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Court upholds consumer-protection ruling against Fenway bar where patron fell down stairs and died

The Supreme Judicial Court ruled today that Our House East on Gainsborough Street engaged in "unfair or deceptive conduct" under the state's consumer-protection law by building an illegal and unsafe staircase down which Jacob Samuel Freeman fell to his death while talking on his cell phone in 2007.

However, the court sent the case back to a lower-court judge to reconsider the monetary awards, in particular, some $2.1 million in lawyers' fees.

A jury had ruled for the bar's owners on strict negligence grounds, saying that while the place violated state building codes, that didn't cause Freeman's death. The judge in the case, however, ruled that his death did violate the consumer-protection laws, and the state's highest court agreed:

The defendants' conduct in this case was unfair within the meaning of [the law]: the defendants consciously violated the building code for more than twenty years, thereby creating hazardous conditions in a place of public assembly where alcohol is served to commercial patrons. The potential for danger, and even death, was clear. ...

The defendants' conduct also may qualify as deceptive because if Jacob or other patrons had known of the highly dangerous conditions present at Our House East--conditions in clear violation of the building code--they very well may have taken their business elsewhere, or, in any event, Jacob may have decided not to take his telephone call in the alcove.

In its ruling, the court cataloged problems - and warnings about those problems - with the staircase:

Before Jacob's fall, on multiple occasions the kitchen manager had warned one of the trustees, Henry D. Vara, III, a manager and an owner of Our House East, that the stairs needed to be fixed or someone would get hurt. The kitchen manager also had informed management employees that she and a liquor distributor had both fallen on the stairs and that the staircase should be fixed.

According to the ruling, early on April 1, 2007, Freeman, a Northeastern student, moved to the back of Our House to try to find a quieter place for a phone conversation. Unfortunately for him, he wound up in front of some plastic strips, which failed to stop him when he fell backwards and crumpled down the stairs to the basement, suffering fatal brain injuries.

The court said the Our House's owners had managed to evade the need for inspections that might have forced repairs to the staircase:

The defendants had built the stairs leading from the first floor to the basement at Our House East in the early 1980's without obtaining necessary building permits and without complying with the building code, which required the staircase to be equipped with a self-closing "fire-rated" door and landing at the top of the stairs, compliant riser and tread dimensions with uniformity within limits set by the building code, and compliant hand rails on both sides of the staircase.

In 1984, Our House East expanded its operations into 54 Gainsborough Street, which had been a laundromat, without obtaining a "change in use" permit from the inspectional services department of Boston; in 1987, the restaurant expanded into the building at 50 Gainsborough Street, which had been a florist and beauty parlor, again without obtaining a change in use permit. The defendants thus evaded upgrade requirements, because in order to obtain change in use permits, the defendants would have had to bring the premises into compliance with the building code. The defendants again failed to acquire a building permit or to comply with the building code when they rebuilt the staircase to the basement in 1998. At all relevant times, the defendants knew that building permits and a change in use permit were required, as evidenced by the fact that the defendants filed, and then abandoned, multiple building permit and change in use permit applications.

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Comments

responsible, I'm not sure what's worse here. The fact that constructing something that doesn't meet building codes isn't automatically considered at least contributory negligence. Or the fact that a judge can overturn a jury's "not guilty" verdict on a whim.

However, this case is another reason I'm glad I decided NOT to become a lawyer.

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The judge had the jury rule on one set of legal issues (strict liability on the wrongful death side) but reserved judgment on the 93A claims (consumer protection on behalf of the estate) rather than sending that to the jury.

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the judge decided "I'll give half of this case to the jury, but rule on the other half of the case on my own."

Just another example of how our justice system is so messed up.

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Regarding the former: here's a hypothetical. Whenever I go shopping, there seems to be at least one person who stops, and then starts walking backwards into me without looking. They just don't look where they're going. Say this guy happened to be at the top of the stairs, and started moving backwards while he was talking on the phone. He goes down head first, and suffers fatal injuries. The code violations, like the width of the tread, or the hand rails, have nothing to do with it. If the construction had been to code, the results would have been identical.

If you can't show that the code violations caused this particular accident, as opposed to just being a general danger, then the jury made the right decision. If he had been walking down the stairs and fell, then you have a different case.

The consumer protection ruling is the head-scratcher to me, although it may follow the letter of the law. You could rule the same way if the accident had happened at another, code-compliant stairwell.

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without complying with the building code, which required the staircase to be equipped with a self-closing "fire-rated" door and landing at the top of the stairs

How would stepping backwards during his phonecall and his ass bonking into a fire door have killed him?

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someone took a dive in a divey dive bar?

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So they didn't follow the rules when they opened and expanded 30 years ago. Why didn't the city notice until now?

Don't the multiple city licenses you need when you open a business, which have to be renewed every year, have any associated inspections?

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