.Y. 499, 44 N.Y. St. Rep. 863, 87 Sickels 499, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1221 (N.Y. 1892).

Opinion

Parker, J.

We are of the opinion that the evidence does not permit a recovery.

27o contractural relation exists between the plaintiff and defendant. The covenant of the landlord to repair does not inure to the benefit of a stranger sustaining injury because of its breach. (Odell v. Solomon, 99 N. Y. 635.)

But when the occasion of the injury constitutes a nuisance as to the party complaining, then a landlord may be charger able in damages on the ground that he maintains a nuisance, where the contract of letting contains a covenant authorizing him to re-enter for the purpose of making repairs. (Ahern v. Steele, 115 N. Y. 203.)

*502 We are thus brought to the question whether the decayed steps in the rear of defendant’s premises leading from the ground to a stoop constituted a nuisance as to the plaintiff, who occupied an adjoining house. If so, the defendant, by reason of his covenant to repair, may be responsible for the injury occasioned to the plaintiff while walking down them.

This inqury admits of but one answer and ■ does not seem to be worthy of the citation of authority, but it may not be out of place to refer to the cases cited by the appellant.

It may be observed in passing that the owner may ordinarily exercise such dominion over and make such use of his real estate as he chooses, provided the rights of others are not thereby violated.

Mo right of the plaintiff was violated. The enjoyment of the premises occupied by her was not interfered with. Had she remained on them the injury would not have occurred. But she chose to go on private property and up or down back steps, over which she had no authority and as to which she had acquired no sucli interest by contract, or otherwise, as would have entitled her to demand as a right that the so-called nuisance be abated. As to her it was not a nuisance, because it did not invade either her property or personal rights. (Murphy v. City of Brooklyn, 98 N. Y. 642.)

Appellant cites Timlin v. Standard Oil Company (126 M. Y. 514), where it is held that if an owner lease premises without abating an existing nuisance, he is liable to respond in damages for an injury resulting therefrom. But that case has no application here. The nuisance complained of was dangerous to the public and the adjoining owner. The wall of a building was so out of repair that it fell over upon the tracks of a railroad company, killing plaintiff’s intestate while engaged in repairing the track,

In Beck v. Carter (68 N. Y. 283), the owner made an excavation on his own land, but so near to the highway as to render travel thereon dangerous and failed to guard it, and the instruction of the trial court to the jury that the excavation was a nuisance if made in the highway, or so near it that a *503 person exercising ordinary care was liable to fall into it, was sustained. The court holding that the circumstances of that case imposed a duty on the defendant to protect the excavation.

It appeared that the excavation had been made in a place long used by the public, and the character of the user was thus described by the court: “ It Avas not the case of a bare permission by the owner to cross his land adjoining a public street. The land had, by use long continued, been made, for the time being, a public place and part of the highway.”

While the court held that the situation presented by the evidence supported the judgment, it did not fail to emphasize the general rule that the owner of property has the right to put his property to such use as he chooses, “ and, in the absence of special circumstances, if a person traveling on a highway deAuates therefrom and falls into a pit or excavation on the adjacent land, the owner is not responsible for the resulting injury.”

There are cases where the use to which an OAvner of prop-, erty puts it is of such a public character that he is bound to observe reasonable care in keeping it in such a condition as to save, harmless, those who are invited to come on to it for the benefit and profit of the owner. Cases of this kind are considered by this court in Clancy v. Byrne (56 N. Y. 129). A drayman, in the ordinary course of his business, drove a horse upon Pier No. 34, North river, and a rotten plank giving way, the horse fell through and was killed. In the opinion by Forger, J., it is said that the occupant is liable for an injury to the property of a person lawfully upon it therewith. This is not put upon the ground that the south half of the pier was a public place or highway. It Avas private property to a certain degree, though held as such for public objects. * * " By the use to which it was put by the occupant, from which a profit to him Avas directly or indirectly derived, and which persons of the calling of plaintiff aided, there Avas a license and an invitation given to the plaintiff to come and go on this pier in the following of his employment” * * * and thus was imposed on lfim the duty of taking care, so long as *504 it was thus kept open, that those who had a lawful right to go there could do so without danger to their property.”

Swords v. Edgar (59 N. Y. 28) was a case of injury by a defective pier, and the court said, though the pier be private property, and though it be granted that the owner or occupant thereof might at any time close it and refuse entrance-upon it .to any and all persons, yet so long as it was kept open to that portion of the public of which the intestate was one, for the profit of defendant’s lessees, there was upon such lessees, primarily, the duty of taking care so long as it was thus kept open, that those who had lawful right to go there, could do so without incurring danger to their persons.”

But a further consideration of cases is neither needful nor useful. No case has been found, nor do I think can be, which supports the contention that, as to this plaintiff, the decayed back stairs of a private residence, under the circumstances proven, constituted a nuisance. " :'

As there is no injury, in a legal sense, which can give a right of action, unless it is occasioned by a violation of some duty owing to the injured, there remains for consideration but one other ground on which it is claimed that defendant’s liability can be predicated.

It is urged that a recovery can be supported because the defendant negligently permitted the stairs to remain in an unsafe condition. The question is, therefore, presented: Did the defendant’s duty require the exercise of any care to protect the plaintiff while on the premises ?

The fact that a landlord leases premises, with a condition that he may re-enter for the purpose of making repairs, does •not enlarge his responsibility as to third persons, or burden him with the duty as to them of observing any greater degree of care than would be required were he in possession.

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Bluebook (online)
30 N.E. 987, 132 N.Y. 499, 44 N.Y. St. Rep. 863, 87 Sickels 499, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sterger-v-van-sicklen-ny-1892.