There is no duty upon the landlord, in the absence of a duty imposed by statute or contract, to keep common halls and passageways lighted, and failure alone to light such areas, where no other negligence is alleged against the defendant, will not sustain a cause of action.
Lee
v.
Malone,
55
Ga. App.
821 (
“Notice of a separate and independent patent defect, in no way connected with the latent defect which is alleged to have caused the injury, can not be taken as constructive notice of the latter as devolving on the landlord any duty of inspection.”
Gledhill
v.
Harvey,
55
Ga. App.
322 (1) (
Nor are the allegations of the petition in relation to the rough and unsafe condition of the wooden steps pertinent, 'for the rea *659 son that no causal connection is alleged between their condition and the plaintiff’s injuries, it appearing that she had reached the hallway when she tripped over the hole.
It follows, therefore, that the question of the defendant landlord’s liability for failure to repair the hole in the cement hallway rests upon whether or not he had a duty to make such repair, and this, in turn, must depend upon constructive, rather than actual notice, since no sufficient actual notice is alleged. However, the petition does, by amendment, set up that the defendant “retained supervision of said building and customarily made repairs on the premises under his own direction and supervision.” Under such circumstances, the rule as set forth in Code § 61-112, that the landlord, having fully parted with possession and right of possession, is not liable for damages except those arising from defective construction or failure, after notice, to keep the premises in repair, is modified to the extent that a landlord who retains possession and control for the purpose of inspection and repair is liable for injuries resulting from any defects which,
in the exercise of ordinary care,
such inspection would have revealed to him.
Marr
v.
Dieter,
27
Ga. App.
711 (2) (
It is contended by demurrer that the landlord owed this plaintiff no duty as to the upstairs hallways which were for the use of other tenants, when her own downstairs store had access
*660
to the street independent of such stairs or hallways. Generally speaking, this proposition would be correct. The plaintiff here, however, seeks—successfully, so far as the allegations of the petition are concerned—to show that her presence in the upstairs hallway was lawful because it was necessary. It was the route she had to use to reach the Sue feeding the chimney of the stove in the premises under her exclusive control, and it was a route maintained by the landlord for tenants having need thereof. If the plaintiff’s stove would not function, and if, as alleged, the landlord had actual notice thereof and (either because of his failure to repair, or faulty repair) it continued to be unusable, the plaintiff was damaged, and it was her duty to mitigate her damages insofar as possible.
Cohen Bros.
v.
Krumbein,
28
Ga. App.
788 (2) (
The passageway in question was open to tenants of the building who needed to use the same, as an easement appurtenant to the full enjoyment of their leased property. Although the tenant here had no need to use such passageway in the ordinary course of entering or leaving her store, whether or not it became available to her for the particular purpose alleged, of using it as the means of access to the flue of her chimney, and whether, in the exercise of the duty to mitigate her damages, if any, she undertook to repair the flue herself—are jury questions.
It is further contended that the defect was a patent one; and, it not being alleged that it did not exist at the time the plaintiff leased the property, the defendant was under no duty to her to make repairs thereof.
McGee
v.
Hardacre,
27
Ga. App.
*661
106 (2) (
It follows from what has been said in the preceding divisions of this opinion that the plaintiff is not barred from recovery, under Code § 105-603 and the rulings in
Lee
v.
Malone,
55
Ga. App.
821 (
The trial court properly overruled the general demurrers to the petition.
Judgment affirmed.
