Hoger v. Massachusetts Mut. Life Ins. Co.

Decision Date02 December 1938
Docket Number31753.
Citation282 N.W. 484,204 Minn. 615
PartiesHOGER v. MASSACHUSETTS MUT. LIFE INS. CO. et al.
CourtMinnesota Supreme Court

On Motion for Rehearing Feb. 6, 1939.

Appeal from District Court, Hennepin County; Luther W. Youngdahl Judge.

Action by Wayne Hoger against the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company and Henry Shanedling for injuries caused by breaking of a faucet in an apartment rented by plaintiff from last named defendant. From an order denying his blended motion for judgment or new trial, last named defendant appeals.

Order denying new trial reversed.

Syllabus by the Court .

In a case where a landlord, not under covenant to repair, has promised to repair a leaky faucet and the leak had been repaired but in such a manner as to require it to be closed tight to prevent dripping, and a tenant injured his hand by using all his strength on the porcelain handle, the record does not disclose such a condition of the handle as to indicate that a man of ordinary prudence would have anticipated injury to anyone from its use.

Maugridge S. Robb, of Minneapolis, for appellant.

Cobb Hoke, Benson, Krause & Faegre and Frank Janes, all of Minneapolis, for respondent.

LORING Justice.

In a suit to recover for an injury caused by the breaking of a porcelain faucet handle in the bathroom of an apartment rented to plaintiff and his mother by the defendant Shanedling, the plaintiff had a verdict and the defendant Shanedling appealed from an order denying his blended motion for judgment or a new trial, the corporate defendant having obtained a directed verdict.

Plaintiff and his mother jointly rented a five-room and bath apartment from month to month at a rental of $22 per month from the defendant Shanedling on September 1, 1935. The contract was oral, and there was no covenant by the landlord to repair the premises or to keep them in repair. At the time that the plaintiff and his mother commenced the occupancy of the premises the plumbing fixtures were functioning properly. In two or three weeks a leak developed in the hot-water faucet in the bathroom, and upon complaint the landlord dircted Carl, the janitor, to fix it. This happened two or three times more during the following year, and on the 14th of September, 1936, the janitor again undertook to fix the leak after complaint had been made. Plaintiff testified that when the janitor finished, he told plaintiff and his mother that he had done the best he could and, ‘ If it was still dripping a little bit * * * all you have to do is to push on it hard and it will stop, and he showed us how it was done and it stopped.’ At about two o'clock on the following day plaintiff was using the lavatory and had occasion to close the hot water faucet and in doing so applied so much force to the porcelain handle that it broke in his right hand and was forced deeply into and almost through the palm. In his direct examination plaintiff said that he turned the faucet handle as hard as he could and then, when he was asked, ‘ And had he told you to do that before?’ answered, ‘ Yes.’ But later in his cross-examination, in response to the question, ‘ What did Carl tell you to do?’ he answered, ‘ To shut it off tight,’ which was in effect a reiteration of his first statement on direct examination.

It is the contention of the plaintiff that the porcelain faucet handle was defective and that the promise to repair the leak included the handle, whose defective character should have been ascertained by the landlord. It is the contention of the defendant that there is no evidence of a defect in the porcelain handle or of negligence on the part of the defendant. The janitor did not see any cracks in the handle neither did the plaintiff nor his mother, and each of them used the lavatory two or three times a day during the more than a year that they occupied the apartment prior to the injury. The only evidence of a crack in the handle was given by a young man named Schoeben, who used the lavatory in shaving himself on the fourth day of July previous to the injury. He noticed no defect in the handle until he was cleaning up the lavatory after he had shaved, and then he thought he saw a couple of hairs on the handle. He could not wipe them off and so he concluded that they were hair-line cracks, but of course he could not tell by observation whether they were any deeper than the surface finish on the porcelain. In his testimony he did not undertake to say that the break in the handle occurred in the place where he saw the cracks. There are still two lines on the surface of the unbroken part of the handle, and these would be visible to a person standing in front of the lavatory when the handle was in a closed position. So there is no evidence before us that the handle broke at the place where this witness saw the lines. Nor is there any testimony in the case that porcelain handles are dangerous or that the hair-line cracks which he saw would indicate to a person having knowledge of such matters that the handle was unsafe to use or that a man of ordinary prudence would have replaced the handle to avoid possible injury to anyone. The porcelain handle was in use daily for over two months after Schoeben noticed the hair-like lines upon it. It withstood the pressure which Carl, the janitor, put upon it and which was sufficient to close the valve on the day previous. It is our opinion that no man of ordinary prudence would anticipate injury to anyone from the appearance of the faucet as Schoeben described it. These reinforced porcelain faucet handles are in common use, and, while they are more fragile than a metal handle, they seem to have sufficient strength to resist the pressure used to close the valves; and while in this case there may have been hair-like lines or cracks upon the handle it had withstood long usage upon a valve that evidently required considerable pressure to close. It withstood the test placed upon it by the janitor in closing it the day before and evidently during the next 24 hours; and while any of these porcelain handles may withstand the pressure necessary to close the valves, this one was subjected to extraordinary pressure by the plaintiff because he says that he pushed the handle as hard as he could. It is significant that he used so much pressure that when the handle broke the porcelain was driven almost through his hand. ‘ The care taken by people generally to prevent injury from articles in common use is a proper guide for the courts in determining what...

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