Lipsitz v. Schechter

Annotate this Case

377 Mich. 685 (1966)

142 N.W.2d 1

LIPSITZ v. SCHECHTER.

Calendar No. 15, Docket No. 51,254.

Supreme Court of Michigan.

Decided May 10, 1966.

Charles Rubinoff, for plaintiff.

Ward, Plunkett, Cooney, Rutt & Peacock (John D. Peacock and Charles T. McGorisk, of counsel), for defendants.

ADAMS, J.

On the afternoon of June 28, 1962, plaintiff, a 72-year-old practical nurse, started to *687 take her 84-year-old employer for a walk. They left defendants' 4-story apartment building by a commonly used rear exit.

As to what then happened, Mary Watson, a next-door resident, testified:

"I saw this screen window falling. And this lady was coming out with her companion, and I screamed, but they didn't hear me because they didn't know why I was screaming. I just looked up and screamed, because I saw the screen was falling and that they was coming out, it was coming down so fast that they wouldn't have had time to really get out of the way of the screen."

Plaintiff was struck by the screen, suffering serious injuries.

I

Leave was granted to appeal from decision of the Court of Appeals, Lipsitz v. Schechter, 1 Mich App 137, reversing a jury verdict for plaintiff. The first question is the nature of the duty owed by defendants to plaintiff. At common law, a landlord's duty depends upon the facts and circumstances of each case. The element of control is of prime importance. Huey v. Barton, 328 Mich 584, 588; 52 CJS, Landlord and Tenant, § 427, p 100. The common-law duty is predicated upon the concept that a lease is equivalent to a sale. The lessor, absent agreement to the contrary, surrenders possession and holds only a reversionary interest. Under such circumstances, he is under no obligation to look after or keep in repair premises over which he has no control. Prosser, Torts (3d ed), § 63, pp 411, 412; Harkrider, Tort Liability of a Landlord, 26 Mich L Rev 260, 383.

An exception to the general lack of obligation is that a landlord has a duty to keep in safe condition *688 any portion of a building under his control. Butler v. Watson, 193 Mich 322, 328 (16 NCCA 1013); Annotation, Landlord's liability for injury or death due to defects in exterior stairs, passageways, areas, or structures used in common by tenants, 26 ALR2d 468, 531. The duty extends to a tenant's invitees, such as plaintiff. Siegel v. Detroit City Ice & Fuel Company, 324 Mich 205, 214, 215.

In this case, injury occurred on a part of the premises used by all tenants. The trial judge, on motion for directed verdict, held that the duty to keep the area in safe condition included the duty to see that objects attached to the building did not fall. Defendants have cited the text to 52 CJS, Landlord and Tenant, § 427, p 100, to support their contention that the landlord's duty does not extend this far. The cited cases involve fixtures attached by the tenant to the exterior of the building or flowerpots and other items left by the tenant on a window ledge.

No act of a tenant is involved here. Plaintiff alleged control of the window screens by defendants. Defendants admitted they secured the screens to the building. Their janitor occasionally removed the screens to wash the windows. There was evidence of control over the area in which the screen fell and also of control over the screen. Consequently, we need only decide whether there was a duty to plaintiff with regard to the screen.

Cases dealing with this question are collected in Annotation, Landlord's liability, et cetera, supra, 531, 602. In general, where control is found, the landlord is held liable for breach of his duty to exercise reasonable care to keep the premises in safe condition. One case in which the landlord was held liable involved a tenant who was injured by a screen that fell because of a defective hook fastening of *689 which the owner had notice. Howe v. Howe, 266 App Div 799 (42 NYS2d 15), leave to appeal denied, 266 App Div 874 (43 NYS2d 636).

Detzur v. Stroh Brewing Co., 119 Mich 282 (44 LRA 500, 5 Am Neg Rep 371), is a relevant Michigan case, minus the landlord-tenant relationship. Plaintiff was injured by a piece of glass that fell from defendant's building. There was testimony that a window had been broken for some weeks prior to the accident. The Court found the owner liable, implying a duty to remedy defects that should have come to its attention.

In the instant case, the landlords had a duty to exercise reasonable care to remedy defects that might constitute a hazard in those areas of the building under their control which had, or should have, come to their attention.

