1. “A landlord is liable to one lawfully present on the rented premises, by invitation of the tenant, for injuries arising from defective construction, or from failure to keep the premises in repair, where the defect is known to the landlord or in the exercise of reasonable diligence could have been known, and the injured person was himself in the exercise of due care.”
Ross
v.
Jackson,
123
Ga.
657 (
2. “Where the landlord retains a qualified possession of the rented premises, himself attending, to the supervision of the building, collecting the rents, and personally or by an agent making repairs, he is liable for an injury resulting from a defective condition of the building, if he has actual notice of such defective condition, or if, in the' exercise of ordinary and reasonable care and diligence, he ought to have known of it.
Monahan
v.
National Realty Co.,
supra [4
Ga. App.
680,
3. That the tenant, at whose invitation the plaintiff went upon the premises, knew of the defective and unsafe condition of the steps constitutes no defense to an action by the guest against the landlord, where it is
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not shown that the guest had actual or constructive knowledge of the unsafe, condition herself. Such knowledge of the tenant is not imputable to the guest, and where the petition shows that the guest was in the exercise of ordinary care for her own safety, it was not subject to demurrer for that reason.
Crook
v.
Foster,
142
Ga.
715(2) (
4. The ground of special demurrer attacking the allegations of the petition respecting notice to the defendant of the unsafe condition of the steps on the ground that such allegations failed to state definitely when said advice was given defendant and whether it was given orally or in writing, and further on the ground that the allegations respecting the condition of the steps amounted to a conclusion of the pleader, is without merit since the petition shows that the defendant had notice of such condition for such a length of time as would authorize a jury to find that he had had an opportunity to make the repairs. Petitioner is not required to plead her evidence, and need show in her pleadings only generally that the steps were in such a state of disrepair as to cause them to give way and cause her to fall and sustain the injuries sued for.
Judgment affirmed.
