Court Opinion

ID: 3489856
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 21:19:19.256527+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:38:10.202050
License: Public Domain

This action was brought for the use of Michael J. Walsh, the father of Sarah Walsh, for loss of the services of his child, who was killed by reason of the alleged negligence of the appellant and Neptune E. Bowden, in wilfully and knowingly allowing a balcony on a house owned by the appellant, and rented to Bowden, to be in a dangerous condition. Mrs. Smith had owned the house since July, 1893, and some time in 1897 her agent rented it to Mr. Bowden, who continued to hold it, as monthly tenant, until after the accident, which happened on the 20th of August, 1899. She made no agreement to repair it or keep it in repairs. Having a housekeeper in charge, the tenant rented one or more rooms to those applying for them. Walsh rented from the housekeeper, on the 19th of August, 1899, a front room on the second floor, and the next day took his child, Sadie, who was five years and six months old, to the room. There was a back building along which a porch ran from the second story of the front building. Three rooms opened on the porch and there was a stairway leading from the middle of it (between two of the rooms) down to the yard. Mrs. Sheckels, who was an acquaintance of Walsh, occupied the rear room, and in the afternoon of the 20th of August the little girl, with the permission of her father, went to Mrs. Sheckels' room to get some water, which she got and started along the porch towards her father's room. Mr. Scott, who occupied the middle room on the porch, saw her go to Mrs. Sheckels', and just after she passed his window a second time he heard something fall. He then went on to the porch and saw the child lying below on the bricks. The balustrade had several openings in it — the balusters being out — the theory of the plaintiff being that the child fell through the one near Mr. Scott's door. He said that opening was about three feet wide and the child was lying below it and a "picket," as he called it, was lying by the child when he found her. She was killed by the fall. The testimony shows that the balustrade was in a bad condition and had been for some time, some of the witnesses thought it had *Page 528 
been for some years, judging from the appearance and condition of the wood, but that was a conjecture. Mrs. Schekels said, however, it was when she went there in December, 1898, and that it got worse — that the balusters would fall out if you touched them. It was admitted by the plaintiff's witnesses that the floor of the porch was sound. Some question seems to have been raised in the testimony as to the right of Walsh to use the porch, but his own evidence, as well as that of some of the other witnesses, was to the effect that it was used by all the occupants. That was the way, and apparently the only convenient way, to get into the yard, unless they went into the front hall. A number of prayers were passed on by the Court, but under the view we take of the case it will only be necessary to consider the one which was refused, denying the right of the plaintiff to recover at all against the appellant. The case was dismissed by the plaintiff as to Bowden, and a judgment was obtained against the appellant, from which this appeal was taken.
The theory of the appellee is that at the time the property was rented it was unsafe and in a dangerous condition, which the owner knew, or could by the exercise of reasonable diligence have known, and therefore she was responsible to any one lawfully on the premises who was injured by reason of that condition, although the property was in the possession of her tenant when the accident happened. In support of that position he relies uponOwings v. Jones, 9 Md. 108; Albert v. State, 66 Md. 325;State v. Boyce, 73 Md. 469, and other cases of a like character. There is no question about the responsibility tostrangers of a landlord who leases premises which are a nuisance or must become so by their user, and receives rent, whether he is in possession or not, if injury ensue. Nor do we doubt that he may be liable to strangers if he rents his property when it is in such condition as will likely produce injury; and if the property be of a public character he cannot with impunity rent it in an unsafe condition and, if he does, may be required to answer to those who are brought upon it, at the instance of his lessee, for injuries they sustain. Our own cases have determined the liability of the owner in such cases. *Page 529 
The injury complained of in Owings v. Jones was received by falling into a vault, appurtenant to the property of the defendant and built under the pavement of a public street. The boy who was injured was on a public street at the time where he and the public had the right to be, and if the owner leased the premises, with the vault appurtenant to it, which was either a nuisance at the time of the demise or must in the nature of things become so by its user, then he was unquestionably liable and could not protect himself by proving that at the time of the injury it was no longer in his charge. So in Albert v. State,
and State v. Boyce, the same principles are applied to the owners of public wharves. As was said in Albert's case, "A wharf, furnishing the only mode of ingress and egress to a summer resort, where crowds are invited to come, if in an unsafe and dangerous condition is certainly a nuisance of the worst character. It will not do for the owner knowing its condition, or having by the exercise of any reasonable care the means of knowing it, to rent it out and receive rent for it, but escape all liability when the crash comes. He who solicits and invites the public to his resorts, must have them in a reasonable safe condition, and not in a condition to risk the lives and limbs of his visitors." And other cases might be cited such as B. O.R.R. Co. v. Rose, 65 Md. 485; Irvin v. Sprigg, 6 Gill, 200, and Condon v. Sprigg, 78 Md. 330, to illustrate the duty of owners of property to protect the public against injury resulting from nuisances on or appurtenant to their premises when the public has a right to be there. But those cases do not reach the question before us which is: In the absence of fraud or concealment is the landlord of the original tenant responsible for an injury sustained by a subtenant, by reason of the condition of the premises, when rented or afterwards, such as a defective balustrade on a porch?
