This is an action in tort brought by the plaintiff to recover for personal injuries sustained when he fell on an accumulation of ice on the defendants’ premises. The plaintiff’s declaration in six counts alleges negligence, gross negligence, and wilful, wanton or reckless conduct by the coowners of the premises. The case is here on the plaintiff’s exceptions to the direction of *694verdicts for the defendants on all counts after the plaintiff’s opening statement to the jury.
The pertinent facts, as stated in the opening, are as follows. The plaintiff, a police officer in the town of Concord, was acting in his official capacity at the time he was injured on the defendants’ premises. On January 20, 1967, at approximately 5:30 P.M. the plaintiff was directed by a superior officer to serve a criminal summons for a parking violation on one of the defendants. After locating the defendants’ home, the plaintiff entered upon their premises from the driveway, delivered the summons at the door, and then was injured when he fell on an accumulation of ice on his way out.
Since the plaintiff’s opening statement to the jury was devoid of any facts which would have warranted a jury finding of gross negligence or wilful, wanton or reckless conduct, the trial judge properly allowed the defendants’ motion for directed verdicts as to counts 2, 3, 5 and 6. Viewed in The light most favorable to the plaintiff, his opening states that there were defects in the drainage system that the defendants failed to repair. A failure to repair such defects which resulted in an accumulation of ice may constitute negligence but such conduct does not “[display] the criminal or quasi criminal quality involved in wilful, wanton or reckless conduct.” Carroll v. Hemenway, 315 Mass. 45, 47.
Therefore, the only remaining question before us is whether the trial judge properly allowed the defendants’ motion for directed verdicts as to the plaintiff’s counts 1 and 4 alleging ordinary negligence. The judge’s decision was based on our common law rule that classifies policemen and firemen as licensees who must establish wilful, wanton or reckless conduct, and not just ordinary negligence, on the defendant’s part in order to recover for injuries sustained during their performance of official duty on the defendant’s land. Brosnan v. Koufman, 294 Mass. 495, 501. Wynn v. Sullivan, 294 Mass. 562, 564. Aldworth v. F. W. Woolworth Co. 295. Mass. 344. The plaintiff asks us to abandon this artificial classification *695of public employees as licensees in favor of a rule which would treat public employees, such as policemen and firemen, as a sui generis class to whom the landowner or occupier of land owes an affirmative duty of reasonable care to keep his premises safe when these public employees enter upon the defendant’s land in their official capacity and in the performance of their public duties. The plaintiff’s challenge to the common law’s classification of policemen who enter upon private property as mere licensees has led us to reconsider the historical sources, justifications, and efficacy of the common law’s general licensee-invitee distinction.
Our common law places those who enter upon land in three fixed categories: trespassers, licensees, and invitees. These three categories “make out, as a general pattern, a rough sliding scale, by which, as the legal status of the visitor improves, the possessor of the land owes him more of an obligation of protection.” Prosser, Torts (4th ed.) § 58, p. 357. These categories were developed in English common law at a time when the law attached supreme importance to a landowner’s property interests. See Bohlen, Fifty Years of Torts, 50 Harv. L. Rev. 725. The feudal conception that the landowner was a sovereign within his own boundaries provided the justification for a line of decisions that predicated the existence and distinguished the degree of a landowner’s liability for injuries occurring on his land on the type of relationship existing between the landowner and the injured party.
In Sweeny v. Old Colony & Newport R.R. 10 Allen 368, 372, this court outlined the common law’s approach to the problem of balancing the interests of the occupier against the interests of a person entering upon the premises. “In order to maintain an action for an injury to person or property by reason of negligence or want of due care, there must be shown to exist some obligation or duty towards the plaintiff, which the defendant has left undischarged or unfulfilled. This is the basis on which the cause of action rests.”
