This is an appeal from a judgment for plaintiffs and from an order denying the respective motions of defendants city of King and Edward A. Thompson, doing business as By-Chemical Products Company, for judgment in their favor notwithstanding the verdict of the jury *502 against them. The action is one for wrongful death brought by the parents of a minor child who was drowned in a pool of water.
In 1939 or 1940 the city of King acquired a large tract of land just outside of its corporate limits by means of a general bond issue. In 1940 the city leased the property to the United States government for the purposes of constructing defense plants and an airport for the training of pilots. During World War II the government constructed upon this propеrty hangars, runways, barracks, a sewage disposal plant, butane tanks and other buildings. In 1947 the lease expired and the property together with the improvements reverted to the city. All of this property was thereafter annexed to the city prior to the drowning involved herein.
On August 6, 1947, the city and Thompson entered into a lease agreement whereby a portion of this property was leased to Thompson for a period of 10 years at a rental of $1.00 per year. The lease recited that the leased premises were to be used “for the purpose of manufacturing chemical and chemical by-products.” However, the city authorized Thompson to rent the living quаrters in the barrack buildings to individual families until the housing shortage subsided.
The lease expressly excluded the sewage disposal plant from the premises leased to Thompson but permitted him the use of its facilities and (apparently in return) he was required to maintain it at his own expense. The sewage plant also served the hangars at the airрort and some other housing units owned by the city which were located three-fourths of a mile therefrom. The city continued to inspect the plant four or five times a year, furnish the chlorine needed in the plant’s operation, and assist whenever any repairs to the machinery or equipment became necessary.
On or about January 1st, 1955, Thompson rented a unit in one of the barracks to respondents and their three minor children, the oldest of whom was 7. The barracks were located on a plateau. The sewage plant was located below this plateau. A stairway extended from the level of the plateau down to the level of the land upon which the sewage plant was located. The difference in altitude between the two levels is about 60 feet, the angle of the slope from the plateau down to the lower level being approximately 45 degrees, and the stairway being approximately 85 feet in length.
The distance from the unit occupied by respondents to the plant оn a direct line is approximately 950 feet. The distance *503 from said unit to the top of the stairway on a direct line is approximately 880 feet.
The disposal plant includes two rock filter beds which adjoin two rectangular-shaped concrete basins filled with sewage water. The rock filter beds are higher than the pools of sewagе water.
On the afternoon of February 3, 1955, the respondents’ son, Philip, who was then 2 years and 10 months of age, accompanied by Warren Leader, 7 years of age, and two little girls, 7 and 6 years of age, went to the edge of the plateau at the top of the stairway. The girls stayed there but the boys went down the steps. Philip went onto the rock filtеr beds and began throwing rocks therefrom into the water pools. Warren started back up. On the way he turned around and looked back and saw Philip lying in one of the pools of water. Efforts to rescue him were unsuccessful.
The main issue in this case is the status of the deceased child while on the plant premises. Appellants contend that hе was a trespasser, to whom they owed only a duty to refrain from inflicting wanton or wilful injury.
(Demmer
v.
City of Eureka,
The circumstances upon which respondents rely are; (1) the invitation to rent living quarters carried with it an invitation to the tenants and their children to play and be in the surrounding area, including the sewage plant; (2) public property is open to everyone and the sewage plant was owned by the city; (3) the mere presence of the stairway was an invitation to the plant. We will discuss these points in the order made.
Certainly said children were authorized to and it was their general custom to play in the area occupied by the barracks which were under lease to their landlord, Thompson. But to travel a distance of 850 or 900 feet to reach the top of a stairway 85 feet in length, descend such stairway, and then proceed to a sewage plant in an isolated location is stretching an implied invitation beyond the bounds of reason. As before pointed out, the premises leased by Thompson did
*504
not evеn include the sewage plant and he had no right or authority to invite anyone there for purposes not connected with the use or maintenance of the plant. Neither Thompson nor the city even knew that anyone ever visited the plant for play or sightseeing purposes. While the extent of an implied invitation is generally one оf fact rather than of law, when there is neither dispute nor conflict as to the essential facts, and the evidence and the only reasonable inferences therefrom inescapably lead to the conclusion that the area of any invitation has been substantially overstepped, the question becomes one of law.
(Powell
v.
Jones,
Even if the deceased child is treated as a licensee, whose presence was tolerated by appellants, there would be no liability upon them unless they committed some overt act toward him amounting to negligence. As was said in
Ward
v.
Oakley Co.,
The same question was considered in
Polk
v.
Laurel Hill Cemetery Assn.,
The argument that public property is open to everyone is obviously incorrect if this is meant to include public property which is not customarily open to the public оr to
*505
which, the person in question has gone for a purpose not connected with the use of such property.
(Demmer
v.
City of Eureka,
Respondents also argue that “the mere presence of a stairway to the rocks and pools was an open invitation to the area,” citing
Oettinger
v.
Stewart,
It must be kept in mind that, in determining whether the deceased child in this case was a trespasser, he is to be treated in the same manner as an adult. (19 Cal.Jur., Negligence, § 57, p. 624;
Lake
v.
Ferrer,
Finally, respondents contend that the judgment may be upheld under the doctrine of “attractive nuisance,” more appropriately expressed as “injuries to trespassing children.”
(Marino
v.
Valenti,
Two recent cases have affirmed this statement. In
Lake
v.
Ferrer
(1956),
supra,
In
Wilford
v.
Little
(1956),
Another illustration of a refusal to apply the “trap” theory is
Reardon
v.
Spring Valley Water Co., supra,
We conclude that the attractive nuisance doctrine does not apply to the situation herein and that the respondents are not entitled to recover herein because the status of their son was that of a trespasser, or at best a licensee. The judgment and the order denying appellants’ respective motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict are and each is reversed, with directions to the court below to enter judgment in favor of appellants.
Peters, P. J., and Bray, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied April 26, 1957, and respondents’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied May 22, 1957. Carter, J., and Traynor, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
Assigned by Chairman of Judicial Council.
