OPINION
¶ 1 Thе issue in this negligence action is whether a common carrier has the duty to exercise the highest degree of care practicable under the circumstances or rather only the duty to exercise reasonable care. We hold that the general negligence standard— reasonable care under all the circumstances — applies.
I.
¶ 2 On May 2, 2008, Linda Brown boarded a Tucson city bus operated by SunTran. Brown was confined to a wheelchair. The bus driver, Grace Zoellner, secured the wheels to the bus floor. After the bus resumed its trip, a ear abruptly stopped in front of it. Zoellner braked sharply and Brown was thrown from her wheelchair, sustaining serious injuries.
¶ 3 Brown 1 sued SunTran and Zoellner (collectively, “SunTran”), alleging that Zoell-ner was negligеnt both in driving the bus and in failing to fasten Brown’s seatbelt. Sun-Tran argued that Brown’s refusal to wear a seatbelt caused her injury. SunTran also argued that Brown’s injuries were caused by the negligence of the driver of the car that stopped in front of the bus.
¶ 4 SunTran requested the judge to instruct the jury that common carriers have a duty to passengers to exercise reasonable care under the circumstances. The judge rejected that instruction, instead instructing as follows:
Negligence is the failure to use reasonable care. Negligence may consist of action or inaction. Negligence is the failure to act as a reasonably careful person would act under the circumstances.
*119 The Defendants — Professional Transit Management of Tuсson, Inc. and Grace Zoellner — as common carriers of passengers for hire, are bound to exercise the highest degree of care practicable under the circumstances.
A failure to exercise the highest degree of care under the circumstances is negligence.
¶ 5 The jury awarded $186,777.87 in compensatory damages, but found Brown 30% at fault and Zoеllner 70% at fault. The jury allocated no fault to the driver of the car that stopped in front of the bus.
¶ 6 The court of appeals affirmed, finding that this Court’s case law required the highest degree of care instruction.
Nunez v. Prof'l Transit Mgmt. of Tucson, Inc.,
2 CA-CV 10-0201,
¶ 7 We granted SunTran’s petition for review to address the appropriate standard of care for common carriers. We have jurisdiction pursuant to Article 6, Section 5(3) of the Arizona Constitution and AR.S. § 12-120.24 (2003).
II.
A.
¶ 8 Under the English common law, common carriers were bailees when transporting goods, and as such were strictly liable for damage to the goods. 2 Dan B. Dobbs, Paul T. Hayden and Ellen M. Bubliek, The Law of Torts § 260 at 27 (2d ed. 2011); Robert J. Kaczorowski, The Common-Law Background of Nineteenth-Century Tort Law, 51 Ohio St. L.J. 1127, 1130 n.14 (1990). But because passengers, unlike goods, had some ability to protect themselves, common law courts rеjected strict liability in negligence actions by passengers. See, e.g., Aston v. Heaven, (1797) 170 Eng. Rep. 445, 445-46 (K.B.). Instead, courts imposed a duty of the highest degree of care practicable under the circumstances. See id.
¶ 9 The rationale for applying a heightened standard of care to common carriers was that passengers depended upon the carrier to protect them from hazаrdous conditions that were frequently encountered in the early days of public transportation.
See
Dobbs et al.,
supra,
§ 262 at 31. Early American decisions adopted the heightened standard of care, the so-called “common carrier rule.”
See, e.g., Stokes v. Saltonstall,
¶ 10 Opinions of this Court have.also long repeated the common earner rule.
See S. Pac. Co. v. Hogan,
¶ 11 In
Atchison,
the trial court instructed the jury that a railroad was required “to exercise the highest degree of care for the safety of its passengers which is practicable under the circumstances.”
You are instructed that negligence is the omission to do something which a reasonably prudent man, guided by those considerations which usually regulate the conduct of human affairs would do; or is the doing of something which a prudent and reasonable man, guided by those same con *120 siderations would not do; it is not intrinsic or absolute, but is always relative to the surrounding circumstances of time, place and persons.
Id.
at 143-44,
¶ 12 This Court found that this “reasonably prudent mаn” instruction “correctly states the law,” and that failure to give it “tended to mislead the jury, by failing to point out sufficiently to it the limitations on the care required ... of a common carrier.”
Id.
at 145,
¶ 13
Atchison
is hardly a model of analytical consistency. On the one hand, the Court found that the “highest degree of care” instruction “correctly” stated a common carrier’s duty, but on the other, reversed for failure to give an ordinary “reasonable care” negligence instruction.
Atchison’s
ruling could be read as merely fact-specific.
See id.
(“Under some circumstances this failure to give the suggested instruction, even though, as we have said, it correctly states the law, might not have been prejudicial, but we think in the present case it was.”). But one week later, in another personal injury action by a passenger against a railroad, this Court cited the instruction requested by the railroad in
Atchison
as “an excellent definition of negligence.”
S. Pac. Co. v. Buntin,
¶ 14 Subsequent opinions of this Court reciting the “highest degree of care” language did not involve jury instructiоns.
