Aрpellants Kay and John Hallberg appeal the order of the superior court granting summary judgment to appellees Flat Creek Animal Clinic, P.C. (clinic), Dr. Duane R Tallman and Dr. Joseph A. Harper. This is a suit for damages and loss of consortium; Mrs. Hallberg was injured when she fell on a ramp at the clinic.
*213 Appellant Kay Hallberg had visited the veterinary clinic on at least seven occasions prior to her fall; each time she used the clinic ramp without incident, as it was the sole mannеr of ingress and egress. On the morning of her fall, she ascended the ramp without incident and took all three of her pets to the clinic. She departed by going down the same ramp. She returned that afternoon to pick up her pets and again walked up the ramp. It was a sunny, hot day, and visibility was good. No objects obscured Mrs. Hallberg’s view of the ramp. Mrs. Hallberg requested assistance in carrying the three pets from the building. A veterinary assistant picked up the cage containing Mrs. Hallberg’s 14-pound cat. Mrs. Hallberg voluntarily took control of her two dogs inside the clinic. As she exited the premises with her two dogs, Mrs. Hallberg slipped on the ramp and was injured. The ramp was not slippery and did not appear to be wet at the time. The ramp, which had a metal handrail located on each side, looked the same on the day of her fall as it had on these other occasions.
Mrs. Hallberg testified in her depоsition that although she had been up and down the ramp on several occasions and had paid attention to its rough surface, she had never thought about its steepness. Mrs. Hallberg’s attention was directed to a photogrаph in which a seam-like crack is visible where the bottom of the ramp joins the concrete driveway. She admitted it was “true” that she was physically aware of the existence of this crack prior to the date of her fаll. When asked to describe how her fall occurred, she testified: “I’ve thought about it, and I’ve thought about it, and I’m really not quite sure. . . . I could have tripped on this area [indicating the crack depicted in the photograph where the bottom of the ramp meets the driveway]. I’m not really sure.” (Emphasis supplied.) All Mrs. Hallberg knows is that the leashed puppy pulled her down the ramp and at some point she fell. She thinks she fell “because the ramp was too steep,” and she initially testified during her dеposition there was no other reason for her fall. To her knowledge she did not trip or fall on a foreign substance. She was watching where she was going the entire time she was walking. At no point did she ever try to grab the handrail. She hаd noticed that morning that the railing was rusted and that one portion of it was not imbedded into the concrete; she does not recall either attempting to grab the railing to break her fall, or trying to bear her weight on either of the railings at any time that day. She does not know whether the rusted condition at the foot of one of the railings contributed to her fall. “Had the railing not been rusty, [Mrs. Hallberg] may have grabbed for it; but [she] knew the railing was rusty. It was very rickety. So [she doеs not] know.”
Mrs. Hallberg states in a subsequent affidavit that she knew the ramp handrail was rusted and in a very poor condition; she concluded the handrail could not be used when ascending or descending *214 the ramp. She would have used the hаndrail had it been safe to use. When she started to fall, she would have “attempted” to grab hold of the handrail but she knew it would not help. Mrs. Hallberg further opines that had she been able to grab a stable handrail her fall would have bеen prevented.
In her affidavit Mrs. Hallberg also attempts to explain that, during her previous deposition testimony, she was nervous and tense and sometimes did not give complete answers; however now that she has had time to reflect, she has a clearer recollection of the day she fell and was injured. (Note: Mrs. Hallberg does not identify any specific portion of her deposition testimony that was caused either to be inaccuratе or incomplete due to such nervous and tense condition. Further, the record reveals that Mrs. Hallberg swore to her deposition approximately five weeks after it was recorded and did not tender any changes thеreto as to either form or substance.) Mr. Hallberg testified that, after his wife’s fall, he had measured the ramp “because the ramp looks steep to [him].”
Appellants allege two defects existed in the ramp which causеd Mrs. Hallberg’s fall: an excessive ramp slope more than twice that allowed by county building codes, and appellees’ failure to maintain a handrail in good operating condition for effective use by its patrons. The trial court, citing
Morrison v. Anderson,
1. The rule of self-contradictory testimony, discussed
in. Prophecy Corp. v. Charles Rossignol, Inc.,
Mrs. Hallberg testified she believed she fell because the ramp *215 was too steep, and that there was no other reason for her to fall. However, she аlso testified that she was “really not quite sure” how her fall occurred. As Mrs. Hallberg testified that, after repeatedly thinking about the incident, she did not know how she fell or what caused her to fall, any self-contradictory statements madе by her to this testimony would be subject to the Prophecy Corp. rule.
