This appeal arises from an Order of the Court of Common Pleas of Bucks County, sitting en banc, denying appellant’s (plaintiff below) motion for a new trial. The case arose from an unfortunate mishap wherein the plaintiff’s decedent fell off a scaffolding which had been erected outside of his house by the defendants with whom he had contracted to do masonry work on his home. The executor of the deceased’s estate (“appellant”) commenced actions in tres*550pass for wrongful death and survival against the defendants. The case was tried before a jury. The jury found the decedent to be comparatively negligent and assessed that negligence at fifty percent (50%). The jury awarded damages in the amount of $10,000 in the wrongful death action and found no damages in the survival action. The court molded the verdict into an award in favor of the plaintiff in the amount of $5,000.00.
The appellant raises several issues in this appeal. They are (1) the jury’s award of $10,000 in wrongful death damages was inadequate; (2) the trial court erroneously charged on wrongful death damages; (3) the trial court erred in refusing plaintiff’s request to offer rebuttal evidence on the issue of the decedent’s contributing negligence; (4) the trial court erred by refusing to explain decedent’s right and duty as a landowner to inspect the work of his independent contractors; and (5) the lower court erred in refusing to adequately define the concept of negligence.
In passing upon the propriety of the refusal of a new trial, our inquiry is whether the court below abused its discretion or committed an error of law which controlled the outcome of the case. Abbott v. Steel City Piping Co., 437 Pa. 412, 263 A.2d 881 (1970). We will look to the charge in its entirety, against the background of evidence in the case, in order to determine whether an error was committed and whether any prejudice resulted. Jacob Kline Cooperage, Inc. v. Kistler, Inc., 286 Pa.Super.Ct. 84, 89, 428 A.2d 583, 586 (1981).
The primary duty of a trial judge in charging a jury is to clarify the issues so that the jury may comprehend the questions they are to decide. The instructions must give the jury a reasonable guide for the determination of the question of the defendant’s or plaintiff’s alleged negligence and on the degree of care or duty to inspect required by any person. The jury cannot determine wheth*551er a party is guilty of negligence or contributory negligence without knowing the degree of care required of that party. See, generally, Crotty v. Reading Industries, 237 Pa.Super.Ct. 1, 345 A.2d 259 (1975).
The appellant argues that the trial court erred in its instructions to the jury on the concept of negligence generally. Specifically, appellant argues that the trial court erred by refusing to explain the decedent’s right and duty as a landowner to inspect the work of his independent contractors and by refusing to explain the legal significance of government and industry standards which had been testified to during the trial.
We look first to instructions on government and industry standards. The defendants submitted evidence that the scaffolding had been constructed by such methods as are generally used in the trade. The plaintiff submitted evidence that the scaffold did not comport with Occupational Health and Safety Act (“OSHA”) and American National Standards Institute (“ANSI”) standards pertaining to scaffolding. All of this evidence was properly admitted. In Brogley v. Chambersburg Engineering Co., 306 Pa.Super.Ct. 316, 452 A.2d 743 (1982), we held that evidence of OSHA regulations is admissible as a standard of care, the violation of which is evidence of negligence. See, also, Restatement (Second) of Torts § 286; and, 27 P.L.E. § 175, Violation of Statute or Ordinance: “Proof of the violation of a statute or ordinance is permissible, not as conclusive proof of negligence, but as evidence to be considered with all other evidence in the case.” Accord: Riegert v. Thackery, 212 Pa. 86, 61 A. 614 (1905) (The Supreme Court recognized that the jury could be instructed on the weight to be given municipal ordinances in a negligence case.)
The specific question to be discussed here is whether, or to what extent, the trial court was required to instruct the jury on the relevance of such standards to the *552issue of negligence. The trial court’s instructions which most directly related to this issue were as follows:
Therefore, in determining whether the defendants were negligent, the test would be whether they exercised such care in the erection and maintenance of the scaffold as an ordinary prudent and careful person would have exercised in the same situation and under the same circumstances.
We find that in the context of the entire charge and in view of the fact that the jurors were presented with two standards of conduct, the above quoted charge is an insufficient explanation of the degree of care required by the defendants.1 Without further explanation, the jury may very reasonably have assumed that since the defendants were not required by law to adhere to the OSHA or ANSI standard, their failure to do so was irrelevant. As it reads, the charge seems to indicate that the defendants’ conduct need only be measured against that generally used in the trade and not against the more stringent OSHA and ANSI standards. The customary method of performing work could be a negligent method despite the fact that it was in general use in the trade and could, if the evidence warrant*553ed it, be found so by the jury.2 See DeMarco v. Frommyer Brick Co., 203 Pa.Super.Ct. 486, 492, 201 A.2d 234 (1964).