Chief Justice Bigelow stated the court’s view as to why *696occupiers or owners of land owed a duty of reasonable care to keep their premises safe only for their invitees. Since trespassers enter the occupier’s land without right, they cannot maintain an action based on a claim of negligence because “[t]he owner of the land is not bound to protect or provide safeguards for wrongdoers. So a licensee, who enters on premises by permission only, without any enticement, allurement or inducement being held out to him by the owner or occupant, cannot recover damages for injuries caused by obstructions or pitfalls. He goes there at his own risk, and enjoys the license subject to its concomitant perils. No duty is imposed by law on the owner or occupant to keep his premises in a suitable condition for those who come there solely for their own convenience or pleasure, and who are not either expressly invited to enter or induced to come upon them by the purpose for which the premises are appropriated and occupied, or by some preparation or adaptation of the place for use by customers or passengers, which might naturally and reasonably lead them to suppose that they might properly and safely enter thereon. ... A mere naked license or permission to enter or pass over an estate will not create a duty or impose an obligation on the part of the owner or person in possession to provide against the danger of accident. The gist of the liability consists in the fact that the person injured did not act merely for his own convenience and pleasure, and from motives to which no act or sign of the owner oroccupant contributed, but that he entered the premises because he was led to believe that they were intended to be used by visitors or passengers, and that such use was not only acquiesced in by the owner or person in possession and control of the premises, but that it was in accordance with the intention and design with which the way or place was adapted and prepared or allowed to be so used.” Pp. 372-374.
In light of the supreme importance which our early common law attached to property interests, it is understandable that the occupier’s interests were favored over the licensee’s by the creation of a rule that the only duty *697an occupier owed a licensee was not to inflict wilful or wanton injury on him. The distinctions drawn by the Sweeny case, supra, between licensees and invitees reflected the English common law rule’s reasoning that a landowner should be bound to a duty of reasonable care only in those cases where he had invited the visit for his own purposes. The landowner’s passive acquiescence to a licensee’s entrance for the licensee’s “own convenience and pleasure,” the Sweeny case, p. 373, did not impose a duty of reasonable care on the landowner because the landowner did not benefit from the licensee’s visit or induce it by creating the appearance that visitors “might properly and safely enter thereon.”
One serious problem raised by the common law’s rigid division of the status of all persons entering upon land of another into these three classes of trespassers, licensees, and invitees is the difficulty courts encounter in distinguishing between these latter two categories in dealing with public employees or officials who enter private property by way of a legal privilege that is not conferred by or dependent upon the occupier’s consent. The difficulty of placing such official visits by public employees and officials in one of the three categories established by the common law is reflected in this court’s first decisions on the subject.
In Parker v. Barnard, 135 Mass. 116, this court noted that public servants acting for the public welfare “[a]s individuals may thus enter upon the land of another, firemen may do so for the protection of property, officers of the law for similar purposes, and, under proper circumstances, for the arrest of offenders or the execution of criminal process. The right to do this may be in limitation of the more general right of property which the owner has, but it is for his protection and that of the public. Metallic Compression Casting Co. v. Fitchburg Railroad, 109 Mass. 277, 280. Hyde Park v. Gay, 120 Mass. 589, 593. Commonwealth v. Tobin, 108 Mass. 426. Commonwealth v. Reynolds, 120 Mass. 190. Barnard v. Bartlett, 10 Cush. 501.” P. 117. Thus, when a police *698officer enters another’s land to perform a lawful duty “a license so to do is fairly implied, which, at least, should shield him from being treated as a trespasser” (emphasis supplied). P/117.
However, the court declined to determine the police officer’s exact status under the common law. The defendants had argued that the plaintiff police officer “was no more than ... [a licensee]; he was there at his own risk; and that none of the defendants were under any obligation towards him to keep this entrance or the building in a safe condition.” Pp. 117-118. However, the court found it unnecessary to decide this point because of its holding that the plaintiff’s injury “proceeded from the neglect of an obligation imposed upon the defendants by statute.” P. 118. The court concluded that “even if they are but licensees” (p. 118), “they may demand, as against the owners or occupants, that they observe the statute in the construction and management of their building.” P. 120.
