Summary judgment was granted to respondent, defendant in an action for personal injuries. Appellant was run into from behind by a running seven-year-old girl while she was descending a backstage stairway in the San Jose Municipal Auditorium. The auditorium was owned by the city, but was being used by a light opera association for rehearsal of a play. The association paid no rent. (The association and the girl, Karen Kersey, were made defendants but are not parties to this appeal.) Appellant had brought her two children to the rehearsal, and was descending the stairs with them. She saw no one else on the stairway. About halfway down, the child ran into her.
*601 Condition of the Property
Appellant’s first contention is that the property was negligently maintained. As to the condition of the property, exclusive of handrails, appellant admits in her deposition that the stairway was adequately lighted, that there was no unevenness of the surface, and that there was no slippery substance on the steps. Appellant argues that the statements made by plaintiff in her deposition could only be used at trial for impeachment; but this is not correct. Admissions against interest may be incorporated by reference in a motion for summary judgment.
(Newport
v.
City of Los Angeles,
But appellant contends that although the stairway was but 6 feet wide, and had a handrail on each side, to one of which she was holding, there should have been a third, a middle, handrail and that had there been, she would not have fallen. We reject this proposition. To have a middle handrail on so narrow a stairway might actually be dangerous at a time when rapidity of exit were demanded; but, anyway, we hold that as a matter of law it is quite unnecessary to have such a rail on an ordinary staircase 6 feet wide in order to avoid a charge of negligence. (See
Darrach
v.
Trustees of San Francisco County Medical Assn.,
Supervision or Patrol
Appellant’s second theory of recovery is that the city failed to supervise certain activities. In her complaint, she alleges that she was a business invitee of the city (first count) or a permittee (second count), and she specifies failure to supervise the activities of defendant Karen Kersey, as a proximate result of which she was caused to fall. The complaint does not refer to any common condition, or to failure to supervise children generally. Bespondent’s motion for summary judgment met this limited complaint with an affidavit of the city’s manager of the auditorium, in which it is stated that the auditorium was in the exclusive control of the opera association, that no personnel of the city were provided for the purpose of controlling admittance or rejection of any persons entering the auditorium or for the purpose of ushering, directing or controlling persons who were admitted. This affidavit negated duty on the part of the city to supervise the activities of the particular child, Karen Kersey.
*602 Thereupon, appellant filed an affidavit which states that the city knew that the stairway would be used by small children and by adults “who could be knocked over by children running down said stairway.” This creates no triable issue.
It is unnecessary to decide whether the applicable law is that contained in Government Code sections 835-844, which were enacted in 1963, more than a year after plaintiff’s accident (the act in which these sections are contained “applies retroactively to the full extent that it constitutionally can be so applied” (Stats. 1963, ch. 1681, §45, subd. (a), p. 3288)); or whether appellant may rely, as she contends, on the former theory that the auditorium constituted a proprietary function of the city, as was held in
Chafor
v.
City of Long Beach,
Even if vigilance should be increased where children are the potential offenders, some showing of the reasonable
*603
need of diligence to acquire knowledge of the peril which subsequently results in injury is required. In
Schwerin
v.
H. C. Capwell Co.,
In the case before us, we are informed only that “the City of San Jose knew” that the stairway would be used by small children and by adults and that the adults “could be knocked over by children running down said stairway.” To say that such an accident
could
happen is to state a mere possibility which is common to a multitude of situations. Eventuality alone does not create duty. There is no statement of boisterous conduct, of excitement, of prior occurrences of children running on the stairs, or of other conduct which, if existent, discovery procedure might have shown. (See
Buffalo Arms, Inc.
v.
Remler Co.,
Finally, in the matter of summary judgment, we are reminded that the procedure is drastic. But it is also a useful procedure. It seeks to discover, through the medium of affidavits, whether the parties possess evidence which demands the analysis of trial.
(Burke
v.
Hibernia Bank,
Judgment affirmed.
Draper, P. J., and Salsman, J., concurred.
