On August 3, 1977, the plaintiff Young commenced this action in the Superior Court in Hampden County against the defendants Garwacki (tenant) and Kenneth N. LaFreniere (landlord). The complaint stated two counts of negligence, one against the tenant and the other
*163
against the landlord, in which Young sought damages for personal injuries sustained in a fall from the second-story front porch of the tenant’s apartment. Young alleged that she was lawfully on the premises and that the railing had been negligently maintained. The case was tried to a jury which found for the plaintiff on both counts and returned answers to special questions on September 21, 1978. Mass. R. Civ. P. 49 (a),
The facts as stated in the judge’s report show the following. Thе accident occurred on the landlord’s property at 7 Park Street in Westfield. Garwacki rented the house’s second-floor apartment as a tenant at will. One Larry Mastello shared the apartment with him. Mastello invited Young, a friend of both men, to a dinner party on April 21, 1977. She arrived before the other guests and began preparing the dinner. On his way to pick up a friend, Mastello went down to his car which was parked in a driveway near the front of the house. Young went to the front porch to ask him to pick up some groceries on his way back. When she placed her hands on the railing and leaned forward to call down to Mastello, the railing gave way. She fell to the ground and was injured.
In December, 1976, the landlord’s insurance company had informed him that the railing was dangerous аnd had cancelled his liability insurance. At that time, the landlord warned the tenant of the danger and bought materials to repair the railing, but he made no repairs.
*164 According to the judge’s report, the landlord had made no express agreement to keep the premises in repair, although he testified he considered it his obligation to repair the porch railing. Furthermore, the porсh, which was accessible only from the tenant’s living room, was part of the demised premises, not under the landlord’s control. In answer to the judge’s special questions, the jury found that the landlord did not exercise reasonable care in his maintenance of the premises, that his negligence was the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injuries, and that she was not at all negligent herself. 1
Thus, this case presents a question we have reserved before.
DiMarzo
v.
S. & P. Realty Corp.,
Common law rules defining a landowner’s liability in negligence to people coming onto the land reflected the needs of аn agrarian society. The landowner was a petty sovereign within his boundaries. The character of his duty to an injured party varied with the party’s relationship with the sovereign.
Mounsey
v.
Ellard,
*165 The traditional approach to tenants turned on the concept of a lease as а conveyance of property. The tenant “bought” the leasehold at his peril, so he could not expect the landlord to have repaired preexisting defects, and at the time of the letting, the landlord ceded to the tenant his dominion over the rented premises. Under this ancient view, the axiom was “there is no law against letting a tumbledown house.” Robbins v. Jones, 15 C.B. (N.S.) 221, 240, 143 Eng. Rep. 768, 776 (1863). The landlord might have beеn liable for negligent maintenance of common areas, but was not generally liable for the negligent maintenance of the premises themselves. See generally Restatement (Second) of Property, Landlord and Tenant c. 17, Introductory Note & § 17.3 (1977); 2 R. Powell, Real Property par. 233 (at 330.69-330.70), par. 234[2][b] (P. Rohan 1977).
The landlord “was under a separate and limited duty toward each tenant and that tenant’s visitors to exercise reasonable care to maintain the common areas in a condition not less safe than they were, or appeared to be in, at the time of the letting to the particular tenant.”
King
v.
G & M Realty Corp.,
After seven years of reconsideration and reform, little remains of this obsolete machinery of the common law. Much of the reform has been accomplished judicially.* *
3
“Recent
*167
decisions of this court clearly reflect ... a shift in philosophy with regard to status distinctions in tort standards of care . . . .”
Poirier
v.
Plymouth,
In the landlord-tenant field, we have held that a landlord is liable to a tenant’s guest for failing to exercise due care in maintaining common passageways under the landlord’s control without regard to their condition at the time of the letting. Lindsey v. Massios, supra. We said that “the *168 status of the person visited, landowner or lessee, should not affect the visitor’s right to personal safety or the landowner’s obligation reasonably to maintain premises in his control.” Id. at 82. In King v. G & M Realty Corp., supra, we extended the landlord’s general and continuing duty to exercise reasonable care as to the safety of common passageways to include tenants as well as their visitors.