In Learoyd v. Godfrey, 138 Mass. 315, we upheld a police officer’s right to recover in tort for injuries resulting from a fall into an open hole in an outside passageway to an apartment. Although the plaintiff had been asked to come to the tenement house by one of the tenants, Justice Holmes rested the court’s decision on the fact that the plaintiff had made a lawful entry by a passageway which “from the appearance of the premises . . . [was] the intended mode of approach to the tenement in question.” P. 323. Since the location of the place of injury was a route prepared as a means of access to the premises, any person who had a right to enter the premises used the passageway “by the defendant’s invitation” because of its appearance as “the intended mode of approach.” P. 323.
The Learoyd case established a public employee’s or official’s right to recover whenever he is injured by the negligence of the owner in failing to keep the route of access to his premises in a reasonably safe condition for those using it as it was intended to be used. This court’s *699willingness to find that public employees were impliedly invited to enter upon private property in performance of their official duties was further evidenced by our holdings in Toomey v. Sanborn, 146 Mass. 28, Gordon v. Cummings, 152 Mass. 513, and Finnegan v. Fall River Gas Works Co. 159 Mass. 311.
In the Toomey case, supra, the court held that since a city trash collector was lawfully using the passageway at the implied invitation of the owner, he could recover for injuries caused by the occupier’s failure to keep the back entrance to his premises in a reasonably safe condition. The court said, “There was evidence that the passageway -had been constructed and was maintained for the purpose, among other things, of affording a back entrance to the house, and was, as the defendant knew, constantly used by the servants of the city of Boston for the purpose of removing the ashes and offal from the house, and that the plaintiff, as such servant, was rightfully using the passageway on the implied invitation of both the owner and occupant of the house for this purpose.” P. 33.
In Gordon v. Cummings, supra, we held that a letter carrier, who was injured while attempting to deliver mail to tenants in the building, was an implied invitee. “While the building was intended for workshops ... it was still one where, to some extent at least, the tenants received letters, and there was a preparation and adaptation of the entry, or hallway, for the plaintiff’s use which might well lead him to believe that he could safely enter in the performance of his duty.” P. 515. Finally, in the Finnegan case, supra, Justice Holmes, speaking for the court, ruled that a water meter reader was an invitee because “it appears that the defendant, by taking water, voluntarily entered into a relation, the result of which, as it knew, was to require some one to enter its premises in order to read the water meter. It was bound to use reasonable care to prevent the place thus necessarily entered by the deceased from being a death trap.” P. 312.
We think that the Learoyd, Toomey and Gordon cases provide ample authority for holding in the instant case *700that the plaintiff was an implied invitee to whom the defendants owed a duty of reasonable care to keep the route of access to their premises in reasonably safe condition. It seems logical to contend that if the trashman and mailman can rely on the appearance of safety of an intended mode of approach which they necessarily use in the performance of their official duties, the police officer should be afforded the same right. At the very least, these three cases have established the occupier’s and landowner’s obligation to keep the access routes to his house in reasonably safe condition for those who are required to use them in the performance of their official duties. The mere fact that a policeman rather than a mailman delivered the criminal summons should not affect the standard of care owed by "the occupier or owner. Thus, we could rest our decision in the instant case on the narrow ground that the plaintiff was an implied invitee to whom the defendants owed a duty to keep the route of access to their premises in reasonably safe condition.1
*701Such a decision would be in accord with those of other State courts which have relied on slight variations of circumstances to find that an injured firman was an invitee instead of a licensee (Clinkscales v. Mundkoski, 183 Okla. 12) or a “business invitee” to whom the occupier owed a duty of reasonable care to keep the premises safe (Zuercher v. Northern Jobbing Co. 243 Minn. 166). This approach underscores the courts’ underlying difficulties with the licensee classification which unduly favors the landowner’s interests over the individual citizen’s interest as to his personal safety. The history of the law on the subject of landowners and “licensees” indicates that many courts have broadened the invitee category to avoid the harshness of the licensee rule which no longer conforms to public opinion.
