Plaintiff was defendant’s tenant in one of his dwelling houses and claims that she suffered personal injury on the premises by falling on one of the board walks in the yard, which he had promised to repair. She brought this action for damages and recovered judgment in the circuit court.
The evidence in plaintiffs behalf tended to prove that her husband rented tbe bouse from ■ defendant, but while they were occupying it they became estranged and separated and that in consideration of defendants promise to repair tbe walk, sbe agreed to remain as bis tenant at tbe rental her husband bad been paying. That be failed to repair tbe walk, although frequently reminded and requested to do so. That finally, sbe broke through a defective board and fell whereby sbe was injured.
If one merely hires anotbers premises, there being no fraud or deception and goes into tbe exclusive possession, be takes them caveat emptor without warranty. Tbe rent be agrees to pay is supposed to be rated according to tbe kind of habitation be gets. If there is an agreement that tbe landlord will repair tbe premises and be breaches tbe contract, be is liable on tbe contract to tbe tenant in damages. But in tbe absence of a contract, be is under no obligation to repair and therefore is not liable in tort for negligence. Tbis has been tbe rule in tbis State, beginning at an early day and continuing to tbe present time. [Via v. Weld, 17 Mo. 232; Morse v. Maddox, Ibid. 569; Peterson v. Smart, 70 Mo. 34; Ward v. Fagin, 101 Mo. 669; Glenn v. Hill, 210 Mo. 291; Andrus v. Bradley Alderson Co., 117 Mo. App. 322, 325; Coats v. Merriweather, 144 Mo. App. 89, 91; Roberts v. Cottey, 100 Mo. App. 530.]
It is supported by the highest authority in other jurisdictions. [Tuttle v. Gilbert Mfg. Co., 145 Mass.
If the landlord contracts to make repairs and neg-. ligently fails to do so, he is liable in damages for breaching the contract; but this does not include liability and damages for personal injury received by reason of such unrepaired defects, for they are too remote. [Authorities supra.]
He is not liable in tort for negligence. The sum of his liability is governed by his contract. For he only becomes liable by reason of his contract, therefore the contract determines its extent. Only being liable by reason of his contract, there is no duty resting upon him, except under the contract; his relation to the tenant is entirely contractual, and therefore an action of tort for negligence has nothing to rest upon.
But while conceding that there must be a duty owing and uuperformed to sustain an action of tort for negligence, it has been said that the breach of a contract is a nonperformance of a duty and in that way an action in tort, for negligence, may be made out. Cases are relied upon in support of this which we think are not applicable. It seems altogether illogical to admit that an action of tort for negligence cannot be sustained because the landlord owes no duty to repair;'and that in an action on the contract damages for tort, as in personal injuries, are too remote to be allowed; yet, by the process of making a duty out of the contract and showing it was unperformed, you have perfected an action of tort for negligence, for which you may recover damages for personal injrrry. But we will con
The case of Korach v. Loeffel, 168 Mo. App. 414 is unlike this in that it did not involve a lease in which there was an agreement to repair. But in the discussion of the case Judge Reynolds recognizes and states the law as declared by the Supreme Court in Glenn v. Hill. In the latter part of the opinion, the case is treated, by way of concession to the plaintiff, from the standpoint of an agreement to repair and the law announced as in Glenn v. Hill, that a lessor’s covenant to repair will not support an action for a personal injury resulting from a breach of the covenant.
The St. Louis Court of Appeals also decided Collins v. Fillingham, 129 Mo. App. 340. That case is likewise unlike the one we are considering. There were two premises of the landlord with an upper porch, or balcony; one was one story and the other two story, the latter occupied by the plaintiff. ' The porch extended over the roof of the one story building and was in common to both. It was in possession of the landlord, with" right of use by the tenant and belongs to that class of cases of which McGinley v. Alliance Trust Co., 168 Mo. 257; Karp v. Barton, 164 Mo. App. 389; Andrus v. Bradley-Alderson Co., 117 Mo. App. 322; Lang v. Hill, 157 Mo. App. 685, and Coats v. Merriwether, 144 Mo. App. 89, are types.
