delivered the Opinion of the Court.
11 In this case, we consider whether the Premises Liability Act, § 18-21-115, C.R.S. (2014) ("PLA"), applies to a commercial ten *1037 ant defendant in a lawsuit seeking damages for injuries the plaintiff sustained in a common area. Specifically, we must decide whether the tenant in this situation qualifies as a "landowner" under the PLA. 1
{2 The PLA defines a "landowner" to include both "an authorized agent or a person in possession of real property" and "a person legally responsible for the condition of real property or for the activities conducted or cireumstances existing on real property." § 18-21-115(1). The respondent, a large orthopedics clinic, is the main tenant at a medical campus that also includes a physical therapy group, an imaging group, and a surgery center. The petitioner was a patient at the clinic who sustained serious injuries when she tripped and fell over an unevenness in the sidewalk outside the clinic-a common area under the terms of the clinic's lease. She asserted a premises liability claim against the clinic, alleging that the clinic failed to exercise reasonable care to protect against a danger of which it knew or should have known. At trial, the clinic moved for a directed verdiet on grounds that it was not a landowner under the PLA. The trial court denied the motion, and the jury ultimately found in favor of the petitioner.
T3 The clinic appealed and the court of appeals reversed, concluding that the clinic was not a landowner for purposes of the PLA. We granted certiorari review and affirm the judgment of the court of appeals. Because the clinic neither was in possession of the sidewalk where the petitioner fell, nor was it legally responsible for the condition of the sidewalk or for the activities conducted or circumstances existing there, we hold that it was not a landowner as defined by the PLA and therefore cannot be held liable under that statute's provisions.
I. Facts and Procedural History
T4 Petitioner Barbara Jordan sued Respondent Panorama Orthopedics & Spine Center, PC ("Panorama") for negligence and premises liability. After receiving medical treatment at Panorama, Jordan was walking to meet her husband, who was waiting for her in the parking lot, when she tripped over uneven sidewalk slabs near Panorama's main entrance. She fell and suffered a concussion and an orbital fracture.
15 Panorama is a large orthopedics clinic that receives upwards of 100,000 patient visits each year. The single medical building on the "Panorama Medical Campus" bears a sign with Panorama's name on it, although there are three other tenants in the building who also provide services to Panorama's patients. Under Panorama's lease with landlord PPG MOB Fund IB, LLC, Panorama has twenty-five reserved spaces in the parking lot for its exclusive use, and it operates a reception desk for the entire building.
16 Panorama's lease defines the leased "Premises" as "that space in the Building shown on the floor plan ... containing approximately 81,401 rentable square feet." The lease distinguishes "Common Areas" as those areas in the building complex provided by the landlord for the general non-exclusive use of tenants and others and defines such areas specifically to include sidewalks:
The term "Common Areas" is defined as all areas and facilities outside the Premises and within the Building Complex that are provided and designated by the Landlord from time to time for the general nonexclusive use of Landlord, Tenant and of other tenants of the Building and their respective employees, suppliers, and invitees, including but not limited to sidewalks....
(Emphasis added.)
T7 Under the lease, the landlord retains responsibility for maintaining the common areas. 2 Panorama routinely notifies the property managers via email about safety issues such as snow and ice on the sidewalks. If the landlord fails to provide maintenance, *1038 the lease allows Panorama to take reasonable steps to cure the landlord's failure and "the minimum steps as are reasonably necessary" to provide emergency repairs. Panorama also directs its employees to fill out incident forms if a Panorama employee is involved when a patient is injured anywhere on the property, and it sometimes reports these incidents to the property managers. In its lease, Panorama "assumes all risk of damage to property or injury to persons in, upon or about the Premises from any cause" and agrees to indemnify the landlord for any claim related to the tenancy.
[8 Before trial, Panorama filed a C.R.C.P. 56(h) motion for determination of a question of law, asking the trial court to rule that Panorama owed no duty of care to Jordan under either the PLA or common law negli-genee. Panorama argued that it was not a statutory landowner under this court's holding in Pierson v. Black Canyon Aggregates, Inc.,
T9 The trial court ruled that the record before it was insufficient to determine whether Panorama owed Jordan a common law duty of care because a factual dispute existed over Panorama's ownership, possession, and control of the sidewalk where Jordan fell. Thus, it denied Panorama's motion to determine that it owed no duty. Nevertheless, citing Pierson, the trial court concluded that, if Panorama owed Jordan a legal duty of care, any such duty would "fall within the purview of the [PLA] because a finding that [Panorama] was in possession or control of the injury-causing cireumstances would render [Panoramal a landowner within the meaning of the [PLA]." It therefore dismissed Jordan's negligence claim.