“Like so many cases in which a barbaric formula has been retained, its content has been so modified by interpretation as to remove much of its inhumanity.” Bohlen, Fifty Years of Torts, 50 Harv. L. Rev. 725, 740. Thus, many courts have avoided the harsh implications of the licensee rule by holding that certain types of public employees who are required to enter on a person’s property in the performance of their duties are invitees. See Swift & Co. v. Schuster, 192 F. 2d 615 (10th Cir.) (meat inspector) ; Fred Howland, Inc. v. Morris, 143 Fla. 189 (building inspector); Anderson & Nelson Distilleries Co. v. Hair, 103 Ky. 196 (United States revenue officer); Jennings v. Industrial Paper Stock Co. 248 S. W. 2d 43 (Ct. App. Mo.) (public health inspector); Morgan v. Renehan-Akers Co. Inc. 126 Vt. 494 (inspector of weights and measures) ; Cameron v. Abatiell, 127 Vt. 111; 65 C. J. S., Negligence, § 63; 38 Am. Jur., Negligence, § 123, n. 14, § 126. Cf. Restatement 2d: Torts, § 345.
The problem with this judicial approach is that it perpetuates the illogical legal fiction that a public employee *702or official, who enters upon private property by way of legal privilege in performance of his official duties, can be classified as either a licensee or an invitee. Public employees should not be labeled licensees because they do not act for their “own convenience and pleasure,” Sweeny v. Old Colony & Newport R.R. 10 Allen 368, 373, when they enter upon another’s land. They are not invitees because the occupier or owner does not have the freedom of choice to admit or exclude them which is ordinarily considered an essential element of the invitee classification. See Prosser, Torts (4th ed.) § 61, p. 396; Harper and James, Torts, § 27.14 p. 1500. We agree with Prosser’s view that public employees or officials “do not fit very well into any of the arbitrary categories which the law has established for the classification of visitors. They are not trespassers, since they are privileged to come. The privilege is independent of any permission, consent or license of the occupier, and they would be privileged to enter, and would insist upon doing so, even if he made active objection. They normally do not come for any of the purposes for which the premises are held open to the public, and frequently, upon private premises, they do not enter for any benefit of the occupier, or under circumstances which justify any expectation that the place has been prepared to receive them.” Prosser, Torts (4th ed.) § 61, p. 396. We think it is illogical to say that the plaintiff in this case, who entered the defendants’ premises quite independently of either invitation or consent, cannot be an invitee because there has been no invitation, but can be a licensee even though there has been no permission. This reasoning has led some courts to treat policemen and firemen as neither licensees nor invitees but as a sui generis class (Buren v. Midwest Indus. Inc. 380 S. W. 2d 96 [Ct. App. Ky.]; Krauth v. Geller, 31 N. J. 270; Spencer v. B. P. John Furniture Corp. 255 Ore. 359) to which the occupier or owner owes a duty to keep his premises in reasonably safe condition. Dini v. Naiditch, 20 Ill. 2d 406. Meiers v. Fred Koch Brewery, 229 N. Y. 10. Beedenbender v. Midtown Prop*703erties, Inc. 4 App. Div. 2d (N. Y.) 276. See Prosser, Torts (4th ed.) § 61, p. 398; Harper and James, Torts, §§ 27.1-27.14, pp. 1430-1503.
The difficulty with both the “sui generis” 2 and “implied invitee” cases is that they mitigate some of the results produced by the licensee rule without eliminating the rule itself. Instead of challenging the efficacy of a classification that establishes immunities from liability which no longer comport with modern accepted values and common experience, many courts have carved out special exceptions to the licensee rule or made procrustean efforts to fit the circumstances of contemporary life into this archaic and rigid classification system.
