Dolan v. Suffolk Franklin Savings Bank

246 N.E.2d 798, 355 Mass. 665, 1969 Mass. LEXIS 853
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 15, 1969
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 246 N.E.2d 798 (Dolan v. Suffolk Franklin Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dolan v. Suffolk Franklin Savings Bank, 246 N.E.2d 798, 355 Mass. 665, 1969 Mass. LEXIS 853 (Mass. 1969).

Opinions

Reardon, J.

The plaintiff was a tenant prior to April 27, 1961, in a building located on Bowdoin Street in Boston where a fire and explosion occurred on July 20, 1961, in which she suffered personal injuries and property damage. The defendant bank had held a mortgage on the premises which it foreclosed and under which it took possession on April 27, 1961, notifying the plaintiff to pay all future rents to its agent, which she did. On the first floor of the building was a restaurant operated by the defendant Mary C. Pantages, containing in its kitchen a gas stove with eight burners and pilot lights, two gas heated coffee urns and one gas heated hot water urn. On the evening of the fire and explosion Mrs. Pantages’ husband, who was operating the restaurant in her absence, prior to closing it and leaving the building about 7 p.m. fit the gas heater under the hot water urn which then contained about six gallons of water, leaving the burner on a low flame that the water might be hot upon his return the following morning. The fire took place approximately three-quarters of an hour later. The plaintiff is here on exceptions to the allowance of the defendants’ motions for directed verdicts in their favor at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence and also to the exclusion of certain evidence which the plaintiff offered.

1. The plaintiff argues that the defendant bank can be held for its negligence on the ground of responsibility for a fire hazard in an area not part of the common premises but an area yet within its control. Employing in combination certain evidence admitted, and other evidence excluded over the plaintiff’s objections and exceptions, the plaintiff contends that there were no sprinklers in a building where the building code required them, and that the premises were occupied by a restaurant using gas cooking facilities, a [667]*667specifically forbidden use in this substandard building following a hearing in 1956 by the board of appeal.1

The general rule in Massachusetts is that violation of a safety statute or ordinance does not in itself give rise to a cause of action but is evidence of negligence. Ross v. Broitman, 338 Mass. 770, 774. But the defendant bank cites to us Stapleton v. Cohen, 353 Mass. 53, 56, cert. den. 391 U. S. 968, which holds that violation of a safety provision by a landlord is neither a ground of civil liability of itself nor evidence of negligence. To the same effect are Richmond v. Warren Inst. for Sav. 307 Mass. 483, 485, and Campbell v. Romanos, 346 Mass. 361, 368, which also deal with unsafe conditions in common areas. The defendant bank suggests that this line of cases applies here and justifies the action of the court below. We disagree.

The common law duty of the landlord with regard to common areas is well settled: he must use reasonable care to keep them in as good a condition as they were, or appeared to be, at the time the tenancy began. Dello Russo v. Rizzo, 302 Mass. 177, 178. Shwartz v. Feinberg, 306 Mass. 331, 333-334. Dreher v. Bedford Realty, Inc. 335 Mass. 385, 388. Merwin v. De Raptellis, 338 Mass. 118, 120. Goodman v. Smith, 340 Mass. 336, 338. Finn v. Peters, 340 Mass. 622, 624. The duty was illustrated by the court in Richmond v. Warren Inst. for Sav. 307 Mass. 483, 485-486 (a fall caused by an obstruction in a common hallway and upon a common stairway). “There can be negligence only with relation to a duty to exercise care, and as the statute creates no new duty of care as between landlord and tenant the duty of care, if any, in this case must be that existing at common law. . . . Bis duty relates to the condition of [668]*668the premises themselves as compared to their condition when the tenancy began.”

The point is further illustrated by analogy in Wynn v. Sullivan, 294 Mass. 562, where it was held that no duty was owed by the defendant to the plaintiff because the latter was a bare licensee. Of an alleged violation of a statute, the court said: “|T]t is true that the defendant’s violation of law would have been evidence of negligence on his part, if he had owed a duty to be careful” (emphasis supplied). P. 565.

In contrast to the Stapleton and related cases, the present case does not deal with common areas.2 If the landlord here owes the tenant any duty it is a duty of reasonable care, violation of which can be evidenced by breach of an ordinance. So the question is whether the landlord of an apartment building owes a duty to his tenant to use due care to keep the building in a reasonably safe condition in other than common areas.

. A guide to the answer may be found in Wainwright v. Jackson, 291 Mass. 100, a case where a plaintiff suffered injury in an apartment house fire. Recovery was denied because no causal connection was established between the plaintiff’s injuries and the defendant’s violation of a safety statute requiring fire extinguishers in the basement and on each floor of the apartment house. But the court noted, “It may be assumed that that statute is available in appropriate cases for the benefit of tenants in an apartment house” (emphasis supplied). P. 102. Since the statute created no new duty of its own, its violation could be evidence only of an obligation existing at common law, i.e., the duty to use due care in maintaining a building in a reasonably safe manner.

Reference should also be made to Ross v. Broitman, 338 Mass. 770. There a fire started in one of two adjoin[669]*669ing, attached houses and, due to violation of a statute in the first house, spread to the second house where the plaintiff’s decedent was visiting (or living with) a tenant, the plaintiff’s mother. Both houses were owned by the defendant. It was held that violation of the statute was evidence of negligence, apparently because the tenancy involved was not in the house where the violation occurred. It is not logical to allow the benefit of a safety provision to a tenant of another building and to deny it to a tenant of the building where the violation occurred, whose safety was obviously uppermost in the minds of those enacting the provision. But we need not here reconsider the fine of cases ending with the Stapleton case, holding that violation of a statute or ordinance is not evidence of negligence. We merely limit it to situations- where common areas are involved. Here, subject to proof of other elements of liability (see Wainwright v. Jackson, 291 Mass. 100, 102-103), violation of § 1008 (a) of the city building code may be found to be evidence of negligence, i.e., failure to use due care to keep the building in a reasonably safe condition in other than common areas. To the extent that Greenway Wood Heel Co. Inc. v. John Shea Co. 313 Mass. 177, suggests a different result, we do not follow it. Therefore, we sustain the plaintiff’s exceptions relative to the excluded evidence and the verdict directed in favor of the defendant bank.

2. The plaintiff seeks to hold the defendant Mary C. Pantages on a basis similar to that on which the plaintiff has alleged liability on the part of the defendant bank.3

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Bluebook (online)
246 N.E.2d 798, 355 Mass. 665, 1969 Mass. LEXIS 853, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dolan-v-suffolk-franklin-savings-bank-mass-1969.