The defendant's principal contention is that the plaintiff is guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law even though the evidence is undisputed that she proceeded down the steps in a cautious manner. His position is stated as follows:"The plaintiff knew the slippery condition of the steps and railings and under like circumstances for ten years prior to the accident she had taken precaution of removing the snow and sanding the icy surfaces. Her conduct in failing to take available usual precautions was negligent. . . . The question is not that the defendant may not have been absolved of his duty to keep the premises in safe condition because the plaintiff used to keep the steps free and clear of ice and snow. It is that on the day of the accident she failed to take her usual precautions."
The steps to the tenement were the sole means of ingress and egress for the plaintiff and other tenants. Menard v. Cashman,
The defendant does not maintain that he is under no duty to keep the entrance used in common by the tenants in a reasonably safe condition but that the failure of the plaintiff to remove the snow and ice on the day of the accident, as she had done in years past,' is such unsafe and unreasonable conduct as to constitute contributory negligence as a matter of law. A similar contention, upon evidence more favorable to the defendant, was rejected in Papakalos v. Shaka,
The rule in this state that contracts exempting a person from liability for the consequences of his own negligence are invalid is a minority view generally and as applied to landlord and tenant cases. 6 Williston, Contracts (Rev. ed.) s. 1751 B, p. 4967; Anno. 175 A.L.R. 12, 14, 83, 84; Restatement, Contracts, ss. 574, 575. In a recent landlord and tenant case it was deemed unnecessary "to determine whether the rule governing exculpatory contracts has been too broadly phrased in our decisions." Nashua c. Paper Co. v. Noyes Co.,
Plaintiff's counsel argued that the plaintiff "couldn't grab hold of the rail because it was slippery." The evidence disclosed that she did hold onto the rail, which was slippery, until she slipped on the bottom step and then lost her grip on the rail. The argument was not meticulously correct but as an inconsequential misstatement of the evidence, it was cured by the Court's charge to the jury to disregard any misquotation of the evidence by the attorneys. Clough v. Schwartz,
Judgment on the verdict.
All concurred.