The Unitéd States Supreme Court, in an admiralty case dealing with a shipowner’s duty to those aboard his vessel, discussed the diminished viability of the common law’s approach to possessor’s liability. In supporting its decision not to import the licensee-invitee distinction into admiralty law, the court noted that “[t]he distinctions which the common law draws between licensee and invitee were inherited from a culture deeply rooted to the land, a culture which traced many of its standards to a heritage of feudalism. In an effort to do justice in an industrialized urban society, with its complex economic and individual relationships, modern common-law courts have found it necessary to formulate increasingly subtle verbal refinements, to create subclassifications among traditional common-law categories, and to delineate fine gradations in the standards of care which the landowner owes to each. ... [T]he classifications and subclassi-fications bred by the common law have produced confusion and conflict. As new distinctions have been spawned, older ones have become obscured.” Kermarec v. Com-pagnie Generate Transatlantique, 358 U. S. 625, 630-631.
A review of our own decisions in this area supports the *704Supreme Court’s conclusion that the application of the licensee-invitee distinction in the modern context has “produced confusion and conflict.” Kermarec v. Com-pagnie Generate Transatlantique, supra. Although our early decisions seemed to indicate that the proper test of invitee status was the assurance of safety implicit in the act of invitation itself,3 later decisions seemed to adopt the “economic benefit” theory which predicated invitee status on the potential economic benefit the occupier may derive from the visitor’s presence.4 But the economic benefit theory has not been consistently applied and cannot be used to explain decisions like Pope v. Willow Garages Inc. 274 Mass. 440, and Kelley v. Goldberg, 288 Mass. 79, where the plaintiffs were treated as invitees despite the fact that there was no mutuality of economic interest between the plaintiffs and the defendants in those cases. These decisions seem to rest on the invitation rationale that the occupier’s duty of reasonable care is not based on any mutuality of economic interest between the plaintiff and the defendant but on an implied representation that, when an owner or occupier encourages others to enter to further a purpose of his own, reasonable care must be exercised to make the place safe for those visitors whose presence is directly or indirectly connected to that purpose.
*705However, this broadened invitation rationale, which represents the majority view according to Prosser, does not explain why social guests expressly invited by the occupier are considered licensees in most jurisdictions including our own. Under our case law, the plaintiff acquires invitee status by “conferring a benefit in the performance of something in which the defendant has an interest provided the benefit is other than ‘those intangible advantages arising from mere social intercourse.’ ” Taylor v. Goldstein, 329 Mass. 161, 165. A “member of a family or household group or group of acquaintances rendering friendly help in household routine or commonplace tasks to another member of the group does not cease to be a licensee or social visitor unless the character or circumstances of the assistance make it clearly the dominant aspect of the relationship rather than a routine incident of social or group activities” (emphasis supplied). Pandiscio v. Bowen, 342 Mass. 435, 437-438.
Not surprisingly, this court’s application of the Pan-discio test has produced a series of confusing and often inconsistent results in cases with similar fact patterns. Thus, in O’Brien v. Myers, 354 Mass. 131, we held that the plaintiff was merely a social guest when she went to her sister’s house to help dispose of their deceased aunt’s effects, but in Rollins v. Marengo, 354 Mass. 765, decided about two months later, we held that the plaintiff, who was visiting “for the purpose of being the godmother of the defendants’ two-week old baby and to take the baby from the [defendants’] home to the church to be baptized,” was an invitee. Compare Colbert v. Ricker, 314 Mass. 138, with Huska v. Clement, 361 Mass. 522, 523-524. Moreover, since the dominant purpose of the entrant’s visit may change during the visit, courts are also confronted with the difficult problem of determining when the change in status takes place. See Pereira v. Gloucester Community Pier Assn. Inc. 318 Mass. 391 (one who comes upon premises as a business visitor becomes a licensee if he continues to remain in the premises after *706his business is concluded), and Tomaino v. Newman, 348 Mass. 433 (social guest in automobile may become an invitee when the defendant requests the guest to remain and render assistance after the automobile has broken down).