2. In slip and fall cases, “ ‘[p]roof of a fall, without more, does not give rise to liability on the part of a proprietor. There must be proof of fault on the part of the owner and ignоrance of the danger on the part of the invitee.’ ”
Harpe v. Shoney’s,
Assuming without deciding that some proof of fault on the part оf the appellees exists, the question remains whether Mrs. Hallberg was ignorant of the dangers existing on the premises. The hazards posed by both the handrails and the ramp were “static” conditions on the premises. “An owner or occupier of land has a duty of exercising ordinary care to keep the premises and approaches safe for invitees. OCGA § 51-3-1. The basis of the owner’s liability is a superior knowledge of the condition that subjected the invitee to an unreasonable risk of harm. The hazard[s] in this case [are] static condition[s] which [are] not dangerous unless someone fails to observe [them]. ... In cases involving static conditions, if the invitee knows of the condition or hazard there is no duty on the part of the proprietor to warn [her] and there is no liability for resulting injury because the invitee has as much knowledge as the proprietor does and then by voluntarily acting in view of his knowledge, assumes the risks and dangers incident to the known condition. Also, we have held that where[, as in this case,] there is nothing to obstruct or interfere with the invitee’s ability to see the static defect, the owner is justified in assuming that the visitor will see it and realize the risks involved. A claim involving a static defect differs from other slip and fall cases in that when a person has successfully negotiated an alleged dangerous condition on a previous occasion, that person is presumed to have knowledge of it and cannot recover for a subsequent injury resulting therefrom.” (Citations and punctuation omitted.)
MARTA v. Fife,
(a) Appellants’ contentions regarding the handrail do not give rise to a genuine issue of material fact which will render the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to appellees erroneous. Mrs. Hallberg admits in judicio in both her deposition and her filed affidavit that she noticed the defective handrail and concluded that it was unsafе to use. Clearly, as to the handrail, appellants are charged with equal knowledge to that of the appellees. “Thus, appellants] cannot show appellee[s’] superior knowledge, which is necessary in
*216
order for her to recover.”
Harpe,
supra at 593 (1); compare
Souder v. Atlanta Family Restaurants,
(b) The evidence here is uncontroverted that appellant had gone up and down the ramp on at least seven different occasions. Her view of the ramp on these occasions was not obscured. While shе may not have realized that the slope of the ramp exceeded the county building code provisions, the steepness of the ramp was open and obvious to Mrs. Hallberg. Having successfully negotiated the allegеd dangerous condition numerous times previously, Mrs. Hallberg is presumed to have knowledge of it and cannot recover for a subsequent injury resulting therefrom.
Rose,
supra at 649. Nothing prevented her “from appreciating the . . . steep slope of the ramp. Even when construed most favorably to her, the evidence demonstrates that the knowledge of the hazard attributable to [her] was at least equal to that of appellee[s].”
Manley v. Gwinnett Place Assoc.,
(c)
Metromedia Steakhouses Co. v. Ray,
(d) The uncontrovertеd evidence shows that regardless whether Mrs. Hallberg asked the assistant to take control of one of her dogs, she voluntarily elected to take both dogs down the ramp at one time. Appellants’ claim of distraction must fаil. First, Mrs. Hallberg affirmatively testified she was looking where she was going the entire time she was walking. Secondly, not only does Mrs. Hallberg fail to show she was distracted at the time of her fall but any existing distraction would have been self-induced by her own election to proceed down the ramp with both dogs. A defendant cannot take the benefit of a self-induced distraction to excuse her lack of care for her own safety.
Redding v. Sinclair Refining Co.,
(e) Appellants’ reliance оn the necessity rule as an exception, which if applicable would permit recovery notwithstanding her equal knowledge of the danger (see generally
Carey v. Bradford,
218 Ga.
*217
App. 325 (
Judgment affirmed.
