
    Tillie Strobel, an Infant, by Amanda Strobel, Her Guardian ad Litem Respondent, v. Fannie Liebmann and Others, Appellants.
    
      Negligence — landlord and tenant—injury to child from, door of cellarway..
    
    Appeal by the defendants from a judgment of the Supreme Court, entered in the office of the clerk of the county of Kings on the 19th day of October, 1908, in favor of the plaintiff, and from an order entered in said office on the same day denying defendants’ motion for a new trial.
    Judgment and order affirmed, with costs. No opinion. Jenks, Gaynor, Burr and Rich, JJ., concurred; Woodward, J,, read for reversal.
   Woodward, J.

(dissenting):

I cannot concur in the affirmance of this judgment. The evidence shows that the plaintiff entered an inclosure surrounding a cellarway to the tenement house where she resided with her parents, and that she got down on her hands and knees to peer into the opening to the cellar, and that while so situated the door dr covering of the opening fell and produced the injuries from which she suffers. The negligence alleged is that when this covering was opened it did not lean back against the house, but stood nearty perpendicular, so that á slight jar would be likely to throw it down. The primary purpose of the covering was to keep the cellarway closed so that it should not be dangerous; it was only when open, if at all, that the covering presented any element of danger, and there is nothing in the evidence here to show that the landlord had any notice of the alleged defect, or that there had ever been any suggestion on the part of any one that the covering, when open, was dangerous.— that it was likely to fall in such a way as to injure anyone. The question is, would any reasonable-minded man, seeing this covering open, and assuming it to have been standing in the manner that it is claimed it did stand, nearly perpendicular, have anticipated this accident, or any other similar accident ? Suppose the landlord had actually seen it standing there. Was he bound, in the exercise of reasonable care, to have anticipated that it would fall, or that, if it fell, it would produce any damage? It was not designed to be kept open; it would probably be open only for short periods, and, if it fell, it would hot, in the range of reasonable probabilities, do any harm. A door of a house, designed for closing out the elements,' might be forced shut by a sudden draft'of wind, and if a child happened at the time to have its fingers in the right place, jt might jam them, but no' one would think of charging a landlord with negligence because he had not anticipated such an accident and guarded against it by providing a fastening which would prevent it, and I am unable to discover any higher probability of the one accident than the other in anything which the evidence here discloses. I think this case comes within the reasoning and principle of Smith v. Donnelly (93 App. Div. 569) and that the judgment and order appealed from should be reversed.  