Admittedly, such “[c]omplexity can be borne and confusion remedied where the underlying principles governing liability are based upon proper considerations,” but the licensee-invitee distinction and the specious guidelines it generates obscure rather than illuminate the relevant factors which should govern determination of the question of duty. See Rowland v. Christian, 69 Cal. 2d 108, 117. The owner’s conduct in maintaining his premises does not depend on whether his visitor is a social or business acquaintance. Moreover, the visitor’s safety does not become less worthy of protection by the law because he is a social guest and not a business invitee.5
It no longer makes any sense to predicate the landowner’s duty solely on the status of the injured party as either a licensee or invitee. Perhaps, in a rural society with sparse land settlements and large estates, it would have been unduly burdensome to obligate the owner to inspect and maintain distant holdings for a class of entrants who were using the property “for their own convenience” (the Sweeny case, 10 Allen 368, supra) but the special immunity which the licensee rule affords landowners cannot be justified in an urban industrial society. See Smith v. Arbaugh’s Restaurant, Inc. 469 F. 2d 97, 101 (D. C. Cir.); Harper and James, Torts, § 27.2, p. 1432, n. 13. We can no longer follow this ancient and largely discredited common law distinction which favors *707the free use of property without due regard to the personal safety of those individuals who have heretofore been classified as licensees. The problem of allocating the costs and risks of human injury is far too complex to be decided solely by the status of the entrant, especially where the status question often prevents the jury from ever determining the fundamental question whether the defendant has acted reasonably in light of all the circumstances in the particular case. 6 See Mile High Fence Co. v. Radovich, 175 Colo. 537, 541-544.
Therefore, we no longer follow the common law distinction between licensees and invitees and, instead, create a common duty of reasonable care which the occupier owes to all lawful visitors. 7 This decision is in accord with the modern trend 8 in the common law which the Supreme *708Court has characterized as moving toward “imposing on owners and occupiers a single duty of reasonable care in all the circumstances.” Kermarec v. Compagnie Generate Transatlantique, '358 U. S. 625, supra, at p. .631. “A landowner must act as a reasonable man in maintaining his property in a reasonably safe condition in view of all the circumstances, including the likelihood of injury to others, the seriousness of the injury, and the burden of avoiding the risk.” The Arbaugh’s Restaurant case, supra, at 100. In the absence of legislative action, we believe that this “reasonable care in all the circumstances” standard will provide the most effective way to achieve an allocation of the costs of human injury which conforms to present community values.9
The abolition of the licensee-invitee distinction and the creation of a “reasonable care in all the circumstances” standard will not leave the jury without standards to guide their determination of reasonable conduct. The principles which are now to be applied are those which have always governed personal negligence. See the Arbaugh’s Restaurant case, supra, at 105. Our decision merely prevents the plaintiff’s status as a licensee or invitee from being the sole determinative factor in assessing the occupier’s liability. However, the foreseeability *709of the visitor’s presence and the time, manner, place and surrounding circumstances of his entry remain relevant factors which will determine “in part the likelihood of injury to him, and the extent of the interest which must be sacrificed to avoid the risk of injury.” The Arbaugh’s Restaurant case, supra, at 106.
Our holding in the instant case does not make landowners and occupiers insurers of their property nor does it impose unreasonable maintenance burdens. The “reasonable care in all the circumstances” standard will allow the jury to determine what burdens of care are unreasonable in light of the relative10 expense and difficulty they impose on the owner or occupier as weighed against the probability and seriousness of the foreseeable harm to others. Indeed, the particular facts in some cases could require a directed verdict for the defendant on the basis that there was no evidence of negligence for the jury’s consideration. See Vance v. Wayside Inn, Inc. 335 Mass. 617, 619, and cases cited. Thus, in the instant case, if the plaintiff policeman, in the course of chasing a thief, was injured at 2 a.m. when he fell into an unguarded hole in the defendants’ private cellar, the defendants might well be entitled to a directed verdict because the time and place of the policeman’s entrance was not an event which the defendants should have foreseen in the exercise of reasonable care. On the other hand, if the defendants directed the policeman to search the cellar or knew he was going there, it could be found that the defendants were under an obligation to warn the policeman of the dangers known to the defendants.
We believe that the reasonable care standard will give the jury the flexibility they need to assess the burden of liability on the facts of each case and in accordance with community standards as to what constitutes acceptable behavior on'the occupier’s part. Cases which adhere to a contrary rule are no longer followed.
