Dеfendant De La Guerra Properties, Inc., owned a building, part of which was leased to the El Paseo Restaurant, operated by defendant Smith. Both owner and tenant were sued for damages for injuries suffered by plaintiff, a prospective patron of the restаurant, when she fell onto a private walk which served as one of the approaches to the building. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence, the trial court took the ease from the jury and granted a nonsuit. Plaintiff appeals from the judgment entered upоn such order.
The De La Guerra building was located at the corner of Anacapa and De La Guerra Streets in the city of Santa Barbara. The northerly line of the property adjoined the southerly property line of a service station and -parking lot owned and operated by an oil company. The private walk was located on the northerly ten feet of the De La Guerra property and ran the full length of the building, joining at its easterly end the public sidewalk on Anacapa Street and *397 terminating westerly at the rear of the building. This walk was used as an entrance to the various establishments in the building. Three doors opened onto the walk, one of them leading into a passageway which was used as a side entrance for customers of the restaurant. Signs were maintained over this door by the owner, or by the tenant with the permission of the owner, reading “El Paseo”—“De La Guebba Studios”—“Restaubante Del Paseo Entbance.” There were three or more other entrances to the restaurant, consisting of passageways leading through the building to the adjoining streets.
For a period of several years after construction of the private walk, and before the oil company acquired the adjoining property, patrons of the establishments in the building used the adjoining property as a parking lot, which had been graded by defendant De La Guerra Properties, Inc., so that it sloped down to the private walk. After the oil company acquired the adjoining premises, it constructed a concrete wall on the southerly edge of its property which abutted and ran the entire length of the walk. The wall varied in height from approximately six inches above the walk at the easterly end to two feet at the westerly end. On the adjoining property, and adjacent to the wall, there was an unpaved parkway ten feet wide. A concrete curb approximately seven inches high separated the parkway from the service station area, which was paved with asphalt and painted with white lines extending from the curb outward diagonally to indicate parking spaces for automobiles. A concrete ramp about 3 feet wide led from the parking area through the parkway to the private walk at a point directly opposite the door which served as a side entrance to the El Paseo Restaurant.
Defеndant Smith had at one time made arrangements with the oil company for patrons of his restaurant to park their ears on the service station property without charge, and persons availing themselves of the privilege went directly from the parking lot to thе private walk to gain entrance to the restaurant. At the time of plaintiff’s injuries, these parking arrangements had been terminated, but, to the knowledge of both defendants, many patrons continued to park on the adjoining property and to approaсh the De La Guerra establishments from that direction.
At about 8 o’clock on the night of the accident, plaintiff, who was 65 years of age, was driven by her husband, in the *398 company of her sister and two friends, to the parking lot adjoining the De La Guerra property. The service station was closed but plaintiff’s husband parked his automobile facing toward the El Paseo Restaurant where the parties contemplated taking dinner. Plaintiff had been to the restaurant on one occasion prior to the accident, at which time the car had been parked near Anacapa Street in the service station lot, and she had walked across the parkway and stepped down to the private walk at a point where the concrete wall was only six or seven inches higher than the walk. On the night of the accident, however, plaintiff’s car was parked closer to the westerly end of the parking lot. The night was dark and the surrounding area was unlighted. Plaintiff and her sister got out of the parked automobile and made their way toward the private walk and thе restaurant. Because of the darkness they could not see where they were going, so they “picked [their] way along very carefully,” heading toward the private walk which plaintiff knew was there by reason of her prior visit. Plaintiff testified that because of her previous experience she “thought there was just a low step from that curb down to the walk, when you walked across there. And I put my foot—my left foot on the curb, and I went to step down with my right. I did not trip. I went to step down with my right foot six or seven inches, and instead of that I stepped right dоwn into space ... I lost my balance and fell and broke my hip.” The wall was 18 inches above the walk at the point where plaintiff stepped off. The condition of the De La Guerra premises in relation to the adjoining property was thus an important factоr in causing the accident. The general area was unlighted and because of the darkness plaintiff had no knowledge and no means of determining that the wall at this point was 18 inches above the Walk. There were no guard rails or other protective devices along the walk which might have served to prevent the happening of the accident which occurred when plaintiff fell from the wall onto the private walk.
