The question in this case is whether the defendant landlord is liable to the plaintiff in tort for the death of plaintiff’s four-year-old daughter who fell to her *390 death from an outdoor stairway at a residential building owned by the defendant in Nashua. The defendant resided in a ground floor apartment in the building, and her son and daughter-in-law occupied a second story apartment serviced by the stairway from which the child fell. At the time of the accident the child was under the care of the defendant’s daughter-in-law who was plaintiff’s regular baby-sitter.
Plaintiff brought suit against the daughter-in-law for negligent supervision and against the defendant for negligent construction and maintenance of the stairway which was added to the building by the defendant about eight years before the accident. There was no apparent cause for the fall except for evidence that the stairs were dangerously steep, and that the railing was insufficient to prevent the child from falling over the side. The jury returned a verdict for the daughter-in-law but found in favor of the plaintiff in her action against the defendant landlord. The defendant seasonably excepted to the denial of her motions for a nonsuit, directed verdict, judgment n.o.v., and to have the verdict set aside, and all questions of law were reserved and transferred to this court by Dunfey, J.
Claiming that there was no evidence that the defendant retained control over the stairway, that it was used in common with other tenants, or that it contained a concealed defect, defendant urges that there was accordingly no duty owing to the deceased child for the defendant to breach. This contention rests upon the general rule which has long obtained in this and most other jurisdictions that a landlord is not liable, except in certain limited situations, for injuries caused by defective or dangerous conditions in the leased premises.
E.g., Black v. Fiandaca,
General principles of tort law ordinarily impose liability upon persons for injuries caused by their failure to exercise reasonable care under all the circumstances.
Fitzpatrick v. Public Serv. Co.,
One court recognized at an early date that ordinary principles of tort liability ought to apply to landlords as other persons. “The ground of liability upon the part of a landlord when he demises dangerous property has nothing special to do with the relation of landlord and tenant. It is the ordinary case of liability for personal misfeasance, which runs through all the relations of individuals to each other.”
Wilcox v. Hines,
As is to be expected where exceptions to a rule of law form the only basis of liability, the parties in this action concentrated at trial and on appeal on whether any of the excep
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tions applied, particularly whether the landlord or the tenant had control of the stairway. 1 H. Tiffany, Real Property § 109 (3d ed. 1939). The determination of the question of which party had control of the defective part of the premises causing the injury has generally been considered dispositive of the landlord’s liability.
E.g., Black v. Fiandaca,
There was evidence from which the jury could find that the landlord negligently designed or constructed a stairway which was dangerously steep or that she negligently failed to remedy or adequately warn the deceased of the danger. A proper rule of law would not preclude recovery in such a case by a person foreseeably injured by a dangerous hazard solely because the stairs serviced one apartment instead of two. But that would be the result if the control test were applied to this case, since this was not a “common stairway” or otherwise under the landlord’s control.
See generally
Annot.,
The anomaly of the general rule of landlord tort immunity and the inflexibility of the standard exceptions, such as the
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control exception, is pointedly demonstrated by this case. A child is killed by a dangerous condition of the premises. Both husband and wife tenants testify that they could do nothing to remedy the defect because they did not own the house nor have authority to alter the defect. But the landlord claims that she should not be liable because the stairs were not under her control. Both of these contentions are premised on the theory that the other party should be responsible. So the orthodox analysis would leave us with neither landlord nor tenant responsible for dangerous conditions on the premises. This would be both illogical and intolerable, particularly since neither party then would have any legal reason to remedy or take precautionary measures with respect to dangerous conditions. In fact, the traditional “control” rule actually discourages a landlord from remedying a dangerous condition since his repairs may be evidence of his control.
Hunkins v. Amoskeag Mfg. Co.,
In
Wiggin v. Kent McCray, Inc.,
Similarly, the truly pertinent questions involved in deter
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mining who should bear responsibility for the loss in this case were clouded by the question of whether the accident was caused by a hidden defect or secret danger.
E.g., Clark v. Sharpe,
Finally, plaintiff’s reliance on the negligent repairs exception to the rule of nonliability
(Hunkins v. Amoskeag Mfg. Co.,
In recent years, immunities from tort liability affording “special protection in some types of relationships have been steadily giving way” in this and other jurisdictions. 2 F. Harper and F. James,
supra
at 1508;
see Hurley v. Town of Hudson,
This conclusion springs naturally and inexorably from our recent decision in
Kline v. Burns,
To the extent that
Kline v. Burns
did not do so, we today discard the rule of “caveat lessee” and the doctrine of landlord nonliability in tort to which it gave birth. We thus bring up to date the other half of landlord-tenant law. Henceforth, landlords as other persons must exercise reasonable care not to subject others to an unreasonable risk of harm.
Scott v. Simons,
The abiding respect of this court for precedent and stability in the law is balanced by an appreciation of the need for responsible growth and change in rules that have failed to keep pace with modern developments in social and juridical thought. When we abolished the tort immunity of a parent from suit by his child, another artificial and inequitable exception to the general rules of tort liability, we made the following observation which is equally pertinent to this case: “If after thorough examination a prior judicial decision seems manifestly out of accord with modern conditions of life, it should not be followed as a controlling precedent. 37 Harv. L. Rev. 409, 414. Finding no supportable rationale upon which this judicially created exception to the ordinary rules of liability can be predicated, justice demands and reason dictates that a change be made from the previous holding in such a situation.”
Dean v. Smith,
*399
Our decision will shift the primary focus of inquiry for judge and jury from the traditional question of “Who had control?” to a determination of whether the landlord, and the injured party, exercised due care under all the circumstances. Perhaps even more significantly, the ordinary negligence standard should help insure that a landlord will take whatever precautions are reasonably necessary under the circumstances to reduce the likelihood of injuries from defects in his property. “It is appropriate that the landlord who will retain ownership of the premises and any permanent improvements should bear the cost of repairs necessary to make the premises safe . . .
."Kline v. Burns,
Although the trial court’s instructions to the jury in the instant case were cast according to the traditional exceptions of control and hidden danger, the charge clearly set forth the elements of ordinary negligence which were presented by the court as a prerequisite to a finding of liability on either issue. Thus, the jury could find that the defendant was negligent in the design or construction of the steep stairway or in failing to take adequate precautionary measures to reduce the risk of injury. We have carefully reviewed the record and conclude that there is sufficient evidence, on the basis of the principles set forth above, to support the verdict of the jury which had the benefit of a view.
See Vezina v. Amoskeag Realty Co.,
*400 The'verdict of the jury is sustained, and the order is
Exceptions overruled; judgment on the verdict.
