
    White Card Co. vs. Mastercolor or New England, Inc.
    December 30, 1966.
    
      Paul D. Maggioni for the defendant.
    
      David Greer, Jr., for the plaintiff.
   The plaintiff, a tenant in a business building, was awarded damages for harm done to personal property on October 31,1961, allegedly due to the negligence of the defendant, a tenant in the same building, in causing water to flow from its premises to the plaintiff’s premises on the floor below. We dispose of the defendant’s exceptions seriatim. The lease from the owner of the building to the defendant, in the face of a general objection, was admissible to show control of the premises. The testimony of a master plumber that the water had flowed from an overhead pipe in the defendant’s premises and that the pipe had broken because a “strap iron” hanger designed to support it “had let go” was not inadmissible. The case was properly submitted to the jury since, on conflicting evidence, they could find that the plumber had informed the defendant’s president of the broken “strap iron” hanger and had recommended that it be replaced, two weeks before the pipe broke. The plumber’s testimony on cross-examination that “possibly” he had told the defendant’s president about the broken “strap iron” hanger on the morning of the discovery of the damage, did not nullify his testimony that he had told him two weeks before. It therefore could be found that the defective condition existed, that the defendant knew of it in sufficient time to repair it, and that it neglected to do so, with consequent foreseeable damage to the plaintiff.

Exceptions overruled.  