Acting under Mass.R.Civ.P. 64,
“Whether a count alleging that a patient resident in a nursing home was caused to slip and fall with resulting injuries as a result of the careless and negligent main-tena.nce of a stairway in the nursing home is appropriate for consideration of a tribunal commenced pursuant to G. L. c. 231, § 60B, in circumstances where a second count alleges that the careless and negligent failure to supervise, attend and care for the plaintiff as a patient caused plaintiff to slip and fall with the same resulting injuries.”
The tribunal had determined that the defective stairway issue was not within its jurisdiction. 1 We agree.
We derive the necessary facts from a statement of material facts filed by the parties pursuant to Mass.R.Civ.P. 64 and G. L. c. 231, § 111. In June, 1978, the plaintiff Rose Brodie, an eighty-four year old woman, was a patient at the defendant nursing home, Gardner Pierce Nursing and Rest Home, Inc. (Gardner Pierce). Following an operation to remove a cataract in her right eye, Brodie was assigned to the fifth floor within Gardner Pierce, where Level Three care was administered. This care afforded a higher degree of supervision than Brodie had previously required and was indicated by the impairment of vision she had suffered after surgery. On July 1, while alone and unattended, Brodie “had somehow gotten from the fifth floor ... to the basement.” While walking upstairs to the first floor, she slipped, fell and injured herself, and has, as a result, incurred large medical and hospital bills.
While the statute does not textually define an “action for malpractice, error or mistake,” the outlines of a definition have begun to be drawn by decisional law. The purpose of § 60B, as stated in the preamble to St. 1975, c. 362, which established the tribunal, was “to guarantee the continued availability of medical malpractice insurance.” It was also the Legislature’s purpose to make malpractice insurance available at more reasonable premiums since escalating premiums would inevitably have an impact on the cost of medical services to consumers.
Aker
v.
Pearson, 7
Mass. App. Ct. 552, 555 (1979).
Paro
v.
Longwood Hosp., supra
at 647. As a means to those ends, the statute is designed “ to discourage frivolous claims whose defense would tend to increase premium charges for medical malpractice insurance.”
Austin
v.
Boston Univ. Hosp.,
It has been held that injuries caused by defective hospital property are within malpractice insurance policies covering injuries due to mistake, error or negligence.
Burns
v.
American Cas. Co.,
The defendant argues that the very use of the premises by patients constitutes a part of their treatment. However, the focus of the tribunal’s inquiry is limited to evaluation of only the “medical aspects” of claims.
Salem Orthopedic Surgeons, Inc.
v.
Quinn,
An action for negligent maintenance of a stairway, a conventional building component, does not raise a question requiring expert medical evaluation, i.e., whether the health provider conformed to appropriate standards of medical care in its care and treatment of patients. See
Salem Orthopedic Surgeons, Inc.
v.
Quinn, supra
at 519, 521;
McMahon
v.
Glixman,
To be sure, inclusion of count 1 in the tribunal’s jurisdiction would suit one purpose of § 60B, that is, to weed out frivolous claims against health care providers. “Carried to its logical conclusion, however, [this] argument would turn
On the question reported, therefore, we answer that the count in the complaint alleging injury by reason of a negligently maintained stairway in the defendant nursing home, as it raises no question of medical care, is not appropriate for consideration by a medical malpractice tribunal, even in circumstances where a second count alleges a negligent failure to supervise a patient, thus causing her to slip and fall on the allegedly defective stairway.
The case is remanded to the Superior Court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
The tribunal did consider the question whether the defendant had cared for the plaintiff negligently.