*710In the instant case, the plaintiff was injured while acting in accordance with his official duties as a police officer and therefore was lawfully on the defendants’ premises. The defendants were liable to him for negligent maintenance of their premises. Moreover, since the injury occurred after the plaintiff had delivered a criminal summons to one of the defendants, a finding may be warranted that the defendants owed a duty to warn the plaintiff of the dangerous ice condition.
The exceptions are sustained as to counts 1 and 4, and are overruled as to counts 2, 3, 5 and 6.
So ordered.
The cases on which the defendants rely for support of their argument that the policeman is a licensee to whom the occupier owes no duty of reasonable care are subject to serious challenge. Both Bros-nan v. Koufman, 294 Mass. 495, 501, and Wynn v. Sullivan, 294 Mass. 562, 564, contain dictum that a police officer who enters upon private premises in the performance of his official duty is a licensee. Although the Brosnan case did not involve a police officer, the court noted that “[w]here firemen or policemen have a legal right to enter premises in the performance of their duty — and while in such performance of duty they cannot be forbidden entry by the owner or occupant — the legal authority to enter, at least in the absence of a statute concerning the maintenance of the premises, does no more than create a status of licensee, and no duty of care is owed by the owner to those so entering. Parker v. Barnard, 135 Mass. 116, 117. Brennan v. Keene, 237 Mass. 556, 561.” P. 501. However, as we have already noted, this court declined to determine whether the police officer was anything more than a licensee in the Parker case, supra. Moreover, the court’s decision in the Brennan case that the plaintiff police officer was a licensee rested on its narrow interpretation of the plaintiff’s official duties and its conclusion that there was no evidence that the plaintiff was injured while acting in accordance with those official duties. Our interpretation of the holding in the Brennan case significantly reduces the authority it lends to later cases which suggest that the policeman (and fireman) is no more than a licensee when he enters upon private premises in performance of his official duties. Wynn v. Sullivan, 294 Mass. 562, can be distinguished on its facts because the court in that case held that “[t]here was here no general invitation arising from the condition of the premises or from *701conduct of the defendant himself, to use the alleyway as the regular means of approach to the building such as was found in Learoyd v. Godfrey, 138 Mass. 315, and in Gordon v. Cummings, 152 Mass. 513.” P. 564.
We think the sui generis rule is too restrictive in its application when it limits defendants’ responsibility to areas of common access. See Meiers v. Fred Koch Brewery, 299 N. Y. 10; Beedenbender v. Mid - town Properties, Inc. 4 App. Div. 2d (N. Y.) 276.
See the Sweeny case, 10 Allen 368, and Davis v. Central Congregational Soc. of Jamaica Plain, 129 Mass. 367, where the court held that a person attending a church meeting was an invitee. “The application of the rules on which the defendant’s liability depends is not affected by the consideration that this is a religious society, and that the plaintiff came solely for her own benefit or gratification. It makes no difference that no pecuniary profit or other benefit was received or expected by the society. The fact that the plaintiff comes by invitation is enough to impose on the defendant the duty [of reasonable care] which lies at the foundation of this liability. . . .” P. 372. Contra, Holiday v. First Parish Church of Groton, 339 Mass. 692.
See Plummer v. Dill, 156 Mass. 426; Zaia v. “Italia” Soeieta Anonyma di Navigazione, 324 Mass. 547, 549 (“There must be a real or apparent intent on the part of the invitor to benefit in a business or commercial sense and an intent on the part of the invitee to enter upon the premises for a purpose consistent with that of the invitor as evidenced by the invitation. Plummer v. Dill, 156 Mass. 426, 427”). See also Restatement: Torts, §§ 332, 343, comment a (1934).