Where a charge is generally accurate, but misleads the jurors on a critical issue, a new trial should be granted. Hamil v. Bashline, 481 Pa. 256, 275, 392 A.2d 1280, 1289 (1978). See also, Leopold v. Davies, 246 Pa.Super.Ct. 176, 369 A.2d 868 (1977). The charge as previously quoted was not inaccurate. It was, however, incomplete and misleading when reviewed in the totality of the circumstances. The issue of the defendants’ negligent construction of the scaffolding is central to this case. Because of the trial court’s error in charging on this issue, and on other issues to be discussed, we must remand for a new trial.
The appellants’ next charge of error is that the trial court refused to instruct the jury on the decedent’s duty, as a landowner, to inspect the work of contractors on his land. Such a duty may have made the decedent’s presence on the scaffolding either lawful or, at the least, foreseeable to the defendants and thus increased their duty of care to protect him from their own acts of negligence. The trial court’s instructions to the jury on the issue of the defendant’s duty of care to the decedent provided, inter alia:
What is reasonable care depends on and must be in keeping with the use that the defendant expected to be made of that property by the plaintiff-decedent. You will recall that I said that they may be liable for resulting damage if he was lawfully on the scaffold. In that regard, then I will ask you to examine this evidence to determine for yourself whether or not:
Firstly, the plaintiff-decedent was invited onto the scaffold. Clearly, if you are persuaded by the weight of the evidence that he was invited onto the scaffold, then you will need to get into the question of whether or not the men who maintain that scaffold, owed a duty of care to the plaintiff-decedent, and whether they violated that *554duty of care by erecting a defective or dangerously unstable or otherwise defective set of scaffolding. You have the evidence on that and I am not going to get into that again with you.
If you find that the plaintiff-decedent was invited up to the scaffolding, and that there was a duty to make the place safe for him, and that they failed in a certain respect to do so; and if that failure to make that scaffolding safe, if you find it was unsafe, was the proximate cause of the plaintiff-decedent’s injuries and death, then he may recover ... Did the Reverend come upon this scaffold because he had a privilege to do so whether or not he was asked up?
I will ask you to examine the contract, the construction contract and the evidence on the question of whether or not the parties either by their contract or by their words, or by their conduct, vis-a-vis one another, reached a general understanding of the Reverend, as owner of the premises, had a duty or obligation and a correlative right to go and inspect the work which could not be done effectively without going on the scaffold; in which case he would have the right to be there; in which case, they owed him a duty to give him a safe scaffold.
But that is the investigation you will have to make. If you decide the question of whether he was invited, then I don’t think you would have to get to the second question, if you find in the first instance, that he was invited. I think you would only get to the second proposition if you determine from this evidence, that he wasn’t invited. And so, you will have to look into the question of whether uninvited or invited, whether he had a right to be on the scaffold by reason of his relationship to these parties, by reason of the contract, by reason of something they said or did that would give rise to a conclusion on your part that they understood that he had the duty, obligation and right to inspect the property and couldn’t do it effectively any other way except by being on it.
*555If you find that he did have a right to be on the scaffold in order to effectively carry out his right and duty to inspect the property, then you must pass to whether or not they violated their duty of care to him since they could reasonably have foreseen under that circumstance that he would one day be upon the scaffold doing the inspecting.
If you find however, that there was no contractual basis or anything in the conduct or words of'the parties which gave rise to such a privilege on his part to be on the scaffold, then pass to the third proposition which is: If he had no invitation to be there, and if he had no privilege to be there, then he was like anybody else, a trespasser.
It is clear from the foregoing exerpts of the trial court’s charge that the jurors were precluded from considering the decedent’s duty, imposed by law, to inspect his property for possible defects. Any contract or agreement between the parties could not have negated this duty which is imposed on every landowner in the interests of public safety. This charge by the court erroneously limited the jury’s consideration of decedent’s duty and, following from that duty, what the defendants should reasonably have foreseen. The questions of whether the decedent was required to ascend the scaffolding in the performance of this duty or whether he did so in a reckless manner are still questions for the jury to decide.3
The trial court instructed the jury that if the decedent had no right or duty to be on the scaffold and the defendants had no previous knowledge of his use of the scaffold, then they (the defendants) owed him no more than the duty to refrain from injuring him as a consequence of wilful or reckless conduct. The issue of the decedent’s right to be on the scaffolding and the foreseeability of his actions are *556central both to the plaintiff’s claim that the defendants’ actions were negligent as well as to the defendants’ contributory negligence claim. The trial court’s erroneous instruction on these issues by its failure to instruct on plaintiff’s requested point for charge is reversible error.
Because we reverse and remand for a new trial, we do not reach the other issues raised by the appellant in this case.
Reversed and remanded for a new trial.
Jurisdiction is relinquished.
WIEAND, J., files a concurring opinion in which MON-TEMURO, J., joins.