II

The parties stipulated that the question of notice should be limited to whether there was constructive notice. Consequently, the issue was not one of actual notice but whether reasonable supervision would have given notice of a defect. Rhoades v. Seidel, 139 Mich 608, 609 (18 Am Neg Rep 135); Annis v. Britton, 232 Mich 291, 294.

Subdivision III of this opinion details testimony relevant to breach of the landlord's duty. Much of that testimony is relevant to the question of constructive notice. It is reasonably foreseeable that, if a screen is placed in a window and left there indefinitely, sooner or later it is likely to fall. A jury could find that the defendants would have had notice of a defective condition of the screen if there had been reasonable supervision.

*690 III

The defendants' final argument is that:

"There was no evidence introduced to make out a factual question for the jury as to defendants' negligence being the proximate cause of this accident."

In reversing the trial judge, the Court of Appeals relied heavily upon this point, noting that proof of an accident alone is insufficient to establish negligence. The Court of Appeals opinion stated:

"There is no testimony in the record before us that would indicate any defective condition existing in the screen which struck the plaintiff." Lipsitz v. Schechter, supra, p 140.

We have lately considered the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur in Gadde v. Michigan Consolidated Gas Company, 377 Mich 117. The question here, as in that case, is whether, in the light of all of the evidence circumstantial, direct, or whatsoever it may be, the plaintiff has produced sufficient evidence from which a jury might make a finding of negligence.

In Burghardt v. Detroit United Railway, 206 Mich 545, 548 (5 ALR 1333), where plaintiff was injured by a trolley pole that had loosened in its socket and fell upon him, Justice FELLOWS said:

"It was patent that if the pole was properly secured it would not have fallen from the socket. It is equally patent that a proper inspection would readily disclose whether or not it was securely fastened. The defect, if one existed, was not a latent one. * * *

"Under the circumstances disclosed by this record, a prima facie case was made for the jury to determine, from the unexplained falling of the trolley pole, which admittedly would not have fallen had *691 it been properly secured, and where an inspection would readily have disclosed any defects in it, from the circumstances of the pole falling when the car was moving at a slow rate of speed, from all the surrounding circumstances, the question of negligence on the part of the defendant company, and that the court could not say as a matter of law that the plaintiff's proofs failed to make this question one of fact."

In Barnowsky v. Helson, 89 Mich 523, 526, 527 (15 LRA 33), where the roof of a building suddenly gave way and fell, the Court said:

"This roof not properly supported would fall as a natural result of the laws of gravitation, but if properly braced there would be no reason for its falling from that cause, and it would not fall from any other cause without the interposition of the elements or some human agency. Therefore, without any other showing than that it suddenly gave way, slipped or tipped to one side, and fell, the presumption is almost conclusive that it fell because it was not sufficiently braced or stayed. The defendant made no showing to explain why it fell, and the case should have been submitted upon the plaintiff's proof."

See, also, Detzur v. Stroh Brewing Co., supra, 284, 285.

In this case it seems equally evident that the screen, if it had been properly secured, would not have fallen. The trial judge noted that the angle at which the screen fell would be consistent with a theory that the fastenings gave way. The testimony of Mary Watson was that for 10-1/2 years the screens were never taken down. Plaintiff testified that during the two years she lived in the building the screens were never taken off except when the windows were washed, that the screens were dilapidated, that they were so worn and ill-fitting it was *692 necessary for her to use a rolled-up newspaper to keep out flies in the summer and snow in the winter. She never saw the screens painted or repaired. There was testimony going to general neglect of the building and failure to make needed repairs. All of this testimony would tend to indicate that the fastenings loosened with age. The dwellers in the apartment from whose window the screen fell were not home at the time, eliminating them as a possible reason for it falling.

There was a factual issue from which a jury might infer that the screen fell because of failure of the landlords to inspect and maintain it in good repair. The trial judge did not err in denying the motions for directed verdict and for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed. The judgment of the trial court is affirmed. Costs to plaintiff.

T.M. KAVANAGH, C.J., and DETHMERS, KELLY, SOURIS, and O'HARA, JJ., concurred with ADAMS, J.

BLACK and SMITH, JJ., concurred in result.

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