There is no implied covenant requiring the landlord to make repairs. Gluck v. Mayor, etc., of Baltimore, 81 Md. 326. "There is no implied warranty on a lease of a house, or of land, that it is or shall be reasonably fit for habitation or cultivation. The implied contract relates only to the estate, not *Page 530 
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 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, section 175A, 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; for any injury suffered by him during his occupancy by their defective condition, or even faulty construction, he cannot make the lessor answerable, unless there was misrepresentation, active concealment, or perhaps a total inability on the tenant's part to discover the defect before entering." There are many cases to that effect of which we will mention: Doyle v. R.R. Co., 147 U.S. 413; Moynihan v.Allyn, 162 Mass. 272; Gallagher v. Button (Conn.) 46 At. Rep. 819; Peterson v. Smart, 70 Mo. 34; Burdick v.Cheadle, 26 Ohio St. 393; Purcell v. English, 86 Ind. 34;Brewster v. De Fremery, 33 Cal. 341; Murray v. Albertson,50 N.J.L. 167; Cole v. McKey, 66 Wis. 500; Towne v.Thompson, 68 N.H. 317; Bowe v. Hunking, 135 Mass. 380;Whitmore v. Orono Company, 91 Me. 297; Jaffe v. Harteau,56 N.Y. 398.
The reason of the rule is perfectly apparent. If the lessee knows the condition of the premises and rents it without requiring the owner to repair it, he takes it as he finds it and has no right to complain of injuries sustained on account of its condition. The owner not being compelled to keep it in repair, if the tenant desires to require that of him, he should so bind him by contract. In the absence of that, he must protect himself against dangers which are apparent to him. A building may be perfectly safe and suitable if used for certain purposes, while it may not be for others, and if the tenant has *Page 531 
had opportunity to inspect it before he rents it, the landlord cannot anticipate that he will use it in a way his intelligence and observation ought to tell him not to use it. If Bowden had been injured by reason of a defect such as is complained of here, he would have had no right to recover against the appellant. The defect was as apparent to him as to his landlady and if he, with full knowledge of its condition, entered upon the premises the principle of caveat emptor applies. If that were not so, no landlord would be safe in renting premises out of repair, although the tenant agreed to so accept them. As was said inRobbins v. Jones, 15 C.B.N.S. 240, "fraud apart, there is no law against letting a tumble-down house and the tenant's remedy is upon his contract, if any."
Nor does the plaintiff occupy any better position than Bowden would have done if he had sustained the injury. In Taylor'sLandlord and Tenant, supra, the author follows what we have already quoted by adding "And the subtenant, servant, employee, or even customer of the lessee, is under the same restriction; because entering under the tenant's title, and not by any invitation, express or implied, from the owner, they assume a like risk." This is quoted with approval in Cole v. McKey,supra; Clyne v. Helmes, 61 N.J.L. 358, (39 A. 767.) See alsoTowne v. Thompson, supra; Bowe v. Hunking, supra; Whitmore
v. Orono Co., supra; Robbins v. Jones, supra. In Jaffe v.Harteau, supra, it is said "The defendant, having leased the premises to Van Duzer, incurred the same liability to his subtenants for the safety and sufficiency of the premises for use for the purposes for which they were intended as they were under to him. It is not claimed by the appellant's counsel that the obligation to a subtenant is, in this respect, any greater than that to the lessee."
