The complaint in this case fails to state sufficient facts to constitute a cause of action, and the demurrer should have been sustained..
The action is brought to recover damages for personal injuries-resulting from alleged negligence by a guest or inmate of a tenant’s, family against the landlords who have covenanted to keep the-demised premises in repair, and who have reserved the right to enter the rented apartments for that purpose. The apartments comprise a portion of a tenement house in the borough of Hanhattan, and the complaint alleges that the defendants, the landlords,, reside in the building, and had knowledge at the time of the condition of the apartments. There is no allegation that such condition- was defective, but it is alleged “ that as a result of the negligence of the defendants in not keeping the céiling of the above-described apartments in proper repair, plaintiff was struck by such, ceiling falling on her head while lying in bed on the morning of the 21st day of November, 1900,” and “ that such accident occurred as a result of the negligence solely of the defendants, and plaintiff is not guilty of any contributory negligence.”
By section 481 of the Code of Civil Procedure it is provided that a complaint must contain a statement of the facts constituting-
The language of the Supreme Court of Georgia in the recent case of Savannah, Florida & W. Ry. Co. v, Boyle (42 S. E. Rep. 242) is pertinent, viz.: “ It is true that the petition alleges in general terms that the defendant was guilty of negligence, but it also sets forth what is claimed by the pleader to be the act of negligence, and the only act of negligence alleged is the failure of the company’s servants to search the tramps for weapons, and to
The case of Schick v. Fleischhauer (26 App. Div. 210) is precisely in point. There the landlord promised to.. repair, but failed to do so, and the Ceiling, because of such failure, fell upon the tenant. The complaint in tort was held' bad upon demurrer. The court said (p. 211) : “ It is well, settled in this State that no duty rests upon the landlord to repair premises which he has demised, or to keep them in tenantable condition, and that there can b.e no obligation to repair, except such as may be created by the agreement of the landlord so to do. (Witty v. Matthews, 52 N. Y. 512.) Where such agreement has been made, the measure of damages for the breach of the contract is the expense' of doing the work which the landlord .agreed to do but did not. A contract to repair does not contemplate, as damages for the failure to keep it, that any liability for personal injuries shall grow out of the defective :condition of the premises, because the duty of the tenant, if the landlord fails to keep his contract to repair, is to perform the work himself and recover the cost in an action for that purpose, or upon a' counterclaim in an action for the rent, or, if the premises are made untenantable by reason of the breach of the contract,, the tenant may move out and'defend in an action for the rent as upon an eviction: (Myers v. Burns, 35 N. Y. 269 ; Sparks v. Bassett, 49 N. Y. Super. Ct. 270; 1 Taylor Landl. & Ten. [8th ed.], 380.) . The tenant is not at liberty, if the landlord fails to keep his contract to repair the premises,.to permit them to remain in an unsafe condition and to-stay there at the risk of. receiving injury on account of the defects in the premises and then recover as for negligence for any injuries that he may suffer. Where the sole relation between two. parties is contractual in its' nature, abreach of the contract does not .usually-create a liability as for negligence. In such a easefhe liability of one.of the parties to the other because of negligence is based either on the breach
The respondent has furnished no brief, and investigation fails to -discover any case authorizing a recovery under the circumstances set up in this complaint. There is a dictum in Edwards v. N. Y. & H. R. R. Co. (98 N. Y. 245, at p. 248) that “ if a landlord lets premises and agrees to keep them in repair, and he fails to' do so, in consequence of which any one lawfully upon the premises suffers injury, he is responsible for his own negligence to the party injured;” but the proposition finds no support in the Authorities unless the negligence is something beyond the mere failure to perform the contract. Such negligence in a general sense as may be involved in the failure to fulfill a covenant is not enough.. As was said by Mr. Justice Barrett in Wynne v. Haight (27 App. Div. 7, at p. 10): “ It is not the landlord’s negligence, in the sense in which that word is commonly used, which makes him liable — that is, in not fully doing what he has voluntarily promised to do, but his active and direct negligence with regard to the subject-matter of his undertaking. His negligent act must be the real cause of the injury, and it is for that alone that he is liable.” It was accordingly held in that case that (p. 9) “ the defendant was under no legal obligation to repair the premises, nor was she liable for damAges caused by a defect in the ceiling, even though shepromised to repair it and failed to do so.”
The plaintiff, as a lodger, visitor or member of the tenant’s family, has no better claim than the tenant would have. The cove
The case of Dollard v. Roberts (130 N. Y. 269) is distinguishable upon principle. There the injury resulted from the fall of. a-ceiling in a hallway common to. ah the tenants. The property where the accident happened was not demised but remained in the-possession of the landlord. . It was held that the. landlord owed to the tenants a duty of activé care to see that the hallway , was kept, in.a safe condition for.their.use. The duty was legal and not contractual; that is, it was imposed by law and did not result from the obligations of an agreement. The distinction was noted by Judge Bradley- in the statement at page 272, that “if the hallway hadi been. part of the premises demised to the plaintiff, there would have been no liability of the-defendant to him.”
The complaint in this case gains nothing by the general charge that the ceiling fell as a result of the defendant’s negligence in not. keeping it in proper repair. In the. very recent case of Golob ,v. Pasinsky (72 App. Div. 176) the complaint , was much more-specific. It alleged that the defendant, the landlord, had. reserved to himself control of the roof and ceilings in the building; that he “ negligently and carelessly ” permitted the roof of the building and ceilings in the apartment occupied by the plaintiff to “be, become and remain in a defective and dangerous condition, and in. such a condition as to become and remain out ;of repair and dangerous to the health, life ‘and limb of .persons occupying said apartment,’? and that without any. fault on plaintiff’s part and by reason of the "carelessness and negligence on the part of the defendant in permitting the roof of said building and the ceilings of.. said apartment to be and remain in a dangerous condition ” a portion of the. ceiling, in the demised apartment felt upon and injured the plaintiff. The complaint upon demurrer was held to be defective for the
.In the case at bar the complaint expressly avers a contractual obligation and its breach by the defendants. There is no claim or suggestion of personal neglect other than such breach, and no sug
It follows that the interlocutory judgment should .he reversed, -with costs, and judgment directed sustaining the demurrer, with costs, but with leave to the plaintiff to amend upon the payment óf the costs in both courts within twenty days.
All concurred, except Goodrich, P. J., who read for affirmance.