In this action of tort the plaintiff had verdicts for the conscious suffering and death of the plaintiff’s intestate, Donna Marie Ward, in a fire in premises of the defendant. The defendant excepted to the denial of a motion for a directed verdict, to the refusal to give certain requests, to instructions given, and to the denial in part of a motion to strike material from the auditor’s report.
The evidence permitted the jury to find as follows: The fire occurred on May 12, 1955, in two adjoining, attached, wooden frame, three apartment buildings, 1 Milton Street and 35 Spring Street, Boston, owned by the defendant. The fire started in the first floor apartment at 1 Milton Street occupied by a tenant, Antony Calafano, whose business was dealing in junk. A large accumulation of paper and cardboard (about five feet high and twelve feet long) in the first floor common hallway, at 1 Milton Street, which was in the control of the defendant, had been in plain view and known to the defendant for some weeks or months. This accumulated material created an intensity in the fire which caused it to spread through a window at the rear of the hallway to the building at 35 Spring Street. The fire reached the third floor apartment of the plaintiff’s mother at 35 Spring Street and there caused the death of the plaintiff’s intestate. There was no evidence that the defendant, her agents or servants, had placed the paper and cardboard in the hallway.
1. The trial judge on motion of the defendant struck from the auditor’s report the words “[Tjhe view of the law upon which my finding depends is that the defendant was *772 negligent in permitting the hallway under her control on the first floor of the building owned by her at 1 Milton Street to be used for the storage of inflammable materials, which were or might become, dangerous to the public safety as a fire menace in violation of the provisions of . . . G. L. c. 148, § 24, and under such circumstances and conditions that a fire might likely result therefrom, or become intensified, or uncontrollable thereby, and that such negligence was a contributing cause of the spread of the fire to 35 Spring Street and the resulting conscious suffering and death.” The defendant contends that the judge should therefore also have- struck out the words “and that the defendant was guilty of negligence, which created a fire hazard that was a contributing cause of the spread of said fire to the building at 35 Spring Street and of the conscious suffering and death of Donna Marie Ward,” and the words, “I find for. the plaintiff and assess damages in the amount of five hundred dollars ($500) for conscious suffering and five thousand dollars ($5,000) for the death.” We disagree.
General Laws c. 221, § 56, requires that the court “exclude any finding of fact which appears in the report to be based upon an erroneous opinion of law, or upon inadmissible evidence.” That the judge did not strike the conclusions in respect of negligence shows that he did not deem these conclusions to be based on an erroneous view of the law or inadmissible evidence. The judge’s action in striking the material from the report shows in the circumstances that he believed it inadvisable to give to the jury the auditor’s “view of the law.” ■ This was consistent with the judge’s function to instruct the jury as to the law. There is no exception before us to the act of striking the material which was deleted. We intend no suggestion.
2. There was no error in denying the motion for a directed verdict. In
Chalfen
v.
Kraft,
The principle that an owner in control of a common passageway does not have a duty, in the relationship of landlord and tenant, to remove objects placed therein by others (see
Richmond
v.
Warren Inst. for Sav.
3. There-was no error in respect of requested rulings and instructions given. It is true that the defendant’s requests numbered 4 and 5 correctly stated the law.
“4.
Violation of G. L. c. 148, § 24, does not create any civil liability by the defendant to the plaintiff. 5. Chapter 148, § 24, created
*774
no new duty of care owed by the. defendant to the plaintiff other than that • existing at common law.” It is well established that such a statute, although its violation by a person to whom it applies is evidence- of negligence
(Wainwright
v.
Jackson,
There was-no error in the instructions with respect -to the violation of the statute. -The violation was evidence of neg
*775
ligence in that a part of the defendant’s building which was in her control was being used for the storage of paper which the jury could find was a fire menace. “Paper stock” is mentioned in the statute. The defendant knew that her building was being so used.' The case of
Little
v.
Lynn & Marblehead Real Estate Co.
There was no error in reading and expounding the statute. The plaintiff’s request numbered 2 as- given was sufficiently precise. The statute is not limited, in its application, as the defendant contends, to her own use of the premises for storing paper.
What we have said shows that neither request numbered 1 nor request numbered 6 1 could have been given. Request numbered 2 (no duty on the defendant to prevent the spread of the fire until she had notice of it) was inapplicable.
Exceptions overruled'.
Notes
General Laws c: 148, §-24, provides:' ‘rNo part of any building used for habitation.nor that part of any lot within, fifty feet of any building so used shall, except as permitted by section twenty-three, be used for the storage, keeping or handling of any article .or material that is or, may become, dangerous to the public safety as a fire menace, and no part of any such building shall be used as a carpenter shop or paint shop, nor forthe storage,-keeping or handling of excelsior, shavings, sawdust, cotton, paper stock, feathers or rags, except under such terms and conditions as the head of the fire department may prescribe in writing.”' ...
“1. There was no responsibility on the part of the defendant, outside of any provision of any statute, to remove from the premises anything which was put thereon by any person other than the ■ defendant- or her agents or servants.” “6. Even though the defendant knew of or should have known of the presence of paper and cardboard in'the hallway of the premises at 1 Milton Street prior to the fire, the defendant is not liable for the spread of the fire and the ultimate death of the plaintiff’s-intestate.” - .
