(dissenting). Based on the jury verdict, there is no question that plaintiff’s injuries arose from a hazardous condition on a stairway. The question here is whether the Transit Authority, as a common carrier, is responsible for plaintiffs damages even though it did not own, occupy or control the defective premises. This inquiry turns on whether this Court should adopt a rule, developed by the Appellate Term in 1906 in Schlessinger v Manhattan Ry. Co. (49 Misc 504 [App Term 1906]), that would hold the Transit Authority liable for injuries on property that is owned, maintained, and controlled by others, but is traversed by passengers on their way to and from subway stations. In my view, the Schlessinger rule of premises liability is outmoded and, consistent with our recent precedents, common carriers should be required only to maintain property they own, occupy or control.
This issue first came to our attention in 2003 when we decided Bingham v New York City Tr. Auth. (99 NY2d 355 [2003] [Bingham I]). In Bingham I, the injured plaintiff appealed the grant of summary judgment dismissing her complaint. As part of their motion papers, defendants submitted evidence indicating that they did not own, control or maintain the stairwell where plaintiff fell and asserting that the stairway was not used exclusively by subway patrons. Defendants had, however, failed to raise in the motion court the argument they pursued on appeal — that the Schlessinger rule should be abandoned. As a result, we did not reach that question. Instead, we reversed the order granting summary judgment and remitted on the ground that an issue of fact existed as to “the alleged common use of the stairway” by businesses or tenants in addition to subway patrons (Bingham I, 99 NY2d at 359), a reference to the First Department’s version of the Schlessinger rule.
On remittal, the case proceeded to trial, with the Transit Authority raising the issue that it had not preserved in Bingham I. During the charge conference, defendants argued that, like other special common carrier rules that are no longer viable, the Schlessinger rule should be abandoned in favor of a rule that does not distinguish common carriers from other defendants, holding them liable only for defects on property they own, occupy or control. The Transit Authority also took issue with plaintiff’s iteration of the Schlessinger rule, under *183which the jury would be charged that the Transit Authority could be held liable if the stairway was used “openly and notoriously” by subway patrons. The trial court rejected the Transit Authority’s arguments without explanation and charged the jury as requested by plaintiff. The jury found in plaintiffs favor and, after the Appellate Division declined to disturb the liability finding, the Transit Authority pursued its appeal to this Court.
We now must decide whether the Schlessinger rule remains viable in light of our recent common carrier cases and modern premises liability rules. Although no one disputes that the Transit Authority has a duty to maintain approaches and subway platforms — the areas it clearly controls (see Lewis v Metropolitan Transp. Auth., 99 AD2d 246 [1st Dept 1984], affdfor reasons stated 64 NY2d 670 [1984]) — our Court has never adopted the Schlessinger rule. As is evident from the majority opinion, in New York the rule has had limited reach, having been applied primarily to subway or train operators in metropolitan areas; the majority does not cite any upstate appellate court decision relying on the rule. In my view, the Schlessinger rule should not now be embraced by this Court, even in the restricted context of this case.
By applying the Schlessinger rule, the majority backtracks from the progress of the law in discarding specialized rules of liability, especially where common carriers are concerned. In the past decade, we retired several of the heightened duty and standard of care rules that had historically applied to common carriers. In Adams v New York City Tr. Auth. (88 NY2d 116 [1996]), the Court dispensed with the 100-year-old rule that had imposed vicarious liability on common carriers for all acts of their employees, including acts outside the scope of employment, in favor of a more modern rule treating common carriers like other employers. Likewise, in Bethel v New York City Tr. Auth. (92 NY2d 348 [1998]), the Court departed from its long-standing precedent that a common carrier is held to a standard of “extraordinary care” for injuries sustained by passengers while in transit, establishing that the reasonable person standard of care applicable to all other tortfeasors also applied to common carriers. In reaching these conclusions, the Court noted that the historic reasons for treating common carriers differently from other tortfeasors no longer made sense given that public transportation, such as rail travel, had become as safe as private means of transport (id. at 353, citing Adams, 88 NY2d at 121). The trend away from specialized common carrier rules reflects *184the broader trend in real property law, as exemplified by Basso v Miller (40 NY2d 233 [1976]), which dispensed with specialized standards of care that depended on the status of the injured party as a licensee, invitee or trespasser, instead adopting an across-the-board standard of reasonable care under the circumstances. The most recent precedent from other jurisdictions relied on by the majority was decided in 1955 — long before our Court began the shift away from specialized common carrier and premises liability rules.