We have also attacked the theory on which the tenant’s status classification depends. In the line of cases creating and applying the implied warranty of habitability, we have overthrown the doctrine of caveat emptor and the notion that a lease is a conveyance of property.
Berman & Sons
v.
Jefferson,
Tоday, we do away with the ancient law that bars a tenant’s guest from recovering compensation from a landlord for injuries caused by negligent maintenance of areas rented to the tenant. Like the other rules based on status, this rule has prevented a whole class of people from raising the overriding issue: whether the landlord acted reasonably under the circumstances. Thе practical result of this archaic rule has been to discourage repairs of rented premises. In cases like the one before us, a landlord with knowledge of a defect has less incentive to repair it. And the tenant, who often has a short-term lease, limited funds, and limited experience dealing with such defects, will not be inclined to pay for expensive work on a place he will soon be leaving. 5 *169 Thus, the defect may go unrepaired until an unsuspecting plaintiff finds herself with a lawsuit that care could have prevented.
Seven years ago, in
Sargent
v.
Ross,
*170 The former rule was not without its reasons. When a landlord rents an apartment to a tenant, he gives up his right to enter. Ordinarily, absent a contractual agreement or the tenant’s permission, the landlord can neither inspect for defects nor make repairs on the rented premises. See G. L. c. 186, § 15B (1) (a). This obstacle, however, does not justify the landlord’s wholesale absolution from liability. 7 Matters of control, like mаtters of status, can be components of familiar negligence analysis; they can affect such questions as reasonableness and foreseeability. So, too, may matters of intervening negligence by the tenant or others be treated. Cf. G. L. c. 186, § 19. In particular, a landlord should not be liable in negligence unless he knew or reasonably should have known of the defect 8 and had a reasonable opportunity to repair it. 9
Our statutes do not support limiting a landlord’s negligence liability to areas under his control. General Laws c. 186, § 19, 10 requires most landlords to exercise reasonable *171 care to correct an unsafe condition of which the tenant or a code enforcement agency has given him notice. If a landlord fails to correct the condition within a reasonable time, the tenant or any person rightfully on the premises has a tort action against the landlord for injuriеs sustained. General Laws c. 186, § 15,* 11 renders invalid any lease clause which has the effect of idemnifying the landlord or exculpating him from “any . . . negligence ... on or about the leased . . . premises.” In St. 1974, c. 575, § 1, the Legislature deleted the phrase “and not within the exclusive control of the lessee or tenant.” Thus, the landlord is liable in negligence for defects of which he has notice, even though the defect occurs on the rented premises. Furthermore, the landlord cannot exculpate himself from liability for negligent maintenance of the rented premises. Both of these statutes are consistent with the result we reach today. 12
*172 We reverse the judgment and remand the case to the Superior Court with orders that the jury’s verdict be reinstated.
So ordered.
Notes
The judge instructed the jury to assume that there was an implied duty imposed on the landlord to exercise reasonable care to maintain the rental premises in a reasonably safe condition. By doing this, he utilized the device of special questions so that the jury could determine whether the landlord had violated such duty. He states in his report that he did so “in the hope of obviating the necessity of a new trial if an appellate cоurt did decide in this case that landlords are under such a duty.” We commend the judge for this approach as being consistent with the intent of Mass. R. Civ. P. 50 (b),
In addition to the hidden defects exception, many jurisdictions require landlords who lease property for a purpose involving admission of the public to exercise reasonable care to discover and remedy defects existing at the time of the letting, if the landlord can reasonably expect that the tenant will admit the public before the property is made safe. Restatement (Second) of Property, Landlord and Tenant § 17.2 (1977). This
*166
broad exception never came into the law of the Commonwealth.
Mallard
v.
