Appellant has filed a motion for recall of mandate alleging that our decision of April, 1973,
*964
We affirmed judgment for defendants on the basis of a longstanding Massachusetts doctrine maintaining that a landowner’s duty to his employees or employees of an independent contractor is only to disclose hidden defects, not to repair obvious conditions in an unsafe work area. Burr v. Massachusetts Electric Co.,
The Supreme Judicial Court abolished the common law distinction between licensees and invitees, enlarging the class of persons toward whom the standard of reasonable care is owed. The plaintiff in Mounsey was an injured police officer denied recovery because public employees on private land have been considered licensees, and therefore, merely owed the duty to refrain from inflicting wanton and willful injury. The appellant in the instant case was, on the other hand, always regarded as an invitee.
Appellant relies on the Massachusetts court’s formulation of one standard for all but trespassers: “reasonable care in all the circumstances”, but this phrase according to the
Mounsey
court was not intended to change the traditional standards of negligence in the invitee area. 1973 Mass.Adv.Sh. at 886,
Even if
Mounsey
had made a relevant change the Supreme Judicial Court did not indicate that the new rule should be applied retroactively. Courts generally do not abolish clear precedent retroactively when the parties may have relied upon the prior formulation of obligations.
See
Chevron Oil Co. v. Huson,
The Supreme Judicial Court’s decision in Colby v. Carney Hospital,
Recall of mandate is an inherent power of the Court of Appeals reserved for special circumstances and “sparingly exercised.”
See
Greater Boston Television Corp. v. Federal Communication Comm.,
“If we were in error in this appraisal, of which we are not presently persuaded, we believe it would be far greater error to permit reconsideration now after denial of petition for rehearing and certiorari. There must be an end to dispute. If a situation arose, such as a subsequent decision by the Supreme Court, which showed that our original judgment was demonstrably wrong, a motion to recall *965 mandate might be entertained. The present case is far from that.” Legate v. Maloney,348 F.2d 164 , 166 (1st Cir. 1965).
Appellant tells us that his petition for certiorari was docketed in the United States Supreme Court on July 9, 1973, and has not yet been acted upon. The latter fact may cut both ways; but in any event it does not lead us to see this case as being governed by considerations different from those cited above.
Motion for recall of mandate and petition for rehearing denied.