But this court ruled in Graff v. Brewing Co., 130 Mo. App. 618 and repeated it, in same case 145 Mo. App. 364, that a simple agreement to repair, created a duty to repair, and then, drawing upon the law that permits an action in tort for violated duty, held that an action could be maintained for personal injury by a tenant against his landlord who had breached his contract. The opinion at the first hearing shows that we relied much on Thompson v. Clemens, 96 Md. 196. In that case notwithstanding a promise to repair the
We think it clear that Thompson v. Clemens and our Graff v. Brewing Co. are opposed to the great weight of authority and to sound reason as well, as we will proceed to show.
In the cases where a contract was involved and .a duty was also claimed, the duty arose from the lew, by reason of the relation of the parties, apart from the contract. It was never supposed that one could shelve his express contract and yet recover on a duty the contract, alone, created. If the duty is created by an express contract, then the action would be on the contract and not on a violated duty. Otherwise, as stated in Tuttle v. Gilbert Mfg. Co., 145 Mass. l. c. 175, one, instead of bringing an action on a note, would found his action on tort for negligent breach of duty in not paying the note. In the familiar instance of cases against common carriers the law imposes a duty in addition to the contract itself, and the action may be on the contract, or for breach of the duty, the contract being mentioned if pleaded at all, only by way of inducement. The following quoted in Dustin v. Curtis, 74 N. H. l. c. 268 will aid our meaning if transcribed here. “In Legge v. Tucker, 1 H. & N. 500, Pollock C. B., in stating the distinction between actions of contract and actions of tort said, 'Where the foundation of the action is a contract, in whatever way the declaration is framed, it is an action of assumpsit; but where there is
So implied duties or obligations may arise from certain contractual relations and a failure to perform this implication of the law may furnish a cause of .action in tort. But, “where there is an express promise, and a legal obligation results from it, there the plaintiff’s cause of action is most accurately described in assumpsit, in which the promise is stated as the gist of the action. But where from a given state of facts the law raises a legal obligation to do a particular act, and there is a breach of that obligation, and a consequential damage, there, although assumpsit may be. maintainable upon a promise implied by law to do the act, still an action on the case founded in tort is the more proper form of action, in which the plaintiff in his declaration states the facts out of which the legal obligation arises, the obligation itself, the breach of it, and the damage resulting from that breach. ’ ’ [1 Chittys Plead. (16 Ed.), 195, 196.]
The question of whether an action in tort for breach of duty by the negligence of the landlord in fail
Immediately following this, the court quotes from the case last above cited, the following: “The gravamen of the plaintiff’s cause of action was the defendant’s failure to fulfill his promise to repair. No action for negligence was maintainable on this basis, and the complaint ought to have been dismissed. Assuming the making of the alleged agreement to repair, the breach thereof did not confer upon the tenant or his wife any right of action based upon negligence. The relation between the parties to the agreement was
To the same effect is a late English case, Cavalier v. Pope, 2 Kings Bench Div. (1905) 757, which was affirmed on appeal to the House of Lords where several interesting opinions were delivered. [Appeal Cases (1906) 428.]
If the landlord in this case had agreed to keep and maintain the walk in safe condition and he had retained control of it so as to be able to watch over it and effectuate that purpose, plaintiff, having the right, of course to use it, a different question would be involved. For if he then carelessly neglected its safety, in consequence of which the tenant was injured, he would be guilty of a wrong and the case would belong to that other class which we have mentioned above (McGinley v. Alliance Trust Co., 168 Mo. 257) where the place involved remains in charge of the landlord whose duty, whether express or implied, is to keep it in safe condition for the common use of his different tenants, as in the instance of stairways, halls, porches, etc., in flats or tenement houses.
And this is stated to be the law in Miles v. Janvrin, 196 Mass. 431, 433-435. In that case it is said (p. 433) that “To charge a landlord in tort for personal injuries caused by a negligent omission to make needed repairs, not only must the tenant prove that the landlord agreed to keep the premises in repair, but he must go one step .further and prove that the landlord agreed to maintain the premises in a safe condition for his (the tenant’s) use. That is to say, he must prove that during the term of the lease, so far as their safety is concerned, the premises to be kept in repair are to remain in the control of the landlord (as they would have remained had there been no lease) with nothing but a right in the tenant to use them. In short, that, so far as their safety is concerned, the landlord’s relation to the premises to be kept in repair
But the case before us does not involve such considerations; the defendant’s contract was merely an agreement to repair a broken walk in the yard, and his failure to do so, in the language of Collins M. R. in Cavalier v. Pope, 2 K. B. (Supra) 762,” is nothing but remissness in carrying out a contract.”