54 Mass. App. Ct. 578 | Mass. App. Ct. | 2002
Arlene Fox, the plaintiff, was injured when she opened a set of double doors at the end of a corridor in a building operated by the defendant, The Little People’s School, Inc. (school), stepped out and fell on a step and landing. She sued the school,
Fox’s initial complaint contained only a single count alleging
When the case came to trial before a different judge, Fox sought an instruction to the effect that a violation of the building code causing damage to her would require a verdict in her favor. The trial judge declined to give that instruction, ruling, like the motion judge, that although violation of a code provision was evidence of negligence, it did not, by itself, provide a vehicle for recovery.
On appeal, Fox seeks reversal of the motion judge’s denial of her motion to amend the complaint and a new trial because the trial judge failed to instruct the jury in accordance with her requested instruction. Neither action was error and we affirm.
There is no doubt that violation of a regulation is some evidence of negligence. See Perry v. Medeiros, 369 Mass. 836, 841 (1976); Matteo v. Livingstone, 40 Mass. App. Ct. 658, 659 (1996). On its face, G. L. c. 143, § 51, travels beyond use of a regulatory violation as evidence of negligence by stating that, when the building code is involved, a violation that injures someone allows the injured person to recover damages. Arguing
In order to understand the “appropriate circumstances” to which the court referred in St. Germaine, however, one has to look at several other cases. The first of those is Repucci itself. There, the plaintiffs had been injured by a defective fire escape when attempting to flee a fire in the defendant’s building. At the time, G. L. c. 143, § 21, required building owners to keep fire escapes, and “other means of escape from fire,” “in good repair and ready for use.” Repucci v. Exchange Realty Co., supra at 572. Chapter 143, § 51, as it then existed, imposed on building owners, and certain others, liability for damages to those injured by a violation of § 21.
The plaintiffs’ cases in Repucci were submitted to the jury on a theory of common-law negligence and on the theory of statutory liability. The jury found for the plaintiffs on both theories and the defendant appealed. After analyzing only the statutory
Repucci thus established the proposition that a statutory cause of action was available to those injured by a building owner’s failure to keep “means of escape from fire” “in good repair and ready for use.” But in Festa v. Piemonte, 349 Mass. 761, 761 (1965), the court made it clear that the cause of action was narrow, arising only when the injured person was actually fleeing a fire and providing no path to recovery to one injured while using a stairway or other means of egress for another purpose. In its brief opinion, the court said that “none of the benefits of G. L. c. 143, §§ 21 and 51, is ‘available to persons using stairways and egresses for purposes other than escape from danger from fire,’ ” ibid., and affirmed denial of recovery to a person who was injured when he fell down a set of stairs after adjusting a rooftop television antenna.
Chapter 143, § 21, was repealed by St. 1972, c. 802, § 28. That legislation for the first time created a comprehensive State building code.
“The plaintiff also argues that the judge erred by not reading a proposed jury instruction stating that the defendant ‘shall be liable . . . [for] a violation of the State Building*582 Code,’ citing G. L. c. 143, § 51. There was no error. ‘[N]one of the benefits of G. L. c. 143, [§ 51] is “available to persons using stairways and egresses for purposes other than escape from danger from fire.’ ” Festa v. Piemonte, 349 Mass. 761, 761 (1965)” (alterations in original).
McAllister v. Boston Housing Auth., supra at 304 n.5.
Notwithstanding any conclusion we might reach were we writing on a clean slate, controlling cases regard the pedigree of c. 143, § 51, as a limitation on its facially broad language. Accordingly, the “appropriate circumstances” for recovery under § 51 are those in which a violation of the State building code results in an injury to someone fleeing a fire. No fire motivated Fox’s exit from the building when she was injured. Consequently, any school violations of the building code, although evidence of negligence, did not themselves permit recovery under c. 143, § 51.
Judgment affirmed.
She also sued the building’s owner, the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Boston Corp. She voluntarily dismissed that part of the action before trial.
The complaint, of course, had not been amended to assert the claim for which Fox sought the instruction. The trial judge did not deny Fox’s request for that reason. Had the trial judge elected to give such an instruction, she could have permitted an amendment to the complaint, see Mass.R.Civ.P. 15(b), 365 Mass. 761 (1974), for by then the school was fully aware of Fox’s claim that violation of the code entitled her to recovery and the alleged code violations had been explored at trial on the theory that the violations were evidence of negligence.
Insofar as § 51 is concerned, St. Germaine held that the section did not apply to single-family homes. St. Germaine v. Pendergast, 411 Mass. at 619. See also Santos v. Bettencourt, 40 Mass. App. Ct. 90 (1996), which reached the same conclusion in the wake of statutory changes provoked by the original St. Germaine opinion and its successor, St. Germaine v. Pendergast, 416 Mass. 698 (1993). In Glidden v. Maglio, 430 Mass. at 698-699, the trial judge ruled that the statute was inapplicable to a three-family dwelling. The Supreme Judicial Court, stating that it need not examine the correctness of that conclu- - sion, held that the record was devoid of any evidence that the alleged building code violation — failure to secure a building permit before beginning work — had caused the accident. None of these cases mentioned concerns regarding fire safety. See discussion, infra.
Section 51 imposed similar liability for violation of §§ 24-28, and 30. Sections 24-27 also dealt with fire safety issues. Section 28 dealt with building inspections and issuance of certificates of occupancy “specifying the number of persons for whom the egresses and means of escape from fire are sufficient.” Section 30 required those who made changes to buildings that had been issued a certificate under § 28 to notify a building inspector so that a new inspection could be made. See G. L. c. 143, §§ 24-28, 30, 51, as amended by St. 1943, c. 544, § 3.
The same legislation also repealed G. L. c. 143, §§ 24-28, 30. See note 4, supra.