Court Opinion

ID: 5417792
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-08 16:21:28.111129+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:31:05.978397
License: Public Domain

Lydon, J.
Plaintiffs sue to recover the rent of the basement of premises 103 East One Hundred and Ninth street for the month of October, 1920, to wit, $50. Defendants denied the indebtedness and set up a counterclaim for $508 for damages to defendants’ property.
*248The jury found a verdict for the defendants in the sum of $204, which is apparently one-half of the counterclaim less the amount of the rent. After the verdict, on motion of plaintiffs’ counsel, the court set the verdict aside on the ground that defendants were guilty of contributory negligence in leaving their goods in the cellar with knowledge of the fact that on a .previous occar sion their merchandise had been damaged by water from a broken leader.
In the rear of said basement there is a window which opens into an airshaft, the bottom of the shaft being on a level with the lower part of the window. The house leader was affixed to the rear wall, and was in the airshaft. In December, 1919, there was a very heavy rainstorm and the broken leader permitted the rain to come into the shaft and flow into the cellar and damage defendants’ merchandise, consisting of paper goods. There were no shelves and the merchandise was kept on the floor. After the December, 1919, storm, the defendants spoke to plaintiffs and their agents several times about repairing the broken leader, and they promised to do so. The defendants also, after that experience in December, obtained numerous boxes about one foot in height which they placed upon the floor, and thereafter placed their goods on these boxes. In August, 1920, another very heavy rain fell, and the broken leader, which had never been repaired, again permitted the water to flow into the cellar to a depth of over one foot, or higher than the boxes, and the defendants’ merchandise was damaged.
The jury decided that the defendants were not negligent in keeping their merchandise in the cellar, and I do not see what other conclusion they could have reached. To be sure, the defendants knew that the leader had not been repaired and that there was danger of another flow of water into the basement, but the defendants took the precaution to provide boxes one foot high on which to place their merchandise, and they could not be expected to do more. The tenants did what they thought was reasonable and proper under the circumstances. Certainly the tenants were not expected to adopt such methods as would safeguard their merchandise under all circumstances and against all possible contingencies. The jury found that the tenants had acted as reasonable and prudent men in the care of their merchandise, and the evidence warranted that finding. The house leader was an appurtenance to the demised premises which remained under the charge and control of the landlords and it was their duty to keep it in repair. Ample notice of the defective leader had been given, and sufficient time elapsed to have enabled the landlords to have *249the leader repaired before the last overflow which damaged the defendants’ goods. . The landlords having failed after due notice to make the necessary repairs, they are liable for any damage suffered by the tenants resulting from a-failure of such duty to repair. Levine v. Baldwin, 87 App. Div. 150.
Respondents claim that the verdict should not stand in any event because the trial justice allowed evidence of the fact that repairs were made to the leader after the accident. This was an error, but I think it was harmless and had no effect on the result because the photographs in evidence showed the defective condition of the leader at the time of the damage, and also in the previous December.
Order reversed, with thirty dollars costs, and judgment reinstated.
Bijur and McCook, JJ., concur.
Order reversed.