
    Margaret Connell, Respondent, v. Samuel Jankelson and Jankelson Realty Company, Appellants, Impleaded with Tilyou Realty Company, Defendant.
    Second Department,
    July 31, 1914.
    Landlord and tenant—liability of landlord for collapse of raised board walk on premises which he had sublet — evidence.
    Where the dangerous condition of a raised board walk at a pleasure resort was known to the lessor or should have been known, he was bound to repair or take some proper steps to avoid danger before executing a sublease of the premises.
    Action against the lessor of such premises for injuries sustained by the collapse of the walk. Evidence examined, and held, that a judgment in favor of the plaintiff should be affirmed.
    Appeal by the defendants, Samuel Jankelson and another, from a judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of the plaintiff, entered in the office of the clerk of the county of Queens on the 19th day of November, 1913, upon the verdict of a jury for $2,000, and also from an order entered in said clerk’s office on the 25th day of November, 1913, denying the defendants’ motion for a new trial made upon the minutes.
    
      Hugo Hirsh [Horace London with him on the brief], for the appellant Samuel Jankelson.
    
      Horace London, for the appellant Jankelson Realty Company.
    
      Henry M. Dater [Jay S. Jones and Edward J. Fanning with him on the brief], for the respondent.
   Per Curiam:

By the collapse of the raised board walk at Steeplechase Park, Rockaway Beach, on August 9, 1911, several persons were cast down upon the ground beneath.

On the proof in Junkermann v. Tilyou Realty Co. (160 App. Div. 892), another suit arising from the same accident, Mr. Jankelson (the lessee under a long lease, but out of possession when the board walk fell) was held not liable. A recovery was, however, sustained against the sublessee in possession, the Jankelson Realty Company.

The present case, tried before the disposition of that appeal, presents new testimony on both sides.

After this verdict for plaintiff it must be taken as true that an inspection of the girders and. upright piles, on April 22,1911, when Mr. Jankelson leased out the premises, would have shown a decayed and dangerous condition. In this record plaintiff’s case is fortified by testimony from the witnesses Cleven and Wheelwright, not before called.

Mr. Cleven, a carpenter, observed at the break a decayed condition which was existing and discoverable a year or eighteen months before this casualty. It was of the brown color of rotten wood. He was of opinion that this decay set in from the outside, and was not latent, internal dry rot. The witness Wheelwright also testified in substance that the spile which broke, and the girder which capped the spile and came down with it, were similarly decayed from without.

Beside the probability that such rotten state of the timbers in August existed in the previous April, as an inference, there was affirmative proof of actual observation of this decayed condition while in the possession of Mr. Jankelson. In March Mr. Wheelwright had noticed this decayed spile, also in January and in March had observed a girder at this place' so decayed that it had been reversed in order to hold nails driven into the top of it. And the latter part of March was -the time that Brockelman was working on this board walk -m the employ of Mr. Jankelson. T

During fine days in the winter and ''.spring people walked along this board, walk, and upon pleasant Sundays twenty or thirty persons might thus be seen at one time. Hence, upon these proofs, it cannot be said that this board walk was not in use by the public — a use which-lmposed corresponding duties on the occupant, Jankelson,- ,

Mr. Jankelson was engaged in partially performing this duty by having Brockelman, his employee, upon this board walk putting it in repair. The proofs now show that the defects in the supporting timbers were not concealed, but were discoverable, and, indeed, open to observers on the shore beneath. The defendant Jankelson, therefore, came within the rule that if this dangerous condition was known to the lessor, or should have been known, he was bound to repair, or take some proper steps to avoid the danger, before reletting. (Timlin v. Standard Oil Co., 126 N. Y. 514; Lusk v. Peck, 132 App. Div. 426; Nelson v. Liverpool Brewery Co., L. R. 2 C. P. Div. 311; Swords v. Edgar, 59 N. Y. 28.)

The verdict of $2,000, while perhaps large, is not, in the circumstances, excessive.

The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed, with costs.

Present—Jenks, P. J., Burr, Carr, Bich and Putnam, JJ. Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.  