This аppeal is taken by defendant, Mary C. Jones from an order denying her motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict and a judgment on a jury verdict in favor of the plaintiff, Dominic Yazzolino, a minor, and his father. The complaint sought to recover damages and medical expenses for personal injuries sustained in the plaintiff’s fall from the exterior rear stairway of a two story two flat structure owned by the defendant in the city of San Francisco.
As there is conflicting evidence on several matters, a detailed statement of facts is necessary. The accident occurred on the afternoon of Sunday, May 24, 1953, when the plaintiff was *629 9 years old. The defendant had rented the lower flat of the property in question to Mr. and Mrs. Duffy and their son, Ronald, who was also 9 years old at the time of the accident. The plaintiff lived around the corner from the Duffys and played with Ronald Duffy every day. On the afternoon in question, Ronald Duffy was standing on the landing of the exterior rear stairway checking the sights on his air rifle.
Ronald’s parents testified that they did not know where he was on the afternoon of the accident. Ronald testified that he had told his parents he was going out on the back stairs. According to the testimony of the plaintiff and the plaintiff’s younger brother, they were sitting on their back porch when Ronald yelled to them to come over to help him check the sights on the air rifle. According to the testimony of Ronald, the plaintiff “asked me if he could come over.” The plaintiff then got permission from his mother to go out, but didn’t tell her where he wаs going. The plaintiff and his brother, Mike, who was 7 years old at the time of the accident, then joined Ronald on the stairway. There was no evidence that the boys had played on the stairway before, or that they had permission from the upstairs tenant to play on the stairway, or that the upstairs tenant or anyone had seen them playing on the stairway prior to the date of the accident. Ronald had been expressly forbidden to play on the rear stairway, and did not customarily play there “as thеre was no one to play with,” although he did on occasion run up and down the stairway. The plaintiff had never been told by anyone not to play on the particular stairway where the accident occurred. His parents did not know where he was at the time of the accident and had not given him permission to play on the stairway. The stairway in question is a wooden exterior stairway, the lower portion of which is outside the back door to the Duffy flat. There is a gate in the center, separating thе lower from the upper portion of the stairway. The upper portion led only to the back door of the flat of the upstairs tenant who had never used the stairway. The Duffys used the stairway once every six or seven months to visit the upstairs tenant. The railing consists of three rails about 8-10 inches apart, parallel to the stairs. The distance from the top rail to the step is 35 inches. At the time of the trial, the plaintiff was 5 feet tall. There were no records available as to his height at the time of the аccident, but he and his mother testified that he had grown about 6 inches in the intervening three years.
*630 The plaintiff, Ronald Duffy and Mike Yazzolino all testified that just before the accident the plaintiff was crouching on a step in the upper portion of the stairway, and leaning on the center rail and pointing the rifle toward a tree. The center rail gave way and the plaintiff fell 12-14 feet to the ground and sustained the injuries which are the subject of this action. The evidence is in conflict as to whether at the time of the accident the bottom rail was missing at the particular spot where the accident occurred. The policeman, who subsequently reported the accident, testified that the plaintiff had told him at the hospital that he had been sitting on top of the railing prior to the accident. Ronald did not see the plaintiff fall as he was talking to Mike about three steps away from the plaintiff. Mike testified that he saw the plaintiff fall and the railing break. The plaintiff testified that he did not see or feel a lоose rail before he fell. Ronald did not see the rail give way or a board falling with the plaintiff. The plaintiff’s father testified that one of the boards which was found on the ground with the plaintiff after the fall was a board which belonged to the railing of the upper stairway.
The evidence produced at the trial disclosed that the Duffys had rented the premises since 1945 on an oral lease from the defendant. The defendant testified that she had an oral understanding with both the Duffys and the upstairs tenant that, if any repairs wеre necessary on the premises, the tenants were to make repairs or arrange to have anything they could not do themselves done by someone else and then notify the defendant. On a number of occasions, repairs had been made in this manner and the rent reduced accordingly. Mr. Duffy testified that he had repaired the back stairway from time to time, and Mrs. Duffy corroborated this testimony. The upstairs tenant had also had the back stairway repaired by her son-in-law. Rent was paid by the tenants to a local druggist, a good friend of the defendant who out of friendship banked the rent moneys or forwarded them to the defendant.