Waldman,
For examples of statutory reform, see G. L. c. 111, §§ 127A-127K (public and private remedies for sanitary code violations); G. L. c. 111, § 127L (repair and deduct); G. L. c. 186, § 14 (criminal and civil penalties for failure to furnish essential services or for interference with quiet enjoyment); G. L. c. 186, §§ 15-15F (limits on freedom of сontract); G. L. c. 186, § 18 (penalties for reprisals against tenants); G. L. c. 186, *167 § 19 (tort action against landlord who fails to correct unsafe condition after notice); G. L. c. 186, § 20 (tenant’s recovery of attorney’s fees); G. L. c. 239, § 2A (reprisal against tenant for reporting violations of law or joining tenant’s union is defense to summary process action); G. L. c. 239, § 8A (defenses and counterclaims in summary process proceedings; rent withholding). For a discussion of a tenant’s remedies under the consumer protection statute, G. L. c. 93A, see Note, Consumer Protection Legislation and the Assertion of Tenant Rights: The Massachusetts Paradigm, 59 B.U.L. Rev. 483 (1979).
A parallel shift in philosophy has occurred in the area of tort immunity. We have repeatedly demonstrated our readiness to reconsider common law immunity doctrines. See, e.g.,
Colby
v.
Carney Hosp.,
Of course, nothing we say here as to the landlord’s duty of care is to be construed as relieving a tenant of his legal responsibility to exercise reasonable care as to the demised premises.
In reaction against the traditional rule, courts have “expended considerable energy and exercised great ingenuity in attempting to fit various factual settings into the rеcognized exceptions.” Restatement (Second) of Property, Landlord and Tenant c. 17, Reporter’s Note to Introductory Note 2, at 157 (1977). Ry eliminating the rule entirely, we obviate the need for its exceptions. Thus, the hidden defect doctrine, which we criticized in a related context in
Poirier
v.
Plymouth,
In fact, under our cases, the lаndlord was not liable even after the right to obtain control of the premises reverted to him. Liability attached only after the landlord actually obtained control.
Cassidy
v.
Welsh,
Because the landlord here had knowledge of the defect, we need not consider the extent to which landlords may be chargeable with knowledge.
The rule may be different in an action for injuries resulting from breach of the warranty of habitability. In
Crowell
v.
McCaffrey,
The statute, inserted by St. 1972, c. 665, provides: “A landlord or lessor of any real estate except an owner-occupied two- or three-family dwelling shall, within a reasonable time following receipt of a written notice from a tenant forwarded by registered or certified mail of an unsafe condition, not caused by the tenant, his invitee, or any one occupying through or'under the tenant, exercise reasonable care to correct the unsafe condition described in said notice except that such notice need not be given for unsafe conditions in that portion of the premises not under control of the tenant. The tenant or any person rightfully on said premises injured as a result of the failure to correct said unsafe condition within a reasonable time shall have a right of action in tort against the landlord or *171 lessor for damages. Any waiver of this provision in any lease or other rentаl agreement shall be void and unenforceable. The notice requirement of this section shall be satisfied by a notice from a board of health or other code enforcement agency to a landlord or lessor of residential premises not exempted by the provisions of this section of a violation of the state sanitary code or other applicable by-laws, ordinances, rules or regulations.”
The statute, as amended by St. 1974, c. 575, § 1, provides: “Any provision of a lease or other rental agreement relating to real property whereby a lessee or tenant enters into a covenant, agreement or contract, by the use of any words whatsoever, the effect of which is to indemnify the lessor or landlord or hold the lessor or landlord harmless, or preclude or exonerate the lessor or landlord from any or all liability to the lessee or tenant, or to any other person, for any injury, loss, damage or liability arising from any omission, fault, negligence or other misconduct of the lessor or landlord on or about the leased or rented premises or on or about any elevators, stairways, hallways or other appurtenаnce used in connection therewith, shall be deemed to be against public policy and void.”
The statutes also raise a number of questions which we need not decide. Although we do not construe them today, the statutes are not limited by their terms to residential properties. We do not decide whether our rule today should extend to nonresidential properties. Cf.
Berman & Sons
v.
Jefferson, supra; Crowell
v.
McCaffrey, supra; Boston Hous. Auth.
v.
Hemingway,
