Opinion by
Plаintiff (appellee), a tenant in a multiple dwelling owned by appellant recovered a jury verdict against her landlord for personal injuries sustained ivhen she fell in an area at the rear of the building as she was returning to her home after dark. This appeal is from the order of the court below refusing appellant’s motion for judgment n.o.v. and entering judgment on the verdict.
The appellant offered no evidence at the trial and, since the appellee was awarded the verdict, the testimony offered by her and all reasonable inferences therefrom must be considered in the light most favorable to her.
Appellant operated a three-story building containing a storeroom on the first floor and four apartments above. Access to the apartments was by means of two stairways, one inside the building and one outside. The outside one ran alongside the building from the street up to the second floor level. From there it was necessary for a person using same to cross a small yard to the back porch on that level, from which another set of stairs rose to the third floor apartment occupied by appellee. Appellee used thе outside passage regularly day and night rather than the inside one because the latter was steeper and involved more steps, which af *645 feeted her health and caused her to have a shortness of breath when she used same.
Appellee described the conditions of the yard area that she was required to cross to reach her apartment as being washed out, rough, with gravel and rocks, and containing two large stones, one being eleven by eight inches in dimension and protruding three to four inches out of the ground, the other being six by seven inches and protruding one and one-half to two inches out of the ground, and both located near a single concrete step which led up to the porch. The distance which she was required to travel between the corner оf the building and the porch step was about four feet. The condition of this area was about the same from the time she moved into the premises in the fall of 1956 until the night she fell, March 30, 1957.
There was a light on an extension bracket at the top of the steps running along the building which illuminated those steps, as well as part of the yard area, and which was burning on the night of the accident. A light on the porch which could be turned on by appellee and other tenants when needed was also available. This light Avas not on Avlien appellee fell, she not having turned it on when she left her home and not having-reached the pull string which controlled it before she fell. The lighting conditions at the scene of her fall were testified by her as folloAvs: “By the Court: Q. What was the condition of the ground where you fell as far as illuminаtion Avas concerned? A. It Avas a shadoAV. Q. Was it light or dark? A. It Avas dark to me. Q. Could you see the ground? A. I Avas very careful. I could see it. but not as good as I should because it was a dark night. By Mr. OliA’er: Q. Now, Mrs. Devine, you Averе aAvare of the nature of the ground where you Avere Avalking, Avere you not? A. Yes, sir.”
Appellee was the only witness to her accident because she Avas alone at the time. The substance of her *646 testimony was that, as she was returning to her home from church with a pocketbook and a hag of groceries at about 8:40 p.m. on March 30, 1957, she encountered the stone or stones-and, “I thought I could just like I did before, go over it. I traveled over it before.” However, this night she struck it and either tripped or slipped on it, causing her to fall.
There appears to be sufficient evidence on which the jury could base a finding that defendant was negligent in permitting two stones to protrude one and one-half to four inches above ground at or near the point appellee would likely undеrtake to step upon the concrete step preparatory to mounting the porch floor, which point was in the direct route over the yard from the last step in the flight alongside the building to the porch. Appellant either knew about the condition or had constructive notice of its existence. Therefore, it was her duty as the one in control of that area of the property to make the area reasonably safe for the use intended for it by her tenants, including appellee.
The duty of a landlord of a multiple-tenant building, reserving control of the common аpproaches, such as sidewalks, passageways, etc., or parts of the building common to all tenants, such as the roof and walls, is to keep such approaches and parts reasonably safe for the use of tenants and their invitees and a landlord becomes liable where he either had actual notice of a defective condition therein or was chargeable with constructive notice, because had he exercised reasonable inspection he would have become aware of it.
Lopez v. Gukenback,
*647
The major issue in this case, however, is whether or not the lesseе’s (appellee) knowledge of this existing condition bars her recovery. The ordinary rule in cases of this nature is stated in
Simmonds v. Penn Fruit Company,
The present case does not come within the area of obvious peril. Tо use a passage with protruding stones would not indicate an inevitable mishap. On the contrary, it would indicate use with proper caution. Therefore, the question of due care was for the jury. That being the case, the issue of proper choice of way was also for the jury. Reference is made to the quotation from
Sculley v. City of Philadelphia,
*649
There remains the question of determining whether appellee by her own testimony indicated as a matter of law that shе failed to use due care in safeguarding herself from the risk of the protruding stones. It is only in clear cases whenever the facts are undisputed and but one inference can be drawn therefrom- thаt the court may declare a party guilty of contributory negligence judicially.
Usher v. Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad Company,
We have closely reviewed the cases cited by appellant in her brief and find them readily distinguishable or reconcilable with this opinion.
Judgment affirmed.
