Whitcomb v. Mason

62 A. 749, 102 Md. 275, 1905 Md. LEXIS 163
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 6, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 62 A. 749 (Whitcomb v. Mason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitcomb v. Mason, 62 A. 749, 102 Md. 275, 1905 Md. LEXIS 163 (Md. 1905).

Opinion

*279 Schmucker, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Baltimore City. This suit was instituted to recover damages alleged to have been caused by the fault and negligence of the appellant in preventing the appellee from removing his furniture from an office, rented by him from the appellant, in time to prevent its destruction by fire.

No questions of pleading or admissibility of evidence are raised by the appeal. The only exceptions taken at the trial of the case were to the Court’s rulings on the prayers which will be referred to later on in this opinion.

It appears from the record that at the time of the great fire which occurred in Baltimore City on P'ebruary 7th, 1904, the appellee, Mason, occupied as tenant of the appellant, Whit-comb, a room on the second floor of the office building No. no St. Paul street. Whitcomb, who owned the building, was a non-resident and it was in charge of his resident agent, J. A. Miller. The suit was originally brought against both Whit- ■ comb and Miller but it was dismissed as to the latter at the trial.

The building was about one hundred and twenty-three feet deep. A hallway running through it from front to rear on each floor afforded ingress and egress from the rooms rented as offices and was used in common by their tenants. On one side of this hallway and about thirty feet back from the front of the building there was an elevator and also a stairway affording access to the different floors. There were two entrances to the building from the street, one at the front end of hallway on the first floor and the other at a similar position on the second floor. The entrance on the first floor was on the level of the street and the one on the second floor was reached from the street by a flight of stone steps ascending sidewise on the outside of the building. The office rented by the appellee was on the second floor adjoining the elevator and stairway.

There is evidence in the record tending to prove that at about 3 o’clock P. M. on the day of the fire Mason, having *280 been informed of its threatening character, went from his home at Hampden in the suburbs of the city to his office in Whitcomb’s building and took from it his insurance policies and then went out to see the fire. At that time he found the door to the second-story entrance locked and he went to his office through the door on the first floor which was open. Becoming alarmed at the increasing speed and fury of the'fire he returned in about an hour and a-half, with a wagon, to his office for the purpose of removing its contents to a place of safety. With the aid of several other persons he removed his valuable papers and some of his books by way of the passage and door on the ground floor but when he attempted to take his desk and other large articles of furniture out by that way he found the stairway too cramped to permit them to be carried down to the first floor. He then, with a view of taking those articles out of the building by way of the front door -on the second story, again tried that door but found it still locked and was unable to dpen it. It being Sunday the elevator was not running. About that time he heard that a house in the rear of the building was about to be dynamited in the effort to check the progress of the fire. He thereupon abandoned the attempt to save the residue of his office furniture and it was soon overtaken and destroyed by the fire. ' He did not see Mr. Miller, the landlord’s agent, on the premises at either visit to' his office nor did he know who had locked-the second-story front door.

There was evidence, on the contrary, tending to prove that on the afternoon of the fire the second-story front door of the building was not tightly locked but was held only by a night latch or other fastening that could be easily opened from the inside without a key. In fact the tenant of one of the other rooms in the building testified without contradiction that at about two o’clock on the same afternoon he had opened that door from the inside without difficulty and gone out through it to the platform of the outside steps leading up to it, and stood there ten or fifteen minutes looking at the passers by and then re-entered the building by the same door which he closed after him without locking it:

*281 The amended narr. on which the case was tried, in setting forth the conduct of the defendant complained of by the plaintiff, alleges that the removal of the furniture “was prevented by the fault and negligence of said defendant who notwithstanding and in spite of repeated demands by this plaintiff made by him of the agent of defendant then in possession the said agent barred and maintained barred the necessary means of exit-from said building and office” and by that means alone the plaintiff was unable to remove his furniture and it was destroyed by the fire. There is however no evidence in the record tending to show the making of the alleged demand by the plaintiff upon the defendant’s agent.

The theory of the plaintiff’s case as stated on his brief is that it was the duty of his landlord to secure to him at all times free ingrees and egress to and from his office and the unobstructed use of such passage ways and means of exit as to enable him to remove his goods and save them fiom an impending destruction. The precise question thus arising is one of first presentation but its solution/in a case like the present one, where there is a mere verbal renting with a total absence of any express covenant on the part of the landlord, must be found in a consideration of the implied obligation resting upon a landlord as such in reference to the physical condition of the demised property.

The general doctrine applicable to this subject has recently received careful consideration by us in the case of Smith v. Walsh, 92 Md. 529—30. We then said “There is no implied covenant requiring the landlord to make repairs. Gluck v. Mayor, &c., of Baltimore, 81 Md. 326. ‘There is no implied warranty on a lease of a house or land that it shall be reasonably fit for habitation or cultivation. The implied contract relates only to the estate not to the condition of the property. When a lease contains no express contract of warranty that the property is or shall be fit for the purpose for which it may be rented there is no implied warranty to that effect, and in case the property falls down in consequence of some inherent defect the lessor is not bound to repair and yet the *282 lessee will be compelled to pay the rent. Hess v. Newcomer, 7 Md. 337. After fully recognizing the landlord’s liability to third persons not claiming under the tenant it is said in Taylor on Landlord and Tenant, sec. 175 A, that the lessor’s liability to the lessee is however much more restricted, as the former does not warrant the condition of the premises and the tenant, because he can inspect them, assumes the risk of their state.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 A. 749, 102 Md. 275, 1905 Md. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitcomb-v-mason-md-1905.