Citation Numbers: 143 A.D. 48, 127 N.Y.S. 686, 1911 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 757
Judges: Carr
Filed Date: 2/10/1911
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The plaintiff appeals from several judgments of the Trial Term in Kings county, entered in this action, which dismissed her complaint at the close of her evidence as against respective defendants. The action was brought to recover damages for personal injuries, and liability was asserted against all of the defendants on the ground that they maintained a public nuisance through which the plaintiff suffered injury. The question of law involved in this appeal is “ whether admitting all the facts presented, and giving to the plaintiff the advantage of every inference that can properly be drawn from the facts presented, ah issue of fact is presented for the determination of the jury.” (Kraus v. Birnbaum, 200 N. Y. 130, 133, and cases cited.)
It appears that on the night of January 8, 1906, the plaintiff, together with her husband and children, occupied a small brick house located near a public highway in the village of Haverstraw known as Liberty street. This street was on the east side of the house, about fifteen feet away. The Beauchamp family had occupied this house some seven years prior to the night referred to, and had rented it during that period from the defendant the Excelsior Brick Company on what appears to have been a monthly hiring. The house was located near the crest of a deep excavation made by the defendant the Excelsior Brick Company a number of years before to obtain clay for brickmaking.' When the plaintiff’s family
Many of the parties defendant in this action have no community of interest in the happening which caused injury to this plaintiff and their participation, if any, in its alleged causes are separate and distinct, and it becomes necessary, therefore, to consider separately as to each defendant the case which the plaintiff attempted to make out by her proofs at the trial. The defendant Eckerson owned and maintained the pit farthest north from the plaintiff’s house. If the causation of the slide or cave-in which injured the plaintiff can be traced directly to the pit on the Eckerson property, liability would attach to Eckerson, notwithstanding the distance of that pit from the plaintiff’s house. (1 Wood Muis. § 207, and cases cited.) In the record before us there is no proof tracing any causation for this particular accident to the Eckerson pit, and an attempt to impute liability upon the proofs here would be mere speculative guesswork. Eckerson, however, had acquired ownership of the Gillies pit five days before the slide of January 8,1906, and it is contended that he thereby became liable for any cause contributed by the excavation on the Gillies property. It is true that it has been held that, if one acquire lands on which a nuisance exists, he becomes liable for the
The case at bar differs in its essential facts from that of Adlin v. Excelsior Brick Co. (supra). There the person killed by the caving-in was on -a public highway and was carried down by the subsidence of the highway. Here the plaintiff was in a house distant considerably from the place of the Adlin accident. This house and its yard abutted on another public highway, Liberty street. According to the proofs in this case the house fell in before Liberty street was affected by the slide. The house fell in, but the highway subsided after, and' because the land on which stood the plaintiff’s house had fallen in, and thus destroyed' the lateral support of the highway. The same cause which produced the falling in of the highway at Liberty street likewise brought about the caving in of the land occupied by the plaintiff, but the effects of this cause were not simultaneous but, on the contrary, subsequent and progressive in order. However, if the plaintiff may not claim
In Campbell v. Seaman (63 N. Y. 568) there is a very lucid and elaborate consideration of the rule affecting one who “ comes to a nuisance.” In that case the nuisance was a brick-burning furnace which generated noxious gases which injured the plants and property of one owning and occupying land near by. The nuisance existed before the use of the adjoining land began, and it was held that this fact did not deprive the party injured of a. remedy at law or in equity, in the absence of any prescriptive right to maintain the nuisance. The keynote of this decision is to be found in the statement of Earl, J., as follows: “ One cannot erect a nuisance upon his land adjoining vacant lands owned by another and thus
In Bly v. Edison Electric Illuminating Co. (172 N. Y. 1) the plaintiff rented premises near an electric lighting plant and was injured by smoke and cinders emitted therefrom. The lease under which the premises were occupied was renewed by the plaintiff during the existence of the neighboring nuisance. The plaintiff, as occupant of the premises in question, brought an action to abate the nuisance and to recover past damages. She obtained a judgment enjoining the continuance of the nuisance and for damages. On appeal to the Appellate Division, First Department (54 App. Div. 427), the injunction was vacated and the damages reduced to the nominal amount of six cents. On a further.appeal to the Court of Appeals the judgment of the Appellate Division was reversed on the question of damages, the question of an injunction being eliminated because of the removal of the plaintiff from the premises during the pendency of the appeals. The principle declared by the court was that the renewal of the lease during the existence of the nuisance could not be deemed an acquiescence in its continuance because the nuisance arose from the operation of the electric lighting plant, and the tenant of the neighboring premises had a legal right to presume that an unlawful method of operation would not continue. These two cases are typical of many that are to be found in the books on the question of “ coming to a nuisance.”
This line of cases, however, does not coyer a situation where one goes to an open nuisance and leases, from the party maintaining the nuisance, a part of the premises upon which the nuisance exists1 and enters into occupation of the premises. The principles governing such a situation are to be found in the law affecting the relations of landlord and tenant. It is true that the plaintiff was not the tenant of the defendant in the strict sense of the word. She was, however, the wife of the tenant, and the premises were let for
It is plain beyond question that a tenant who leases real property which is openly ruinous or dilapidated, or perilously located, has no claim in law against the landlord for injuries occasioned by these circumstances, in the absence of fraud or warranty, unless the landlord actively interferes in such manner as to increase the existing hazards during the term of the lease. This proposition is so elementary as to need little or no citation of authority. (Davidson v. Fischer, 11 Col. 583.) In the case at bar the landlord had done absolutely nothing in the adjoining pit for four years before the accident. During these four years the tenant had renewed the letting from time to time in face of the open peril and with full notice of the existing conditions. Whether these.conditions constituted a public or a private nuisance was immaterial so far as his legal rights were concerned against the landlord arising from mere occupation and use of the demised premises. For example, at common law it is a public nuisance to maintain near a public highway a ruinous house which may fall into the highway and injure a wayfarer. If, however, one enter knowingly into the occupancy of such a house as a tenant, and the house subsequently fall down into the highway and injure both a wayfarer and the tenant, the legal right of either against the one who maintained the public nuisance rests upon distinct grounds; one may have a remedy and the other have none.
It follows, therefore, that the judgments should be affirmed, with costs.
Present — Jehks, P. J., Burr, Thomas, Carr and Rich, JJ.
Judgments unanimously affirmed, with costs.