Appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court (Williams, J.), entered May 11, 2000 in Saratoga County, upon a verdict rendered in favor of defendants.
This appeal stems from an incident occurring on April 29, 1996, when plaintiff tripped and fell from a wooden stairway located on premises purchased by defendants Michael Miller and Denise Miller in March 1994. At the time of the accident, plaintiff was going to visit her sister, a tenant at the premises. At trial, plaintiff testified that the wooden stairway was wet due to rain and, although there was a handrail along the right side of the stairway, she did not recall utilizing it as she ascended the stairway. She indicated that she proceeded up the stairway somewhere between the middle and right side thereof and, as she climbed from the second to the third step, she either caught her foot underneath the third step or at its tip, causing her to lose her balance. She fell off the left side of the stairway, which did not have a railing.
Plaintiff commenced this personal injury action alleging that the stairway was improperly designed and constructed and, furthermore, that the Millers were negligent in permitting a dangerous, hazardous and unsafe condition to exist on their premises. The Millers filed a third-party action against Boghosian Brothers, Inc., which allegedly built the stairway in 1985 for the former owners, and an architect, William Stevens, whom the Millers hired in February 1994 to inspect the premises but who failed to identify any problems with the stairway at that time.
Initially, we are unpersuaded by plaintiff’s argument that Supreme Court committed reversible error when it ruled that plaintiff did not lay a proper foundation in order to allow her
Specifically, prior to the offer of proof, plaintiff testified that she was stepping between the middle and right side of the stairway when she tripped.
Next, plaintiff contends that Supreme Court erred when it declined plaintiff’s request for a missing witness charge against Boghosian with respect to Irving Paris, an architect who had examined the subject stairway at Boghosian’s request and was disclosed as a possible witness. Specifically, Boghosian’s response to plaintiffs expert demand revealed that Paris “may testify that there were no * * * building code violations * * * which were in any way causally related to the alleged accident involving [plaintiff].” At trial, however, Paris was not called to testify, although Pikul did indicate in his testimony that the lack of a railing or guard on the left-hand side of the stairway was a violation of the State Building Code and a deviation from standard practice.
Finally, we have examined plaintiff’s remaining arguments challenging the propriety of Supreme Court’s jury charge and, to the extent that they have been preserved for appellate review, find them to be unavailing.
Crew III, Peters, Mugglin and Lahtinen, JJ., concur. Ordered that the judgment is affirmed, with one bill of costs.
Notes
. Supreme Court ultimately dismissed the third-party complaint against Stevens before the case was submitted to the jury.
. Pikul apparently relied upon plaintiffs less specific testimony in her examination before trial which seemed to indicate that she was stepping closer to the central portion of the second step just prior to suffering her fall. Nevertheless, plaintiff clarified the issue at trial and it was argued by Boghosian’s counsel that an explanation of, inter alia, this apparent discrepancy in relation to the various riser heights would be unduly confusing to the jury.
. Boghosian’s counsel argued that the violation was irrelevant given defendants’ position that the absence of the left handrail was not a causative factor in this accident.