“There has, however, been quite a vigorous undercurrent of dissent, as to whether this [classification of the social guest as a licensee] is really in accord with present social customs under which it is contended that the guest, invited and even urged to come, rightfully expects more than mere inactivity for his safety; and some writers have urged that the social guest be treated as an invitee.” Prosser, Torts (4th ed.) § 60. See Harper, Laube v. Stevenson: A Discussion, 25 Conn. Bar J. 123; McCleary, The Liability of a Possessor of Land in Missouri to Persons Injured While on the Land, 1 Mo. L. Rev. 45, 58; Notes, 12 Rutgers L. Rev. 599; comments, 22 Mo. L. Rev. 186; 7 Wm. & M. L. Rev. 313.
See the Arbaugh’s Restaurant case, supra, 103-104. “Harshness results [when using the visitor’s status to determine the duty owed him] because the essential task of judging a landowner’s conduct under prevailing community standards is removed from the province of the jury. Through motions for dismissal, for directed verdicts, and for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, courts resolve the issue of liability solely on the facts which establish the status of the person injured. Mechanical legal decisions made by judges eliminate jury scrutiny of the actual conduct of the visitor and the landowner.” The case before us presents a clear example of this problem as the plaintiff’s right to recover depended on his classification as an invitee.
We feel that there is significant difference in the legal status of one who trespasses on another’s land as opposed to one who is on the land under some color of right — such as a licensee or invitee. For this reason, among others, we do not believe they should be placed in the same legal category. For example, one who jumps over a six foot fence to make use of his neighbor’s swimming pool in his absence does not_ logically belong in the same legal classification as a licensee or invitee. Frankly, we are not persuaded as to the logic and reasoning in Rowland v. Christian, 69 Cal. 2d 108, in placing trespassers in the same legal status as licensees and invitees. The possible difference in classes of trespassers is miniscule compared to the others. These differences can be considered when they arise in future cases.
See Rowland v. Christian, 69 Cal. 2d 108 (1968), Pickard v. City & County of Honolulu, 51 Hawaii 134 (1969), Mile High Fence Co. v. Radovich, 175 Colo. 537 (1971) (the plaintiff was a police officer), and Smith v. Arbaugh’s Restaurant, Inc. 469 F. 2d 97 (D. C. Cir.) (1972) (the plaintiff was a health inspector). In each of these cases, the court held that the landowner owed a duty of reasonable care to all visitors including trespassers. In England, the Occupiers’ Liability Act, 1957, 5 & 6 Eliz. 2, c. 31, effectuated the recommendations of the Law Reform Committee’s Third Report, Cmd. 9305, by abolishing the licensee-invitee distinction at common law. The act declared that the occupier owes the same “common duty of care” to all lawful visitors. See also Harper and James, Torts, §§ 27.1-27.14, pp. 1430-1505; Pros-*708ser, Torts (4th ed.) § 62; Marsh, The History and Comparative Law of Invitees, Licensees and Trespassers, 69 L. Q. Rev. 182, 359; McDonald & Leigh, The Law of Occupiers’ Liability and the need for Reform in Canada, 16 U. of Toronto L. J. 55; Notes, 12 Rutgers L. Rev. 599; 70 L. Q. Rev. 33; 19 Mod. L. Rev. 691; comments, 22 Mo. L. Rev. 186; 44 N. Y. U. L. Rev. 426.
For these reasons, we cannot adopt the simplistic approach suggested by the plaintiff, namely, to permit recovery by placing him in the category of a business invitee. We reject this suggestion because of our conviction that there is no rational or logical basis for doing so even though it may decide the case in favor of the plaintiff. The cases which would permit such a holding are not based on sound reasoning. To follow them would serve only to complicate matters further. The often cited language of Chief Justice Marshall in 1821 in Cohens v. Virginia, 6 Wheat. 264, has no application to the present situation. We are not here dealing with “general expressions.” On the contrary, we are deciding the sole issue raised, namely, the legal status of the plaintiff. We do this by abolishing the distinction between licensees and invitees, a result which clarifies the law in an area that admittedly is in a state of confusion because of the irrationality and inconsistencies in a large number of cases on the subject.
Thus, what might be a reasonable burden to impose on one owner may require unreasonable sacrifices for another. The Arbaugh’s Restaurant case, 107.