Opinion
Rоbert Donohue, a San Francisco firefighter, brought this action for personal injuries after he slipped and fell on wet, slick stairs during an unannounced fire safety inspection of a building owned by the San Francisco Housing Authority (SFHA). The California Supreme Court remanded this case for reconsideration in light of
Knight
v.
Jewett
(1992)
*661 Background
The facts are basically undisputed. Plaintiff Robert Donohue was employed as a firefighter with the San Francisco Fire Department from 1955 until his retirement in March of 1987. On March 26, 1986, in his capacity as battalion chief, plaintiff conducted a fire safety inspection of a low rise apartment building owned by SFHA. The building consists of three floors with a flight of concrete stairs leading from the third floor to a penthouse door, which opens out onto the roof.
Plaintiff noticed that the stairs were wet and, since he observed two or three men with a hose leaving the scene, conсluded that they had just finished washing down the stairs. As part of his inspection, plaintiff climbed the stairway to see if the penthouse door was locked, a condition not permitted by the fire code. Having inspected the building a number of times before, he knew the door hаd sometimes been left locked.
Plaintiff was wearing crepe-soled shoes issued by the fire department and was particularly cautious in traversing the stairway, knowing that the steps were wet and having observed puddles and mud. As he descended the stairs from the penthouse door, plaintiff slipped and fell on the landing above the third floor, breaking his arm. After the injury, plaintiff did not return to work and went on disability retirement.
The concrete steps did not have skid-resistant treads on them, despite the fact that several years eаrlier the SFHA safety committee had recommended that they be installed. In accordance with routine practice, the fire department did not give SFHA any advance notice of the inspection, although SFHA had general knowledge that its buildings were being insрected on a quarterly basis.
According to injury reports kept by the fire department, plaintiff had multiple slip-and-fall accidents prior to the incident in question, although all of the accidents occurred under firefighting conditions.
Defendant moved for summary judgmеnt based on the theory that plaintiffs recovery was barred by either the firefighter’s rule or traditional common law assumption of the risk. The court granted summary judgment without specifying which ground formed the basis of its ruling.
*662 Appeal
I
The Knight Opinion
In
Knight,
a three-judge plurality of the state Supreme Court (with a fоurth, Justice Mosk, concurring in the result) effectively abolished the previous judicial categorization of assumption of the risk into “reasonable” and “unreasonable” forms for purposes of determining whether the defense is subsumed by comparative negligence as set forth in
Li
v.
Yellow Cab Co.
(1975)
Knight
held that “the question whether the defendant owed a legal duty to protect the plaintiff from a particular risk of harm does not turn on the reasonableness or unreasonableness of the plaintiffs conduct, but rather on the nature of the activity or sport in which the defendant is engaged and the relationship of the defendant and the plaintiff to that activity or sport.”
(Knight, supra,
Finally, since the existence and scope of the defendant’s duty in a given situation is a legal question, not a factual one, the applicability оf the assumption of the risk doctrine is especially amenable to resolution by summary judgment motion.
(Knight, supra,
II
Firefighter’s Rule
SFHA continues to maintain that plaintiff is barred from recovery by application of the firefighter’s rule, since his injury was incurred in the *663 performance of his duties and the hazard of slipping and falling on wet stairs in particular was part and parcel of plaintiff’s job as a firefighter.
Knight, supra,
expressly declares that the firefighter’s rule survives as an example of “primary” assumption of the risk. In footnote 5, the court states that in addition to the sports setting, “the primary assumption of risk doctrine also comes into play in the category of cases often described as involving the ‘firefighter’s rule.’ [Citation.] In its most classic form, the firefighter’s rule involves the question whether a person who negligently has started a fire is liable for an injury sustained by a firefighter who is summoned to fight the fire; the rule provides that the person who started the fire is not liable under such circumstances. [Citation.] Although a number of theories havе been cited to support this conclusion, the most persuasive explanation is that the party who negligently started the fire had
no legal duty to protect the firefighter from the very danger that the firefighter is employed to
confront.” (
In our prior opinion in this case, we found that the firefighter’s rule did not apply because it does not bar recovery for independent acts of misconduct which were
not the сause of the plaintiff’s presence on the scene. (Hubbard
v.
