This is аn appeal from a judgment dismissing an action for personal injuries. Appellant is a tenant in an apartment building owned and managed by appellees. She was injured by slipping and falling on the terrazzo floor of the apartment house lobby on a rainy day. The trial сourt, sitting without a jury, concluded that the landlord had neither actual nor constructive notice of the wet and slippery condition of the floor, and hence had no duty to take corrective action. Because that conclusion rests on an erroneous interpretation of the controlling principle of law, we reverse and remand for a new trial.
A landlord who rents separate parts of his premises to a number of different tenants has a duty to use reasonable care to keep the common passageways free of dangerous conditions. Pessagno v. Euclid,
The ruling below was apparently based on the view that constructive notice of a wet and slippery lobby floor could arise only from evidence that the floor had actually been wet for a substantial period of time. The triаl court found appellant’s case fatally defective for failure to show that for a substantial period of time before the fall there was water on the floor or traffic in the lobby.
In this case the evidence clearly shows that at the time of the accident, rain was falling and the lobby floor was wet. The trial court so found, concluding that there was no showing of the necessary notice because there was no evidence that numerous people had passed through the lobby before the accident, traсking in water. In our view, however, evidence of a substantial period of rain is sufficient to give a landlord constructive notice of thе foreseeable hazards that may result from that rain, including the risk that water will be tracked into an apartment lobby and the floor will become slippery.
See
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tors Hospital, Inc. v. Badgley, 81 U.S. App.D.C. 171,
A landlord’s duty of care must be measured by a flexible standard, that reflects community expectations and meets the needs of contemporary urban life. Levine v. Katz,
If rain and the normal traffic of tenants regularly result in a slippery lobby floor, then a landlord cannot wait each time it rains for notice that the floor is wet. Apartment dwellers today are entitled to assume that management will take reasonable steps to ensure the safety and cleanliness of cоmmon areas in constant use, such as the front entrance lobby. Liability for negligence does not require notice of the partiсular puddle that caused the fall. It is sufficient to show notice of rain, combined with the probability that in rainy weather tenants will track in watеr and the lobby floor will become slippery. Harris v. Joffe,
The instant case turns in part, therefore, on the question whether rain had been falling for a sufficient period of time before the accident to give the landlord constructive notice of the danger of a slippery lobby floor. The findings of the trial judge are ambiguous on this point, because in his view constructive notice required not only evidence of rain but also evidence of a wet floor for a substantial period of time before the accident. His treatment of the evidence, however, requires some comment.
The plaintiff testified that it was raining shortly before she fell, at about 1 p. m., but she did not tеstify that it had been raining earlier in the day. Weather bureau reports were introduced to show that it had been raining all day, but the trial judge noted that these reports were based on observations taken at the National Airport, ten miles from the site of the accident, and “it is a matter of common knowledge that it may rain in one part of the city and not in another.”
We think the trial judge’s approaсh to the weather reports was improper as a matter of law. Weather bureau reports are not conclusive, but they сertainly constitute evidence of high quality, as the same judge earlier noted in Robinson v. Park Central Apartments,
If the case had been tried to a jury, the court would have instructed the jury to decide (1) whether there was a sufficient period of rain to provide constructive notice of the danger of a slippery lobby floor, and (2) if so, whether appellees exercised reasonable care in responding to that danger. On a trial to a judge there are no instructions, of course, but the same questions of fact must be resolved.
Therе was evidence at trial that rubber mats are commonly used on floors of this type in rainy weather.
Cf.
Scott v. United States,
It may well be that a practice of prompt and frequent moрping would suffice to guard against the danger of slippery wet floors. It is for the trier of fact to determine what constitutes reasonаble care under the circumstances. Seganish v. District of Columbia Safeway Stores, Inc.,
So ordered.
