The reason for the Court’s holding that “lawful visitors” may recover for personal injuries caused by breach of the implied warranty of habitability “rests, in part, on the expectation that a tenant might invite a guest into his home, and the concomitant expectation that the tenant’s home must be safe for a guest to visit — which together go to the very heart of the landlord’s contractual obligation to deliver and maintain habitable premises that comply with the building and sanitary codes.” Scott, at 794-95. The Court stated further that “[a] lawful visitor of an ‘occupant of housing’ plainly comes within the scope of persons intended to be protected and therefore also within the ambit of the implied warranty of habitability while in the rented premises.” Id. at 795. The holding in Scott also is based on the Court’s opinion that “(i]t would not stand to reason that where a tenant and lawful visitor both suffered injuries on the tenant’s rented premises, caused by the same significant defect in violation of the sanitary code, the tenant might recover on a breach of warranty claim, while the tenant’s guest could recover only in negligence, thus subjecting only the guest to a comparative negligence defense.” Id. at 795. None of the Court’s rationale applies to a situation where the injured party is a prospective tenant who was not invited onto the premises by a resident.