Similar to the specialized common carrier rules we abandoned in Bethel and Adams, the Schlessinger rule is inconsistent with the legal principles applicable to other defendants in negligence actions. Absent evidence that a party created a dangerous condition, liability for a premises defect is generally predicated on ownership, occupancy or control. This is reflected in the standard Pattern Jury Instructions charge, which states simply that “[t]he (owner, possessor) of (land, a building) has a duty to use reasonable care to keep the premises in a reasonably safe condition for the protection of all persons whose presence is reasonably foreseeable” (PJI 2:90 [2007]). There is a PJI common carrier charge, but it is far narrower than the rule the majority adopts today. It states that “[a] carrier owes a duty to its (passenger, prospective passenger) to provide a reasonably safe place to (get on, get off) its vehicle” (PJI 2:166 [2007]). The rule reflected in the PJI charge does not require the Transit Authority or any other common carrier to enter onto or maintain property it does not own, occupy or control. Moreover, in the context of this case, there is no tension between these two PJI charges because the Transit Authority generally controls the subway approaches and platforms where patrons enter and exit subway trains. The stairway where the plaintiff in this case fell led to an area adjacent to a subway platform — there is no claim that the Transit Authority neglected its duty to provide plaintiff with a safe place to get on or off a train.
Beyond its incompatibility with modern trends, the majority rule is troubling because it results in a party being held liable for a condition that it did not create and lacks the power to ameliorate. Where the Transit Authority does not own, occupy or control property, it is not well-positioned to ensure that the property is free of hazardous conditions. A common carrier has no greater right than any other neighbor to enter and repair a defective condition on property owned, occupied or controlled by another, or to erect the barriers or warning signs suggested by the majority.
*185The majority’s rule will undoubtedly prove difficult to apply fairly. The duty to maintain property ordinarily arises from a party’s legal relationship to that property, often created by deed, lease, easement or contract* — a relationship that can be established by objective proof at trial. Here, the duty to maintain embraced by the majority turns on an amorphous standard: whether the property was used “primarily” by subway patrons at the time of the accident. Under this standard, a duty can come into and out of existence depending on circumstances outside a common carrier’s control, such as the number and type of businesses that may also attract persons who walk across the property in question. The majority’s formulation even differs from that applied by the First Department, which has held the Transit Authority liable only if the area where the accident occurred is used exclusively by subway patrons (see Ceron v City of New York, 277 AD2d 7 [1st Dept 2000]; O’Hara v New York City Tr. Auth., 248 AD2d 138 [1st Dept 1998]; Pena v New York City Tr. Auth., 237 AD2d 150 [1st Dept 1997]; Haberlin v New York City Tr. Auth., 228 AD2d 383 [1st Dept 1996]; Fortson v New York City Tr. Auth., 111 AD2d 58, 58 [1st Dept 1985]). Putting aside the dilemma the Transit Authority now faces in predicting which neighboring properties it must inspect and maintain, this rule will create difficulties for juries and lead to inconsistent results, with one jury finding that the Transit Authority had a duty to maintain a particular property while another may reach the opposite conclusion with respect to the same location.
For all of these reasons, I respectfully dissent and would reverse the judgment and grant summary judgment to defendants dismissing the complaint.
Chief Judge Kaye and Judges Ciparick and Smith concur with Judge Pigott; Judge Graffeo dissents and votes to reverse in a separate opinion; Judges Read and Jones taking no part.
Judgment appealed from and order of the Appellate Division brought up for review affirmed, with costs.
Even obligations created by contract “will generally not give rise to tort liability in favor of a third party” (Espinal v Melville Snow Contrs., 98 NY2d 136,138 [2002]; see also, Church v Callanan Indus., 99 NY2d 104, 111 [2002]).