The defendant acquired the property in 1934 and had been on the property only three or four times since then as she was out of town most of the time with her husband. She kept no keys to the premises when they were rented. The premises had not been inspected by any official since they were built. The defendant testified that she had been on the stairway in question not more than оnce or twice in 20 years, that no one had ever notified her that the stairs were *631 defective, and that it did not occur to her that the stairs needed repairs; “I had Mr. Jones to look out for those things for me.” The last time before the accident the defendant had been on the stairway was in December 1952, when she rented the upstairs flat.
The defendant’s husband, Mr. Jones, testified that he had been in San Francisco on 10 to 12 occasions in the last five years at the most and that he never went out to the premisеs unless called as “the tenants always took care of everything.” He further testified that he had been on the property in question about 15 times in the last five years, although he was certain about having been there only six times when the tenants changed, and that he had gone up and down the stairway in question on each visit. He had gone up the stairs to inspect the roof just before the upstairs fiat was rented in December, 1952; that the “stairs have always been in condition ; in good condition, as any stairs in San Francisco of that type of house.” He also testified as follows: “. . . and sometimes we have renovated the premises. We always kept the thing in pretty good shape, much above average.”
Mr. and Mrs. Duffy testified that on the occasion before the accident when Mr. Jones was on the premises, they had complained to him about their sink and the back stairway and he had promised to see about them. Mr. Jones denied that the stairway had been mentioned to him on that or any other occasion. Mr. Duffy tеstified that Mrs. Duffy had written a letter to the Jones about repairing the stairs before the accident, but Mrs. Duffy denied writing such a letter. The letter in question was subsequently admitted at the trial and contained no mention of the stairs.
The defendant’s contentions on appeal are that as a matter of law she is not liable as she did not retain control over the premises which were not a common areaway; that the plaintiff has not proved the negligence of the defendant as the plaintiff has not shown that the defendant had any duty toward the plaintiff or established any defect in the premises or any causal connection between a defect and the injury; that even if the plaintiff had established a prima facie case of negligence, she would not be liable because of the plaintiff’s contributory negligence, as well as various alleged errors of the trial court in its rulings on the admissibility of evidence and in its instructions to the jury.
As to the primary issue of the defendant’s retention of control over the еxterior stairway on which the accident
*632
occurred, the general rule in this state is that “ ‘In the absence of fraud, concealment or covenant in the lease, a landlord is not liable to a tenant for injuries due to a defective condition or faulty construction of the demised premises.’ ”
(Epperson
v.
Mendes,
In
Freeman
v.
Mazzera,
“It is the duty of a landlord, such as the defendant in this case, to exercise reasonable care in making safe, and in maintenance and repair of any part of the building or other property over which he retains control, and which is reserved from the exclusive use of any tenants, so that they may be used in common by all tenants and all others who may lawfully enter the premises.”
“Whenever a person is a guest or invitee of a tenant, and as such enters upon a part of the premises so reserved for common use, and which is under the landlord’s control, he is assumed by law to be an invitee of the landlord.”
We do not think that the matter of the defendant’s control was an issue of fact in this ease. The stairway led from the ground to the back door of the lower flat and to the back door of the upper flat. There was no independent stairway fоr each floor of the building. As the plaintiff correctly points out in his brief, actual use is not the determinative factor.
(Hassell
v.
Denning, supra,
The defendant’s next argument is that, even if the stairway was a common areaway under her control, she is not liable because of the agreement between her and the tenants that they make any necessary repairs. There was conflicting evidence as to the precise scope of the oral agreement; while the tenants admitted that they had made occasional repairs, the defendant’s husband testified that they had “always kept the thing in pretty good shape.” Even if the alleged agreement is viewed most favorably to the defendant’s position, it does not exhibit complete relinquishment of control by the defendant as the tenants were to either make the repairs and notify her or notify her to have them made. Even had the agreement on the leases exhibited a complete relin
*634
quishment of the defendant’s control, an owner of property who is deemed to have legal control cannot so delegate his duty to keep common areaways free of defects.
(Brown
v.
George Pepperdine Foundation,
The defendant is not to be charged with the responsibility for a defect unless she has actual knowledge of it or unless the defect had existed for so long a time that in the exercise of ordinary care she would have learned of it.
(Harris
v.
