Brodtman v. Finerty

Decision Date09 April 1906
Docket Number15,881
CitationBrodtman v. Finerty, 116 La. 1103, 41 So. 329 (La. 1906)
CourtLouisiana Supreme Court
PartiesBRODTMAN et al. v. FINERTY

Rehearing Denied June 4, 1906.

Appeal from Civil District Court, Parish of Orleans; John St. Paul Judge.

Action by Mary Agnes Brodtman and another against Mrs. Barbara Finerty.Judgment for defendant and plaintiffs appeal.Affirmed.

Miller Dufour & Dufour, Robert John Maloney, and Paul Walter Maloney, for appellants.

Carroll & Carroll, for appellee.

BREAUXC.J. NICHOLLS, J., absent.

OPINION

BREAUX, C.J.

Plaintiff sued the defendant for personal injuries suffered by his wife and by himself.

He was defendant's tenant.There was, it seems, a defect in a shutter hinge of the house occupied by plaintiff, as tenant, and by his wife.

The latter was endeavoring to close the blinds of one of the rooms when the blind broke loose from its hinges, the shutter fell, and in consequence her right hand was severely cut and badly mashed.

Plaintiff charges that was all due to the broken shutter hinge.They charge that the defendant was negligent, as the hinge had been broken for a number of months.He had been requested to make the repair and had promised to make it.

Plaintiff claims damages in the sum of $ 5,000 for the injury which his wife has suffered, and for an additional sum of $ 2,500 for his own mental distress growing out of the injury to his wife, who greatly suffered for a number of months.

An exception of no cause of action was maintained, from which plaintiffs appeal.

We leave out of all consideration the claim of plaintiff's husband, and take up for decision the claim of Mrs. Brodtman, the wife.

If no recovery can be had in her behalf, it is very evident that the husband cannot recover anything.A decision adverse to her claim will dispose of the husband's, for if she does not obtain a judgment he certainly cannot obtain one.

Plaintiff invokes both the statute which binds the lessor, the defendant here, to keep premises leased in proper repair, and in the second place they invoke the promise before mentioned, which defendant had made to them some time previous, to have the proper repairs made.

It is true that the lessor should see to the repairs due by him to his tenant.

Whether the lessor can be held for damages presents the question for decision.

The jurisprudence of this state has spoken upon the subject, and invariably it has been held that the tenant after notice has the right to have the repairs made.

This being the jurisprudence, the tenant is without right to complain of an injury which he could have avoided, for his indebtedness as tenant was over ample to have the repairs made.They would have amounted to an insignificant amount -- the price of a shutter hinge and the very little work of putting it on.

This court has recently construed the article of the law touching repairs by tenants, and declined to condemn the lessor to pay damages when the amount of the rent is sufficient to pay for repairs.

The following decisions are cited in support of that position in the case to which we refer: Scudder v. Paulding,4 Rob. 428;Westermeier v. Street,21 La.Ann. 714;Pesant v. Heartt,22 La.Ann. 292;Diggs v. Maury,23 La.Ann. 59;Winn v. Spearing,26 La.Ann. 384;Welham v. Lingham,28 La.Ann. 903;andLawrence v. Lelievre, Op. Bk. No. 50, p. 57.

The principles announced in these decisions are applicable.The case to which we first referred above is Lewis v. Pepin,33 La.Ann. 1417.

Plaintiff places special reliance upon the promise which had been made by defendant to make repairs to which we have before referred.

Plaintiff should have followed up his complaint to his lessor and should have insisted upon the right which the law gave him, and, if in that event the lessor had not complied, then he had the right to have the repairs made.

In the absence of these steps he has no right to damages.

This was the view taken and expressed in another decision upon the subject in which the question relating to the lessor's special obligation to repair was very similar to the question here.Campbell v. Miltenberger,26 La.Ann. 73.

We have seen that from Westermeier v. Street,4 Rob. 428, to date, the line of decisions is unbroken.The jurisprudence so consistent and harmonious upon a point...

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28 cases
  • Klein v. Young
    • United States
    • Louisiana Supreme Court
    • November 29, 1926
    ...the decisions in the following cases as being, in some measure, authority for the decision rendered in this case, namely: Brodtman v. Finerty, 116 La. 1103, 41 So. 329; Bianchi v. Del Valle, 117 La. 587, 42 So. Schoppel v. Daly, 112 La. 201, 36 So. 322; Cristadoro v. Von Behren's Heirs, 119......
  • May v. Schepis
    • United States
    • Court of Appeal of Louisiana — District of US
    • April 28, 1933
    ...same out of the rent. "I will briefly call attention to some of the cases upon which this Court will base its decision. " Brodtman v. Finerty, 116 La. 1103, 41 So. 329, is a where a distinction is drawn between article 2693 and 2694 of the Civil Code as against article 2695. The case report......
  • Wilson v. United States
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — Eastern District of Louisiana
    • July 25, 1977
    ...is not liable to a tenant for injuries stemming from a defective window condition such as broken window glass. See Brodtman v. Finerty, 116 La. 1103, 41 So. 329 (1906); Daniel, supra; Hutchins v. Pick, 164 So. 173 (La.App., Orls., 1935); Also see Comment, "Article 2322 and the Liability of ......
  • Miles v. Janvrin
    • United States
    • Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court
    • November 25, 1907
    ... ... The same ... conclusion was reached in Cavalier v. Pope, [1905] 2 ... K. B. 757; s. c. on appeal, [1906] A. C. 428; Brodtman v ... Finerty, 116 La. 1103, 41 So. 329. See, also, ... Collins v. Karatopsky, 36 Ark. 316, 324. These were ... all cases where the agreement ... ...
  • Get Started for Free