1. In an action for damages for injuries received by an invitee of a store as a result of falling upon a stairway, under Code §105-401 imposing upon the owner or occupier of land the duty of exercising ordinary care to keep the premises in safe condition as to invitees, the plaintiff, as against general demurrer, must allege negligence on the part of the defendant without at the same time barring herself from recovery by showing, through other facts, that she failed to exercise ordinary care for her own safety.
Pilgreen
v.
Hanson,
89
Ga. App.
703 (
From these allegations it appears that the plaintiff had descended 21 of the 25 steps when she slipped and fell. She complains that due to the dim light she could not tell the rise or tread of the steps, and if, under these circumstances, the defendant had negligently inserted a step of a different shape or color, and thus caused her to lose her footing, an action might lie.
Fuller
v.
Louis Steyerman & Sons, Inc.,
46
Ga. App.
830 (2) (
There are allegations that “said steps are constructed of granite, marble or other stone," which does when worn or when damp
*518
become slick and slippery, and persons using the same can easily stumble and fall, and the plaintiff failed and neglected to place any sort of safeguard or safety treadle at the tip of each step running lengthwise of some rough material,” and also allegations relating to congestion on the stairway. In
Scott
v.
Rich’s, Inc.,
47
Ga. App.
548 (
2. The petition also alleges in the same count that there was on the fourth step from the bottom some foreign substance which caused the plaintiff to falter, slip and stumble when she stejoped in it, that the defendant should have known of the presence of and removed such matter “whatever it was,” that objects such as wads of chewing gum, match covers, fruit peelings, etc., “were being continually thrown by its many customers and the many children accompanying their moth
*519
ers,” and that the defendant should have taken proper precautions to protect the plaintiff and others from such matter. A proprietor of premises is not an insurer of the safety of persons thereon against all acts of co-invitees, and when it has used ordinary care to keep the premises safe it is not guilty of negligence.
Hill
v.
Davison-Paxon Co.,
80
Ga.
App. 840, supra. The allegation in paragraph 10 that the plaintiff slipped because she stepped on some foreign matter is contradictory to the allegation in paragraph 9 that because she could not tell the width of the step her right foot missed the step and she stumbled, but assuming that both happened simultaneously, the allegations that the steps were congested with customers and their children who were “continually” dropping such matter thereon affirmatively show the impossibility of keeping the steps ' at all times and in all events absolutely free of such matter even with the greatest diligence. In
Jones
v.
West End Theatre Co.,
94
Ga. App.
299, 303 (
The trial court did not err in sustaining the general demurrer to the petition.
Judgment affirmed.