Negligence of Owner.
At the outset, it should be noted that the liability of owner and tenant must be based on the respective negligence of each. Because of the circumstances of this case, we need not concern ourselves with the general rule that an owner is not subject to liability during the term of a lease for harm caused
*399
to third persons upon the leased premises resulting from the condition of the premises or the activities of the tenant, nor with any of the established exceptions to this rule. (See Prosser on Torts [1941], pp.
648-657; Burroughs
v.
Ben’s Auto Park, Inc.,
The duty of the invitor to exercise reasonable care toward an invitee applies, however, only to thаt portion of the premises to which the invitee under the circumstances of the invitation would be likely to go. But where the invitee has been intentionally or negligently misled into the reasonable belief that a particular passageway or door is an apрropriate means of reaching the business area, he is entitled to the protection of a visitor while using such passageway or door.
(Tschumy
v.
Brook’s Market,
An invitor is not an insurer, however
(Adams
v.
Dow Hotel,
Defendants rely on the eases of
Gabriel
v.
Bank of Italy,
The evidence is sufficient to support a finding that the defendant owner was negligent. It encouraged patrons of its tenants to park thеir cars on the adjoining property and approach the building by way of the private walk. It had knowledge of the condition which caused the accident, and a jury could find that defendant owner should have foreseen that patrons parking at night, and unaided by аny lighting, might fail to discover the ramp, and, in attempting to gain entrance to the building, step onto the walk at a dangerous place. Under these circumstances, it cannot be said as a matter of law that defendant owner was not negligent in fail *401 ing to light the premises, оr provide guard rails, or otherwise to protect or warn business invitees against the danger inherent in this particular approach.
Negligence op Tenant.
The accident took place on a portion of the De La Guerra property that was not within the premises leased by defendant Smith. A tenant ordinarily is not liable for injuries to his invitees occurring outside the leased premises on common passageways over which he has no control.
(Readman
v.
Conway,
There is evidence in the present case that the tenant, defendant Smith, assumed some responsibility for, and exercised control over, the means of lighting the approaches to the side entrance to the Dе La Guerra building. "When the building was first constructed, a single light was placed on the outside wall immediately above the door opposite the ramp. Smith installed a Neon sign, reading “El Paseo,” a few feet above the single light and connected the sign and the light in such a mannеr that they operated on one switch. Thus the Neon sign, which was under the control of Smith, served not only as an invitation to use the entranceway to the restaurant, but also to illuminate the general area. This evidence would support a finding and conclusion that Smith had a limited right of control over this portion of the premises and of the means of illuminating the entranceway, that he knew of the danger involved in using this approach at night, and that he negligently failed to warn plaintiff, a business invitee, of the dangerous condition.
*402 Contributory Negligence of Plaintiff.
Defendаnts contend that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. In support of their contention, it is asserted that there were three safe means of access to the side entrance. available to plaintiff: By entering the private walk frоm Anacapa Street, by way of the ramp, and by crossing the dirt area and stepping off the wall at the point where plaintiff had stepped down to the private walk on the occasion of her previous visit. Defendants argue that, instead of using any of these means, plaintiff groped her way in the dark, through shrubbery, to a point where the wall was 18 inches above the walk, and stepped off, although she could not see the walk below. Plaintiff testified that she picked her way very carefully, that as she crossed the dirt areа she did not see or feel any shrubbery, and that because of her prior experience in the area she thought there was a low step down to the private walk, like stepping from a sidewalk curb to a street. In view of the fact that plaintiff had found a safе means of reaching the private walk from the parking lot on the occasion of her prior visit, and of her ignorance of the variation in the height of the wall, we cannot say as a matter of law that she was guilty of contributory negligence in attempting to reach the walk by the same general method of approach that she had used before.
The judgment is reversed.
Shenk, J., Edmonds, J., Carter, J., Traynor, J., Schauer, J., and Spence, J., concurred.