Joffe,
Defendant’s next contention is that, even if she is charged with notice of a defect in premises over which she retained control, the plaintiff has not proven the existence of the defect. One of the witnesses testified that the boards of the railing were rotten. The only eyewitness to the accident, Mike, saw the plaintiff fall when he leaned against the railing. A board was found on the ground with the plaintiff after he fell. Repairs hаd been made of the stairs by the tenants. There was also evidence which indicated that the bottom rail was missing before the accident happened. Prom the above, it cannot be said that the jury was not justified in inferring the presence of a defect. In
Bock
v.
*635
Hamilton Square Baptist Church,
Defendant’s next contention is that the plaintiff was making a misuse of the premises as the railing was not designed to be a weight bearer. The identical argument was made to the court in
Rodenberger
v.
Frederickson, supra,
Defendant next argues that she owed no duty toward the plaintiff, other than to refrain from wilfully or wantonly injuring him as he was a trespasser. Plaintiff, relying on
Spore
v.
Washington
(1925),
supra,
“Whenever a person is a guest or invitee of a tenant, and as such enters upon a part of the premises so reserved for common use, and which is under the landlord’s control, he is assumed by law to be an invitee of the landlord.
“The duty of the landlord, as I have stated it, applies in such invitee’s favor as to those parts of the premises under the landlord’s control, and upon or into which such invitee would be reasonably likely to go under the circumstances of the invitation, or would be induced, or allured to go by the express or implied invitation arising from those circumstances.
“If, however, the invitee enters any part of the premises, or makes any use thereof beyond the scope of the invitation, in so far as he oversteps the bounds of the invitation, and while he does so, the landlord holds no duty except to refrain from intentional harm or from wilfull or wanton injury; and except also that if the landlord should have actual knowledge of such person being in a dangerous situation, the landlord would have a duty to exercise ordinary care to avoid injuring the person.”
The court rejected the dеfendant’s requested instruction on the subject of the duties owed to a licensee. The purpose for which a person is on the premises of another is the test of whether he is an invitee or mere licensee.
(Free
v.
Furr,
“By securing this right he accepts the burdens that go with it and if he chooses to let the property look after itself, trusting to good fortune to protect those who use the premises, he must be prepared to acceрt the results when this good fortune abates or takes a turn for the worse.”
The mere fact that Ronald Duffy has been told not to play on the stairway would not make the plaintiff a mere trespasser. Even assuming that Ronald Duffy was negligent in playing on the stairs, there would be no reason to impute his negligence to the plaintiff.
(Singer
v.
Eastern Columbia, Inc.,
Our conclusion as to the duty of the defendant to the plaintiff in the instant case is in accord with the weight of authority as to the duty of a landlord or owner to use reasonable care to keep the property in safe condition for those using it as a matter of right.
(Rodenberger
v.
Frederickson, supra,
Defendant’s next contention is that the recovery of both the plaintiff and his father is barred by сontributory negligence. The issue of whether the plaintiff conducted himself like a reasonably prudent boy of nine and the amount of parental supervision required in the instant case, as well as the other matters which bear on the issue of contributory negligence, were properly left to the jury. Furthermore the trial court very carefully instructed the jury as to the different considerations to be applied in determining the contributory negligence of the plaintiff and the contributory negligence of his fathеr. There is no merit to any of the above contentions, as we are bound by the decision of the trial court if there is any evidence in its support.
(Primm
v.
Primm,
Defendant further raises 26 grounds of alleged error in the admission of evidence. Upon careful scrutiny of the record, we can find no errors as alleged nor that when taken together they create such cumulative errors to constitute a ground for reversal.
As to the alleged errors in the instructions, we have in our discussion above covered the instructions relating to the liability of a landlord for the maintenance of a common area-way, the duties of a landlord to an invitee. We find no prej
*639
udicial errors in the instructions relating to future damages and the future earning power of the plaintiff or in the trial court’s refusal to give certain instructions requested by the dеfendant. It is the rule that the instructions must be considered as a whole
(Shapiro
v.
Equitable Life Assur. Soc.,
We conclude that the cause was fully and fairly tried and no prejudicial error appearing, the judgment must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Order denying motion for judgment notwithstanding verdict affirmed.
Dooling, J., and Draper, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied October 10, 1957, and appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied November 5, 1957. Schauer, J., and Spence, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