See Napier,
¶ 15 Seventeen years later, the court of appeals upheld a “trial court’s refusal to apply the common carrier doctrine because ... it adds no useful element to the ordinary negligence standard of reasonable care under the circumstances.”
Lowrey v. Montgomery Kone, Inc.,
an attempt to explain the cоmmon earner doctrine to a jury would be riddled with the prospect of confusion____To hold that a common carrier must exert more than reasonable care under the circumstances not only serves no useful purpose; it is a hard concept to make sense of and one very likely to be misunderstood.
Id.
at 196 ¶ 23,
¶ 16 The decision below cited
Lowrey,
but suggested that Division One “lacked the authority” to abandon the common carrier doctrine in light of this Court’s previous decisions.
Nunez,
B.
¶ 17 In general, “every person is under a duty to avoid
creating
situatiоns which pose an unreasonable risk of harm to others.”
Ontiveros v. Borak,
¶ 18 But, “[t]he existence of a duty of care is a distinct issue from whether the standard of care has been met in a particular case.”
Gipson v. Kasey,
¶ 19 Brown argues that a heightened standard of care is required because passengers entrust their safety to common carriers. But people entrust their safety to others in many different contexts, such as undergoing surgery. In the medical context, however, the common law imposed upon the surgeon only the duty to act as a reasonable surgeon would under the сircumstances.
See Acton v. Morrison,
¶ 20 Brown also argues that most jurisdictions still adhere to the “highest standard of care” doctrine for common carriers. But we, of course, are not bound by decisions of other state courts in advancing our common law. Indeed, as one court has aptly noted, even eases that continue to “speak[ ] of a common carrier as being held to the highest degree of care,” in fact subject carriers “to essentially the same standard as any other alleged tort-feаsor,
i.e.,
an obligation to exercise due care.”
Sebastian,
¶ 21 The New York Court of Appeals has expressly rejected the common carrier doctrine, instead adopting the general standard of reasonable care under the circumstances.
Bethel,
¶ 22 As the
Lowrey
court did, we find
Bethel
persuasive.
See Lowrey,
¶ 23 We therefore conclude that the appropriate standard of care in negligence actions by passengers against common earners is the objective, reasonable person standard in traditional negligence law. This “standard provides sufficient flexibility, and leeway, to permit due allowance to be made ... for all of the particular circumstances of the case which may reasonably affect the conduct required.” Second Restatement § 283 cmt. c. The finder of fact should consider that the defendant is a common carrier for hire when determining whether the carrier “met the standard of care — that is, whether there has been a breach of duty.”
Gipson,
III.
¶ 24 Brown argues that abandonment of the common carrier doctrine would violate the “anti-abrogation” clause of the Arizona Constitution, which provides that “[t]he right of action to recover damages for injuries shall never be abrogated.” Ariz. Const. art. 18, § 6. She reasons that the doctrine was part of the English common law and adopted in Arizona before statehood in
Hogan,
¶25 We reject the argument. We have repeatedly noted that the legislature “is entitled to regulate common law tort actions,” as long as a claimant is left “ ‘a reasonable рossibility of obtaining legal redress.’ ”
State Farm Ins. Cos. v. Premier Manufac
*123
tured Sys., Inc.,
¶ 26 Our anti-abrogation jurisprudence normally asks whether a statute unconstitutionally deprives a litigant of access to the courts.
See, e.g., id.
at 228-29 ¶ 32,
IV.
¶ 27 Brown also argues that if we abandon the common carrier rule, we should do so only prospectively. The general rule, however, is that “Arizona appellate opinions in civil cases operate both retroactively and prospectively.”
Law,
1. The opinion establishes a new legal principle by overruling clear and reliable precedent or by deciding an issue whose resolution was not foreshadowed;
2. Retroactive application would adversely affect the purpose behind the new rule; and
3. Retroactive application would produce substantially inequitable results.
Id.
¶ 28 Those conditions are not satisfied here. Far from overruling “clear and reliable precedent,” our decision was foreshadowed by Lowrey, an opinion not a decade old. Indeed, as noted above, no decision of this Court has required a heightened standard of care instruction in a common carrier tort action. Our decision today serves to avоid jury instructions that would be quite difficult to apply, and retroactive application would neither adversely affect this goal nor produce substantially inequitable results.
V.
¶ 29 For the reasons above, we vacate the memorandum decision of the court of appeals and remand to the superior court for a new trial.
Notes
. Before trial, Brоwn died from causes unrelated to this incident. Her personal representative, Nunez, was substituted as plaintiff. We refer to the plaintiff as Brown in this opinion for simplicity.
. "With the exception of Comment d to § 27 and Comment a to § 28, the substance of Proposed Final Draft No. 1 (issued on April 6, 2005), has been finally approved by both the [American Law] Institute’s Council and its membership.” Third Restatement § 40 (Prоposed Final Draft No. 1 2007) Note.
. The standard of care in medical malpractice cases has now been codified in A.R.S. § 12-563.
.
See also Union Traction Co. of Ind.
v.
Berry,
