The issue in this case is whether the trial court abused his discretion in refusing to permit plaintiff to introduce into evidence safety standards promulgated by the National Safety Council (1964).
The case arose as a result of a fall sustained on October 17, 1966, by Evelyn Lemery on department store premises owned and controlled by defendant, O’Shea Dennis Corporation. While leaving the store after shopping there, plaintiff fell from a step-down at the end of an exit ramp which sloped *200 from the store to the sidewalk. The ramp in question was eight feet and seven inches in length terminating at the step-down to the sidewalk. The step-down was four and a half to five inches in height' as measured from the sidewalk to the top of the ramp. The evidence shows that plaintiff was not carrying any packages, that the day was clear and dry, and that she knew of the ramp-step-down exit arrangement from prior use. She stated her belief that she had fallen because she had “mis-judged the step.”
Plaintiff’s theory of liability in this action was that the defendant was negligent in failing to either eliminate the step-down in favor of a ramp which tapered directly to the sidewalk or to paint a stripe at the end of the ramp in order to contrast the step-off point of the ramp with the sidewalk below. At the trial of the case, plaintiff sought to introduce evidence, through one Norman Bolduc, an accident investigator, of certain standards relating to ramp construction promulgated by the National Safety Council (1964). The Trial Court (Perkins, J.) excluded this evidence and plaintiff subsequently made an offer of proof for the record. Trial by jury resulted in a verdict for the defendant and the plaintiffs exceptions were reserved and transferred.
The substance of plaintiffs offer was to introduce, solely on the standard of care to which the defendant was to be held, evidence that had the existing exitway been a ramp without a step-down, a so-called “true” ramp, the slope of said ramp would have been within permissible limits of standards promulgated by the National Safety Council (1964). Plaintiff intended that the evidence would show “one or two alternatives. .. available to the defendant... to the existing situation. ... ”, the maintenance of which plaintiff contends was negligent.
There is no unalterable rule in this State on the admissibility of safety codes as evidence on a question of the applicable standard of care, though it has been concluded that such codes are not to be accepted as absolute standards having the force of law unless they have been incorporated into statutes or ordinances by either State or local legislative bodies.
See Murray
v.
Bullard Co.,
We are aware that the majority of jurisdictions reject safety codes as evidence on hearsay grounds. Annot.,
*202
Assuming, without deciding, that plaintiff’s expert, Mr. Bolduc, was qualified to introduce and give his opinion upon the standards of the National Safety Council sought to be admitted
(Dowling
v.
Shattuck,
Plaintiffs’ exceptions overruled; judgment on the verdict.