10 Jordan's premises liability claim was tried to a jury. At the close of Jordan's case, Panorama moved for a directed verdict on grounds that it was not a landowner under the PLA because it had no control over the sidewalk. It also argued that there was no evidence that it either created a condition or conducted an activity on the sidewalk that caused Jordan's injuries. 3
{11 The trial court denied the motion, observing that Panorama was the "major tenant" that "seemed to exert more control than the usual tenant with reference to the parking lots and the sidewalks." It further noted that Panorama was "legally conducting an activity on the property" by providing medical services. Finally, it considered the indemnity clause in the lease to be evidence that Panorama "assumed the risk" and was responsible for any activity or condition in the common areas. The jury found in favor of Jordan and awarded $411,689 in damages.
12 Panorama appealed,
4
and a split panel of the court of appeals reversed. Jordan v. Panorama, Orthopedics & Spine Cir., PC,
13 In dissent, Judge Richman reasoned that, by operating a medical clinic that necessitated ingress to and egress from its office, Panorama was conducting an activity on the property such that it qualified as a landowner under the PLA; and the factual question of whether it was " 'actually responsible for the precise situation that injured'" Jordan was properly submitted to the jury. Id. at 1% 44, 46, 52 (Richman, J., dissenting) (quoting Pierson, 48 P.8d at 1221 n.). Judge Rich-man rejected Panorama's contention that it was not liable because there was no evidence that its activities caused the uneven gap in the sidewalk where Jordan fell. Id. at 148. In his view, this court's decision in Pierson did not require the defendant's activities to be the "direct cause" of the plaintiff's injuries for the defendant to be deemed a landowner. Id. We granted certiorari review to explain our holding in Pierson and apply it in this commercial tenant setting.
H. Analysis
{14 This case presents an issue of statutory interpretation, so we review the court of appeals' conclusion de novo. Build It & They Will Drink, Inc. v. Strauch,
T 15 We proceed by reviewing the overall statutory scheme embodied in the PLA and examining the PLA's definition of "landowner," as previously construed by this court. We then apply that definition in the commercial tenant setting presented here. We conclude that Panorama was not a landowner within the meaning of the PLA because it was not in possession of the sidewalk where Jordan's injuries occurred and was not legally responsible for the condition of the sidewalk or for the activities conducted or circumstances existing there.
A. Statutory Framework
1 16 To provide context for our discussion, we first summarize the statutory scheme establishing the hierarchy of duties that landowners owe entrants and reiterate that the PLA imposes lability only for conditions, activities, and cireumstances on the property for which the landowner is liable in its legal capacity as a landowner. We then analyze the term "landowner" as that term is defined in the PLA and interpreted in our precedent. Finally, we apply these legal principles to the facts before us.
1. Liability Under the PLA
17 The General Assembly's primary purpose in enacting the PLA was to abrogate this court's holding in Mile High Fence Co. v. Radovich,
18 In the General Assembly's view, however, the unitary standard of care unfairly shifted responsibility for a trespasser's injuries to the landowner. Gallegos,
e A trespasser may recover only for damages willfully or deliberately caused by the landowner. § 18-21-115(8)(a).
® A licensee may recover only for damages caused by the landowner's unreasonable failure to exercise reasonable care with respect to dangers created by the landowner of which the landowner actually knew, or by the landowner's unreasonable failure to warn of dangers not created by the landowner which are not ordinarily present on property of the type involved and of which the landowner actually knew. § 18-21-115(8)(b).
e An invitee may typically recover only for damages caused by the landowner's unreasonable failure to exercise reasonable care to protect against dangers of which the landowner actually knew or should have known. § 18-21-115(8)(c).
119 Importantly, the PLA limits lia bility only for injuries that are caused "by reason of the condition of such property, activities conducted or cireumstances existing on such property." § 18-21-115(2). As we observed in Pierson, the overriding purpose of the PLA is to clarify and narrow private landowners' liability to persons entering their land.
[ 20 We had an opportunity to address the reach of the PLA's liability provisions in Larrieu v. Best Buy Stores, L.P.,
121 The United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Cireuit certified to us the question whether the PLA applies solely to activities and cireumstances that are "directly or inherently related to the land," and we answered that question in the negative. Id. at ¶¶ 3-4, 18,
2. Definition of "Landowner"
Our conclusion in Larriew regarding the scope of the PLA drew from our construction of the term "landowner" in Pier-son. See Larrieu, ¶¶ 20-24,
123 With respect to the first statutory definition, we held in Pierson that a person "in possession of" land is one who occupies the land with intent to control it, although not necessarily to the exclusion of all others.