Walsh was a subtenant. He was not there by invitation of the appellant, express or implied, but was there as a tenant of Bowden. There can be no doubt, under the testimony, that he had the privilege of the use of the back porch, but that cannot help his contention. There are cases in which it is held that when an owner of a house rents rooms in it and reserves *Page 532 
the hallways and porches to be used in common by the tenants, the landlord will be liable for their condition, but that is because he has kept them under his control and no one tenant is under obligation to keep them in repair. But without stopping to determine whether Bowden might, under the circumstances, have been responsible for the defective condition of the balustrade, the appellant had not reserved any part of the premises. She had rented the whole property to Bowden and had not retained control over any part of it. He had been in possession of it for over two years and there is not the slightest evidence to show either that the appellant knew of its dangerous condition or had been called upon or requested to repair it. It is true that some of the plaintiff's witnesses said that from their examination of the wood after the accident they were of the opinion that it had been rotten for years. But there is no evidence that the appellant knew or had any reason to suppose it was in such condition. This accident happened, so far as can be told from the testimony reflecting on that subject, by the child falling through a hole in the balustrade caused by some of the balusters falling out. There is no evidence they were out when the property was originally rented and surely a landlord who rents a house, as this was rented, is not required to examine each month to see whether there are any balusters out of a balustrade or any similar defect in the premises, especially when he is under no legal obligation to make repairs, if he finds any needed. But if she had known the balustrade was thus defective, either when she originally rented or afterwards, she would not have been liable to the tenant or the subtenant, as is shown by the authorities cited above.
If a landlord is to be held responsible for injuries resulting as this did, at the instance of a subtenant who had the same opportunity to know the condition of the premises as any other tenant would, it would be a responsibility that few would care to assume. Walsh had been over the porch the day of the accident and had also lived in the house on a previous occasion — a few months before the child was killed. He therefore *Page 533 
knew, or had the opportunity to know, the condition of the balustrade. Mrs. Smith did not know it, so far as appears from the record, but according to the contention of the appellee she is to be held responsible merely because she is the owner, although the house was not in her possession, but was in that of her tenant's tenants. Bowden himself unquestionably could not have recovered for an accident, but Walsh, who only had the right to be there through Bowden, seeks to do so because he claims to be a third party. If that could be done, then after a landlord has rented his house to a person who took it as he found it, the latter could make him responsible to a half dozen or more persons by simply renting out a room to each, with the use of the halls and porches in common. We do not understand the law to go to that extent. On the contrary, when one goes into possession of premises, or part of it, with the right to use other parts in common with the other tenants, as a subtenant, he occupies no better position against the owner than the original tenant would, for injuries sustained by reason of the defective condition of the premises which was equally apparent to all observers. A few nails and a board or two would have remedied this trouble, and, certainly in the absence of notice to her, the appellant might well have assumed that neither Bowden nor those occupying the rooms would permit the balustrade, or any part of it, to give way or remain away, to the danger of anyone when it could so easily have been fixed, so as to have avoided such an accident as occurred.
Albert's case and others of that kind are wholly different from this. Of course the law will not permit an owner to rent property of a public character where people in large numbers are likely to gather, if he knows or ought to know it is unsafe, and then shelter himself behind a lease. There are a number of cases in which the owners had leased wharves, public halls, piers, or other property of a public nature and were held liable. Some of them, including Albert's case, are cited in those we have referred to. The public are deemed to be invited in such cases by the owners and they cannot receive *Page 534 
rent for such uses and permit their tenants to bring, in large numbers, upon their property those who do not have the opportunity to inspect the property, unless they have exercised due care to see that it is safe. Such a place in bad condition is indeed "a nuisance of the worst character." So with defects and dangerous places in and about public highways where the public have the right to be. But such cases can have no controlling effect in one such as we have before us, and for the reasons we have given the appellant is not liable. As this suit is for the loss of the services of the child, which was under the care and control of her father, the equitable plaintiff, who seeks to recover it is, of course, unnecessary to discuss it from the standpoint of the child. She was only there at the instance of her father and as he, by reason of his relation to the property, as tenant of Bowden, cannot hold the owner responsible for such defect, he cannot recover against her for the death of the child, even if a member of the family of a tenant could sue for injuries sustained when the tenant could not, which has been decided in the negative in Moynihan v. Allyn, supra, and elsewhere.
As we are of the opinion that the appellant was not entitled to recover, the prayer, offered at the end of the case, instructing the jury that there is no evidence legally sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover, and that their verdict must be for the defendant, should have been granted. It is therefore unnecessary to discuss any of the other points raised.
Judgment reversed without awarding a new trial, the equitableplaintiff (Appellee) to pay the costs.
(Decided January 23rd, 1901.) *Page 535