Eli Lindsey brought this action for damages against the Housing Authority of the City of Atlanta as a result of a slip and fall outside his residence on a sidewalk maintained by the Housing Authority. The trial court granted the Housing Authority’s motion for summary judgment and Lindsey appeals.
In his deposition, appellant testified he had lived his entire life at *815 his current residence and he could not remember a time when the elevation in the sidewalk on which he fell had not existed. The elevation was arguably caused by tree roots under the cement. Appellant testified he had stumbled over the elevation more than 50 times, that he had traversed the sidewalk under identical lighting conditions for years, and that he knew the elevation was there the night he fell. Although appellant introduced an affidavit from his mother asserting the sidewalk was the sole route from the residence to a nearby street, appellant testified in his deposition that the door to his residence could be approached from any direction.
We affirm the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to appellee. “It has often been held that the true basis for a landlord’s liability to a tenant for injuries resulting from a defective or hazardous condition existing on the premises is the landlord’s superior knowledge of the condition and of the danger resulting from it. [Cits.]”
Richardson v. Palmour Court Apts.,
Judgment affirmed.
