The appellant brought suit against the appellee, which owned the apartment in which she resided, for injuries suffered in a fall on a common stairway in the apartment complex. Summary judgment was granted for the appellee, and the appellant appeals.
During a period of cold weather, ice would often form on the stairway in question due to a defect which was allegedly known by the appellee. The stairway was the sole means of egress from the appellant’s apartment. On the day of the appellant’s fall, she went to work in the morning at a time when no ice was present on the stairs. When returning home for lunch, she discovered the dangerous area. With full knowledge of the danger, she slipped while traversing the ice on her return to work. Summary judgment was granted in the defendant’s favor based on a holding that the appellant had assumed the risk, thus precluding her recovery.
Smith v. Bel-Arbor, Inc.,
In Smith, a private duty nurse carried her patient’s empty lunch tray down a hospital hall which she knew was in a slippery and dangerous condition as a result of a recent mopping. She slipped and fell. Summary judgment was granted the hospital as a result of the nurse’s *270 assumption of risk.
The evidence in
Smith
"disclose[d] no emergency whereby the plaintiff was required to make use of the hallway to remove the dishes from the room.” 121 Ga. App. p. 739. In other words, there was nothing making it necessary for the nurse to venture into the hall at that particular moment, instead of after the danger had subsided. It is in that particular that
Smith
differs from the instant case. In the case sub judice there is evidence from which á jury could find that it was
necessary
for the appellant to cross the ice in order to return to work. Because questions of negligence and assumption of risk, except in plain, palpable, and indisputable cases, may not be decided on summary judgment
(Stern v. Wyatt,
The case at bar is also distinguishable from
Auerbach v. Padgett,
It is for the jury to determine whether the appellee was negligent and whether the appellant assumed the risk. If the jury should determine that the appellant could reasonably have avoided the dangerous ice by remaining in her apartment or by taking further actions on her own accord to lessen the danger, then it must find that she assumed the risk.
Judgment reversed.
