Zolezzi v. Bruce-Brown

154 N.E. 535, 243 N.Y. 490, 49 A.L.R. 1414, 1926 N.Y. LEXIS 777
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 16, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 154 N.E. 535 (Zolezzi v. Bruce-Brown) 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
Zolezzi v. Bruce-Brown, 154 N.E. 535, 243 N.Y. 490, 49 A.L.R. 1414, 1926 N.Y. LEXIS 777 (N.Y. 1926).

Opinion

*493 Lehman, J.

On October 26th, 1922, the plaintiff was injured by the fall of a sign which had been attached to a building owned by the defendant Ruth A. Bruce-Brown. In October, 1916, six years before the accident, Mrs. Bruce-Brown had leased to Harry McCanliss “ the third loft, being the fourth story,” of the building for a period of five years commencing February 1st, 1917. After McCanliss entered into possession of the loft, he placed on its exterior wall the sign which fell down and injured the plaintiff several months after the lease from Mrs. Bruce-Brown to McCanliss had expired. On December 19th, 1921, while the sign erected by McCanliss was still in position and the term of the lease to him had not entirely expired, Mrs. Bruce-Brown leased the entire building to Kroll & Horowitz Furniture Co., Inc., for a term of years. Thereupon Kroll & Horowitz Furniture Company subleased to Harry McCanliss the premises which he was *494 then occupying for the term of one year, beginning February 1st, 1922, the date when his earlier lease expired. The accident occurred during the new term. The plaintiff has obtained a judgment entered upon the verdict of a jury for damages against the tenant McCanliss who erected the sign, against Kroll & Horowitz Furniture Company which at the time of the accident was the immediate landlord of McCanliss, and against Mrs. Bruce-Brown who owns the building.

The theory upon which the case was submitted to the jury is that the evidence is sufficient to sustain findings that the sign was negligently erected and maintained by the defendant McCanliss; that the sign so erected created a danger to pedestrians and constituted a nuisance, and that the other defendants by act or omission on their part have become liable for the continued maintenance of the nuisance, though at the time of the accident Mrs. Bruce-Brown," at least, had no control thereof.

We assume that the defendant McCanliss negligently erected the sign. He has not appealed. The Appellate Division has unanimously affirmed the judgment against Kroll & Horowitz Furniture Company. We may not review the evidence to determine whether it is as a matter of law sufficient to sustain the finding of the jury that that defendant has joined in the maintenance of a nuisance, and no exception to the admission or exclusion of evidence or to the charge raises other questions of law as to the correctness of the theory upon which the case was tried or was submitted to the jury, or the judgment was affirmed. The judgment as to it must, therefore, be affirmed. Our review upon the appeal of Mrs. Bruce-Brown is not so limited.

The defendant Bruce-Brown had leased the loft to McCanliss when the sign was erected. While that lease was in existence she leased the entire building, including the loft, to another party. She was not in possession of the loft, and had no control over it, either at the time when *495 the sign was erected, at the time she made the lease to Kroll & Horowitz Furniture Co., Inc., or at the time when it fell. She did not erect the sign. Liability, if any, must, therefore, be predicated upon wrongful act or neglect as owner of the building while she was landlord of McCanliss.

At the time the lease was made to McCanliss, there was no nuisance on the leased premises. While the lease does not expressly include the exterior wall of the fourth story of the building or the right to place a sign thereon, there can be no doubt that the tenant obtained some right or interest in the exterior of the walls which form the inclosure of his loft. Some cases hold that the outer face of the wall is equally with the inner face a part of the premises demised ” (citing cases). (Stahl & Jaeger v. Satenstein, 233 N. Y. 196.) If there be doubt as to whether the lease included the outer surface of the wall, that doubt was settled by the practical construction placed by the parties upon their contract. As between themselves, it is clear that the lease to the tenant included the right to erect signs upon the outer face of the walls inclosing his loft.

The tenant’s right to erect signs which has been granted to him by the landlord is, of course, subject to regulation by appropriate public authorities. Chapter 23, article 16, section 210 of the Code of Ordinances provides such regulation, and to that extent limits the rights of the tenant. It states that “ signs * * * may be placed on the fronts of buildings with the consent of the owner thereof. They shall be securely fastened,” etc. It is said that under this section a duty is placed upon the owner, though he has leased the premises, to see that the signs are in fact securely fastened before he gives his consent, and to see that they are carefully maintained thereafter. We do not so construe its terms. If the city attempted to confer the right upon a stranger to erect a sign on the front of a building without consent or *496 authority of the owner, it would to that extent deprive the owner of his property. The ordinance in question confers no new right to erect a sign. In its first sentence it merely confirms and safeguards the right, which would exist even in the absence of statute or ordinance, to erect a sign upon a building with the consent of the owner. Without consent, erection of any sign would be unlawful. The ordinance constitutes exercise by the municipal authority of the power to regulate the erection of signs which would otherwise be lawful. It applies to a person. who erects a sign with the owner’s consent; it does not expressly or by fair implication impose upon the owner the duty to see that the sign is securely erected or carefully maintained after the consent is given. An owner may lawfully part with control of his property which at that time constitutes no danger to others. The ordinance does not compel him to maintain limited control for the purpose of seeing that no nuisance is thereafter placed upon it. The erection of a sign constitutes no nuisance in itself, and consent to its erection is no authorization to do such act in wrongful manner. The ordinance recognizes the owner’s right to give or withhold consent, and imposes no new duties upon him when he exercises that right. There can be no presumption that under a consent to do an act which is lawful in itself, a tenant will act unlawfully, and the ordinance does not require a consenting owner who has leased all or part of a building to guard against abuse of his consent by a tenant who attaches a sign to the front wall of the loft leased to him. In the present case the sign was erected by the tenant, and was maintained by the tenant. If the tenant acted wrongfully after he received the owner’s consent, the mere fact that the owner gave such consent did not make her a party to that wrong.

Is there evidence that in other respects the defendant owner either took part in the wrong of the tenant or was guilty herself of some dereliction? If the defendant *497

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Bluebook (online)
154 N.E. 535, 243 N.Y. 490, 49 A.L.R. 1414, 1926 N.Y. LEXIS 777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zolezzi-v-bruce-brown-ny-1926.