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Tob Control 2000;9:201-205 doi:10.1136/tc.9.2.201
  • Original article

Smoke knows no boundaries: legal strategies for environmental tobacco smoke incursions into the home within multi-unit residential dwellings

  1. Robert L Kline
  1. Tobacco Control Resource Center, Northeastern University School of Law, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
  1. Robert L Kline, JD, Tobacco Control Resource Center, Northeastern University School of Law, 400 Huntington Avenue, 117 Cushing Hall, Boston, MA 02115, USA; Rkline{at}lynx.neu.edu
  • Received 4 February 1999
  • Revised 17 January 2000
  • Accepted 9 February 2000

Abstract

OBJECTIVE To describe legal theories that non-smoking residents of multiple occupancy buildings may employ when affected by environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) from neighbouring units.

DESIGN Legal research was conducted in several US states. Research was performed among statutes and regulations. State health regulations were examined as well as common law claims of nuisance, warranties of habitability, and the right of quiet enjoyment.

RESULTS Through the use of state regulations, such as a sanitary code, several states provide general language for protecting the health of residents in multi-unit buildings. State law also supports more traditional claims of nuisance, warranties of habitability, and the right of quiet enjoyment.

CONCLUSIONS The use of state regulations has the potential to provide an effective, existing vehicle for resolution of ETS incursion problems. The general health protection language of the regulations, in conjunction with the latest evidence of the harmful effects of ETS, gives state agencies authority to regulate environmental tobacco smoke incursions among apartments in multi-unit dwellings. Where state regulations are not available, other common law legal remedies may be available.

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