Sara McDonald sued Roy Taylor and Debbie Black, the owner and resident manager, respectively, of Taylor Apartments, to recover damages for injuries she sustained when she fell on a common walkway. The trial court denied Taylor and Black’s motion for summary judgment, and we granted interlocutory appeal.
The record reveals that both appellee and her daughter, Diane Thomas, rented apartments in the complex. Thomas’ apartment was located across the way and upstairs from that of appellee. Approximately four to six weeks prior to appellee’s fall, an automobile had backed into a support post at the complex, jarring loose the connection between the concrete stairs and the wooden decking which *321 floored the upstairs walkway, thereby creating a gap of approximately one to two inches in width. It is uncontroverted that appellee’s daily visits to the Thomas apartment required her to traverse the damaged area, which was the sole means of ingress and egress for that apartment.
Appellants contend the trial court erred by denying their motion for summary judgment because it is undisputed that appellee had equal knowledge of any defect which may have been the cause of her fall. “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 reversed.