€ 24 We held in Pierson that this second statutory definition includes a person who is "legally conducting an activity on the property or legally creating a condition on the property." Id. The alleged landowner in Pierson was an independent contractor that had entered into an agreement with Mont-rose County in 1996 authorizing it to crush gravel at a gravel pit on property that the county leased from private owners. Id. at 1216. The county did not assign its lease to the gravel pit operator and retained the right to enter the property to correct dangerous conditions. Id. at 1216-17. In April 1997, the plaintiff was traveling along a road that ran through the gravel pit when he drove over a drop-off caused by years of excavation and mining activities. Id. at 1217. He sued the gravel pit operator and its owner under the PLA but did not name the county as a defendant. Id. at 1217 & n.8. The gravel pit operator and its owner moved for summary judgment, arguing that they were not landowners under the PLA because the county was in possession of the gravel pit. Id. at 1217. The trial court granted the motion, and the court of appeals affirmed. Id. at 1217-18.
1 25 We reversed. Id. at 1221. In light of the PLA's broad language, we held that a landowner under the first statutory definition is any person in possession of real property with intent to control it, but that such possession need not necessarily be to the exclusion of all others. Id. at 1219-20. Given the facts before us in Pierson, we further held that the second statutory definition of landowner includes a person who is "legally conducting an activity on the property or legally creating a condition on the property." Id. at 1221. Applying these definitions to the gravel pit operator, we concluded that it was both sufficiently in possession of the property to qualify as a landowner and was legally conducting an activity on the property that allegedly injured the plaintiff. Id. We noted, however, that whether the gravel pit operator was "actually responsible for the precise situation that injured [the plaintiff]" was a question for the trier of fact on remand. Id. *1042 at 1221 n.7. In other words, the gravel pit operator qualified as a landowner under the PLA, but whether it was actually liable under the statute remained to be determined.
B. Application
T26 We now turn to the case before us. First, we conclude that Panorama was not in possession of the sidewalk where Jordan fell because, under the terms of the lease, it had only a right of non-exclusive use of the common areas and the landlord retained responsibility for maintaining those areas. Second, we conclude that Panorama was not legally responsible for the condition of the sidewalk where Jordan's injuries occurred or for activities conducted or cireumstances existing there. We therefore hold that Panorama is not a landowner within the meaning of the PLA.
1. Possession
£27 Jordan first contends that Panorama was "in possession of" the common areas, including the sidewalk where she fell, because it was the dominant tenant at the Panorama Medical Campus. She points out that Panorama operated a reception desk for the entire building, erected a sign on the building bearing its name, and marketed the campus as a "one-stop shop" for orthopedic patients. We disagree that these facts alone establish that Panorama was in possession of the common areas within the building complex. 7
T28 As discussed above, we indicated in Pierson that a person "in possession of" land is one who is "in occupation of the land with intent to control it."
129 Furthermore, Panorama did not have responsibility for the ordinary maintenance and upkeep of the common areas under the terms of the lease. Jordan contends that Panorama nevertheless controlled the common areas because it notified the property managers of maintenance issues and was authorized under the lease to make emergency repairs in common areas in the event that the landlord failed to do so. We disagree. To be sure, a tenant might be said to "control" a common area by taking on maintenance responsibilities Cf. Nordin v. Madden,
130 Finally, we find unpersuasive Jordan's argument that Panorama was in possession of the sidewalk because it had exclusive use of reserved spaces in the parking lot. That Panorama had exclusive rights to an adjacent area does not mean it had control over-and thereby possessed-the sidewalk. See Wark v. United States,
2. Legal Responsibility for Conditions, Activities, or Circumstances on the Property
§31 Jordan also contends that, even if Panorama was not in possession of the sidewalk, it nevertheless meets the second statutory definition of "landowner" because it was legally responsible for the condition of the sidewalk where she was injured. We disagree.
