Appellant-plaintiff fell down a flight of stairs on property owned by appellee-defendant. Seeking to recover for injuries sustained in this fall, appellant filed suit against appellee. Appellant appeals from the trial court’s grant of appellee’s motion for summary judgment.
Construed most favorably for appellant and most strongly against appellee the evidence shows the following: As appellant began to lose her balance at the head of the flight of stairs, she reached for the handrail. However, the handrail “leaned over. It gave way. ... It seemed to come loose. . . When the loose handrail gave way, nothing prevented her “from going down all those steps. . . .”
On this evidence, it is immaterial that appellant does not know what caused her to lose her footing at the head of the flight of stairs. She does not allege that appellee’s negligence caused her initially to slip. She seeks to recover on the basis that appellee’s alleged negligent maintenance of the handrail was the proximate cause of her failure to regain her footing after she slipped and that, as the consequence of that negligently maintained handrail, she fell down the steps.
Whether the failure to provide a handrail constitutes a negligent omission is “to be determined upon the circumstances of each case. In making this determination the location, height and width of the steps or walkway would have to be considered.”
Fitzpatrick v. Jim Clay Ford,
Appellee’s motion for summary judgment was based upon the erroneous premise that appellant’s lack of knowledge as to the cause of her initial loss of footing precluded her recovery. Appellee’s evidence does not negate its alleged negligent maintenance of the handrail as the proximate cause of appellant’s failure to regain her footing and of her consequent fall down the stairway. Accordingly, genuine issues of material fact remain and the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of appellee. See generally Fitzpatrick v. Jim Clay Ford, supra at 58 (1). If, as the result of the initial loss of her footing, appellant would nevertheless have fallen down the stairs notwithstanding appellee’s loose handrail, there can be no recovery. However, issues of appellee’s negligence, appellant’s contributory negligence, and the proximate cause of the fall down the stairs are, on the record before us, for the jury to resolve.
Judgment reversed.
