Pomfret v. Fletcher

208 A.2d 743, 99 R.I. 452, 1965 R.I. LEXIS 462
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 29, 1965
DocketEx. No. 10637
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 208 A.2d 743 (Pomfret v. Fletcher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pomfret v. Fletcher, 208 A.2d 743, 99 R.I. 452, 1965 R.I. LEXIS 462 (R.I. 1965).

Opinion

*453 Condon, C. J.

This is an action of trespass on the case by a tenant, Marion Pomfret, against her landlords, Ronald L. and Margaret F. Fletcher, husband and wife, for negligence in permitting a dangerous condition on a common walk of the rented premises to exist due to ice and snow. The case was tried to a justice of the superior court without a jury and resulted in a decision for the plaintiff. The defendants duly excepted thereto' and have brought the case here by their bill of exceptions to such decision and to certain evidentiary rulings.

The plaintiff fell on the common walk which ran along the side of defendants’ house from the front to the rear yard.. The .house was. a duplex cottage which had been divided into two apartments. The plaintiff rented the front apartment and defendants occupied the.rear apartment. In the rear yard defendants had provided receptacles for garbage and rubbish. The only access.to the rear-yard-from plaintiff’s front apartment, was by. means of the common .walk. It was plaintiff’s custom to. use. the walk two ordhree mornings a week, between 7 and 7:30 .o’clock to. dispose of her garbage and rubbish.,. On the morning, of January 1,3, 196.0 the walk, yas icy in spots, which had been covered by a light.fall-of snow during, the night. • .

:. On that morning between 7‘ and" 7:20 o’clock plaintiff deft her apartment 'and proceeded slowly along- the Walk to the *454 rear yard to dispose of some garbage when suddenly she slipped on an icy spot and fell on her back and hit her head. She could not get up immediately and she testified that while she was lying there defendant Margaret F. Fletcher came out “evidently, to put salt or something” on the walk. Over objection she was asked if Mrs. Fletcher said anything to- her at that time and plaintiff answered, “She said that she was coming around to put salt on the walk. Her husband had been back and asked her to do it. That it was slippery.” The witness was then asked if Mrs. Fletcher had said anything further and replied, “She said she should have got around there sooner.” The defendants moved to strike this latter testimony. The motion was denied and such denial is the subject of the first evidentiary exception.

Mrs. Fletcher did not testify. Mr. Fletcher testified that on January 13, 1960 he left his apartment at about 7:10 or 7:11 a.m. and went along the walk at the side of the house; that he noticed a slippery spot; and that he went back into the house and told his wife, “ ‘You better get some salt out there because Marion might slip.’ ” He then went on his way to his work where he was due at 8 a.m. He testified further that when he left, his wife “went to get the salt.” In rebuttal he was cross-examined as to whether he had sanded the walk on prior occasions. Over objection he answered, “If we ran into a bad storm, sleet and ice storm and the walk was covered with ice, slippery conditions, I would put some sand on it.” This is the subject of the second evidentiary exception.

On the view which we take of defendants’ third exception it will not be necessary to consider their first and second exceptions. For the purpose of determining whether the trial justice erred in holding defendants liable for the icy condition of the walk we shall assume without deciding that all the evidence before her was properly admitted. In this connection it should be noted that such evidence was undisputed and therefore the only question the trial justice *455 had to determine was one of law, namely, whether defendants’ owed a duty to plaintiff to keep the walk free from a dangerous condition due to the natural accumulation of ice and snow.

Under their third exception defendants contend that they owed no such duty to plaintiff and therefore the trial justice erred in holding as she did that they were liable for the injuries plaintiff sustained by slipping and falling on the icy spot on the walk. Whether a landlord is liable to his tenant for injuries sustained by slipping and falling as a result of the accumulation of ice and snow on a common passageway of the rented premises from entirely natural causes is a question upon which the decided cases are not in agreement. An unbroken line of Massachusetts cases has answered the question in the negative. McNeill v. Home Savings Bank, 313 Mass. 664; Boulton v. Dorrington, 302 Mass. 407; Rogers v. Dudley Realty Corp., 301 Mass. 104; Smolesky v. Hotter, 270 Mass. 32; O’Donoughue v. Moors, 208 Mass. 473; Woods v. Naumkeag Steam Cotton Co., 134 Mass. 357. The following cases from other jurisdictions are in accord: Harkin v. Crumbie, 46 N. Y. Supp. 453; Gianpaola v. Paoli, 129 N. Y. Supp. 180; Morse v. Houghton, 158 Iowa 279; Holcomb v. Szymczyk, 186 Wis. 99; Rankin v. Ittner Realty Co., 242 N. Y. 339; Turojj v. Richman, 76 Ohio App. 83; Lumley v. Backus Mfg. Co., 73 Fed. 767. See also Annot. II, 26 A.L.R.2d 615. In the same note a long' list of cases contra appears.

We have not heretofore had occasion to pass upon this precise question. DeMello v. Saint Thomas the Apostle Church Corp., 91 R. I. 476, cited by plaintiff is not in point. There, although the plaintiff slipped on ice covering the church walk the following was the only question before us on all the defendant’s exceptions: “Was the plaintiff a licensee or an invitee while on land controlled by’ defendant?” Hence we do not agree with plaintiff’s contention that to adopt the Massachusetts rule enunciated in the *456 albove-cited eases would in view of our holding in DeMello “create an anomaly in our law.” Nor do we agree with her further contention that the duty a landlord owes to his tenant in the use of a common passageway “is the same as that owed to a business invitee.”

The relation of a landlord to his tenant with reference to the condition of the rented premises is markedly different from the relation of an invitor to his business invitee. Perhaps it was due to this difference that no reference was made by counsel in DeMello to the rule governing the duty of a landlord to his tenant with which we are concerned here.

After consideration of the authorities on both sides of the question we- are of the opinion that the Massachusetts rule is preferable to the contrary rule in certain other jurisdictions regardless of their numerical weight. We realize that it has met with sharp criticism in Reardon v. Shimelman, 102 Conn. 383, and United Shoe Machinery Corp. v. Paine, 26 F.2d 594, but we are not persuaded that such criticism has destroyed or seriously impaired the reasoning upon which the Massachusetts cases rest.

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Bluebook (online)
208 A.2d 743, 99 R.I. 452, 1965 R.I. LEXIS 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pomfret-v-fletcher-ri-1965.