T 32 As discussed above, the PLA confers landowner status on those who are legally responsible for the conditions, activities, or circumstances existing on real property. Thus, a landowner under the PLA includes, in addition to a person "in possession of" real property, a person who is "legally responsible for the condition of real property or for the activities conducted or cireumstances existing on real property." § 18-21-115(1). This second statutory definition limits the protection of the PLA to those with legal - authority to be on the land, while placing prospective liability with those who are legally responsible for the conditions, activities, or cireumstances on the property. Pierson,
T 83 Jordan reads Pierson to mean that, to be a landowner under the PLA, the defendant's activities need not have caused the plaintiff's injuries. The court of appeals dissent likewise noted there was no evidence in Pierson that the gravel pit operator. had created the drop-off in the road, and therefore, under our rationale in that case, the defendant need not be the direct cause of the plaintiff's injury to be a landowner. Jordan, 148 (Richman, J., dissenting). However, both Jordan and the dissent have misconstrued the focus of our holding in that case. The gravel pit operator in Pierson qualified as a landowner under the PLA because it was responsible for the condition of the property when and where the accident occurred. Pierson,
*1044 34 Here, by contrast, Panorama was not legally responsible for the condition of the sidewalk or for the activities conducted or cireumstances existing there. Moreover, Panorama was not conducting any activity on the sidewalk where Jordan fell.
1385 The lease in this case assigned responsibility for the ordinary maintenance and upkeep of the common areas to the landlord. That Panorama had a non-exclusive right to use the sidewalk did not make Panorama legally responsible for the conditions there. Similarly, that Panorama documented and notified the property managers of dangerous conditions in common areas did not give rise to any duty to repair such conditions or otherwise make Panorama a landowner for purposes of the PLA. Panorama did not assume a duty to repair the sidewalk, and, even if it had, that would not affect its status under the PLA. See Jefferson Cnty. Sch. Dist. R-1 v. Justus,
186 We also reject Jordan's argument that Panorama should be held liable under the lease provision by which Panorama assumed the risk of injury to persons "in, upon or about the Premises from any cause" and agreed to indemnify the landlord for any claim related to the lease. Even if this provision pertaining to "the Premises" could be construed to allocate to Panorama the risk of injuries that occur in common areas, we fail to see how it affects Panorama's status as a landowner under the PLA. As explained above, to be a landowner under the PLA one must either be in possession of real property or be otherwise legally responsible for the conditions, activities, or cireumstances existing on the property. We agree with Panorama that merely promising to indemnify another party (here, the landlord) for its lability does not transform a defendant into a landowner. See Constable v. Northglenn, LLC,
137 In sum, Panorama was not legally responsible for the condition of the sidewalk or for the activities conducted or cireum-stances existing there. Moreover, we note that Panorama was not conducting any activity on the sidewalk where Jordan fell. 9 Although Panorama operates a medical clinic that necessitates patients' ingress and egress from its office, the fact that the public must pass through common areas to access a tenant's business does not necessarily mean that the tenant is conducting an activity in the common areas. To conclude otherwise would mean that any tenant could be held lable under the PLA for an accident in a common area if the plaintiff intended to enter the defendant's premises at some point during his or her visit.
IH. Conclusion
1 38 Panorama was not in possession of the sidewalk where Jordan sustained her injuries and was not otherwise legally responsible for the condition of the sidewalk or for the activities conducted or circumstances existing there. Accordingly, we hold that Panorama was not a landowner as defined by the PLA and is not liable under that statute's provisions. We therefore affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.
Notes
. We granted certiorari to review the following issue:
Whether the court of appeals erred in reversing petitioner's verdict on the grounds that respondent was not a "landowner" within the contemplation of the Premises Liability Act, § 13-21-115, CRS. (2014).
. The lease further gives the landlord the right to make changes to the common areas and temporarily close them for maintenance.
. In its earlier Rule 56(h) motion, Panorama acknowledged that its employees sometimes escorted patients to their cars. No party asserts, however, that a Panorama employee was assisting Jordan to her car when she fell.
. Jordan did not cross-appeal the trial court's dismissal of her negligence claim.
. As the court of appeals majority observed, the trial court did not find-and Jordan did not contend-that Panorama created the condition on the sidewalk that caused her injuries. Jordan, 1 30.
. In enacting the, PLA, the General Assembly declared that it was "not reinstating the common law status categories as they existed immediately prior to Mile Hi Fence v. Radovich [sic] ... but that its purpose is to protect landowners from liability in some circumstances when they were not protected at common law." § 13-21-115(1.5)(e).
. Jordan suggests that the court of appeals erred by failing to apply a "totality of the circumstances" test to determine whether Jordan was a landowner under the PLA, instead favoring some facts over others in its analysis. We have never enunciated a totality-of-the-circumstances test for landowner status; rather, the court must reach a legal determination based on the facts it concludes are most relevant. See Lakeview Assocs. v. Maes,
. Although the facts and holding of Wark are illustrative, we disagree with its analysis implying that a non-titleholder must have "complete possession and control over the property" to be a landowner. See
. Jordan does not contend that Panorama created the condition on the sidewalk that caused her injuries. See supra note 5.