Boelt
(1980)
The facts that plaintiff was injured while in the regular course of his duties as a fireman and that the hazard was one normally encountered as part of his job, are not dispositive. The negligent conduct at issue was SFHA’s failure to install nonslip adhesive treads on the stairs, coupled with the improper maintenance practice of hosing down the stairs. Neither of these acts was the reason for plaintiffs presence. Plaintiff was not summoned to the scene to inspect the slipperiness of the stairs, he was there to inspect for fire code violations. Since the injuries were not caused by an aсt of negligence which prompted plaintiff’s presence in the building, the firefighter’s rule does not bar the present claim.
(Terhell
v.
American Commonwealth Associates
(1985)
*664 III
Primary v. Secondary Assumption of the Risk
After
Knight,
whether a plaintiff’s cause of action is barred by assumption of the risk or is a mere variant of contributory negligence no longer turns оn the reasonableness of the plaintiffs conduct or his subjective awareness of the nature and magnitude of the danger.
(Knight, supra,
Again
Knight
provides direct guidance relevant to our situation. After acknowledging that an owner or occupier of land owes a general duty of care to eliminate dangerous conditions on his property (
In
Prescott,
a grocery store customer entered the defendant’s store to make a purchase. Upon exiting she noticed a lot of dirty water covering the sidewalk and that there was no dry area through which she could walk. After taking three or four steps on the wet sidewalk, she slippеd and fell. The evidence showed that the defendant had just washed down the area with two buckets of hot water.
(Prescott, supra,
Prescott
held that the plaintiff’s claim was barred by assumption of the risk if she had actual or constructive knowledge of the danger and voluntarily exposed herself to it. It is clear, however, that the variant of assumption of the risk of which the court speaks
presupposed
a breach of duty by the defendant: “As we have seen, the elements of the defense of assumption of risk are a person’s knowledge and appreciation of the danger involved and his voluntary acceptance of the risk. It follows that a person, if he is fully informed, may assume a risk
even though the dangerous condition is caused by the negligence of
others.”
(Prescott, supra,
Here, as in Prescott, defendant SFHA owed a general duty to tenants and visitors to maintain its premises in reasonably safe condition. Evidence was submitted showing that the concrete stairs had been heavily watered down just prior to plaintiff’s visit and laсked skid-resistant treading, which might have increased traction and prevented the accident. From this evidence a jury could conclude that SFHA breached its duty of care toward plaintiff. Plaintiff’s conduct in proceeding to traverse the stairs despite full appreciation of the risk created by such negligence was no more than a species of contributory negligence, to be considered by the jury in apportioning comparative fault.
SFHA cites a series of older cases indicating that а landowner has no duty to warn of a dangerous condition on his property if the condition is so obvious that any reasonable person would have observed it (see 6 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (9th ed. 1989) Torts, § 930, pp. 301-302 and cases cited therein) to support its argument that this cаse falls within the “no-duty” primary assumption of the risk category referred to in Knight. These cases are not apposite.
As explained in
Beauchamp
v.
Los Gatos Golf Course
(1969)
SFHA’s reliance on
Danieley
v.
Goldmine Ski Associates, Inc.
(1990)
By contrast, slippery steps were not a danger inherent in the nature of the activity at bar. There was nothing about plaintiff’s inspection of the building from which it can be inferred that the property owner’s normal duty to keep its public areas in safe condition would be relaxed.
We conclude that this is a “secоndary” assumption of the risk case as defined in Knight. There was a triable issue of fact concerning whether SFHA breached a duty of care toward plaintiff in maintaining the property. While a jury would certainly be entitled to consider plaintiffs conduct in deliberately encountering the danger despite his awareness of it for the purpose of determining comparative fault, such behavior does not automatically bar plaintiff’s recovery.
Disposition
The judgment is reversed.
Kline, P. J., and Benson, J., concurred.
Respondents’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied September 16, 1993.
