Opinion by
Beaver, J.,Plaintiff leased from defendant’s testator a room on the second floor of a three-story building, the second and third stories of which were rented to different tenants who used a common stairway, in reaching their several apartments, which was the only one in the building. Plaintiff was found by a companion, from whom he had been separated for a few minutes, with the avowed purpose of closing the windows of his room, at the foot of the stairway, unconscious and suffering from several bruises in different parts of his body. By his side was a strip of wood between one and one half inches wide, the length of one of the steps of the stairway which corresponded to the part removed from a step, the eighth or tenth from the bottom. The accident occurred during the lifetime of the defendant’s testator but statement was not filed, until after his death. The stairway was shown to be in bad condition which had been brought to the attention of the defendant’s testator by a number of the tenants at different times, and promises to repair the same were repeatedly made. The plaintiff’s mouth was closed by the death of his landlord as to what occurred at the time of the accident. No one being present who could testify, the jury were permitted to infer the cause of the accident from the circumstances and conditions surrounding the plaintiff at the time he was discovered by his companion. Several questions are raised by the appellant which will be briefly considered .in their order.
I. The first question goes to the right of the plaintiff to recover and is thus stated in the question involved. The question is, “ Whether a tenant who rents a room, with privilege of hall and stairs for egress and ingress, and who covenants to repair, is estopped from maintaining an action against his landlord for injuries received from stairs being out of repair.” The question thus stated is not sufficiently full, in view of the facts of the case. The real question is, “ Can one of several tenants, who claim under separate leases and use a common stairway, recover in an action against his laridlord for injuries resulting from the said stairway being out of repair? ” If the *450plaintiff had been the sole occupant of the second and third floors which were reached by the common stairway, there would undoubtedly be force in the appellant’s argument; but the landlord, being under obligations to furnish the means of ingress and egress by means of the stairway, was bound to keep the same in proper repair. Any other view of the respective rights of the landlord and tenants would lead to confusion and uncertainty and would place the responsibility for the maintenance of the stairway practically nowhere. In Looney v. McLean, 87 Am. R. 295; 129 Mass. 33, it was held: “ Where a portion of a building is let and the tenant has rights of passageway over staircases and entries in connection with the landlord and other tenants, there is no such leasing as will exonerate the landlord from all responsibility for the safe condition of that portion of which he still retains control and which he is bound to keep in repair. As to such portion he still retains the responsibilities of a general owner to all persons, including the tenants of his building: Leavitt v. Fletcher, 10 Allen, 119; Foster v. Peyser, 9 Cushing, 242; Readman v. Conway, 126 Mass. 374; Milford v. Holbrook, 9 Allen, 17.” So it was held in Peil v. Reinhart, 12 L. R. A. 843 : “ Permitting stairway carpet with holes in it to remain on the stairs of a tenement house, with notice of its condition, renders the owner liable for injuries to a tenant from a fall caused by catching her foot in one of the holes.” In Dollard v. Roberts, 14 L. R. A. 238, it was held that “ the fall of plaster, from the ceiling of a hallway in a tenement house used in common by various tenants, renders the landlord liable for injuries to an occupant of the building who is struck and injured thereby, if the landlord had notice that there was danger of its falling.” The remarks of Bbadley, J., in the latter case are applicable here: “ If the hallway had been part of the premises demised to the plaintiff, there would have been no liability of the defendant to him; but the argument of the defendant’s counsel, founded upon the proposition that such was the relation of the parties to that portion of the building, does not seem to be applicable to the present case. It was a four floor tenement house. The apartments on the second, third and fourth floors were separately rented for use by 'families as dwelling places. The plaintiff had rented and, with his family, occupied the fourth or top floor. Other families oc*451cupied the second and third, and on the ground floor was a drugstore and a hallway common to the occupants of the floors above. It was the means provided for their passageway for ingress and egress into and from the building in going to and from the apartments from and into the street. It was essentially provided for that purpose and necessarily common to the use of such occupants. Their right of passage through it was ; necessary to the availability for occupancy of the apartments , rented by them. It was provided for their use in passing to and from the apartments demised to them, of which it constituted no part. It was, therefore, subject to their right of passage in it, under the control of the defendant, who was the owner and their landlord, and upon him was the duty of exercising reasonable care in keeping the hallway in suitable repair and condition for the use in safety by his tenants of apartments on the floors above it.” Numerous authorities are here quoted in support of this position. The authorities are numerous and uniform in support of this position, although our attention has been directed to no Pennsylvania authority expressly ruling the question. The liability of the defendant in this case it so fully sustained by these authorities and others which could be quoted, as well as upon reason and the necessary liability arising out of the relation of the parties, that we have no doubt as to the plaintiff’s right to recover.
Other questions arising out of the trial and the charge of the court were subsequently assigned for error and may be briefly considered:
2. It was argued that there was no evidence that the break in the stairway was the proximate cause of the accident. Upon this subject the trial judge in the court below, in his charge, said: “ The burden of proof rests upon the plaintiff to make out his case by the fair weight of the evidence, and you are the judges of the evidence, and you are to determine whether he makes out his case or not as to the facts which will be submit-: ted to you. It is not enough for him to prove that he has suffered injury by something which happened upon the premises of Mr. Pauli. He must prove, to your satisfaction, that Mr. Pauli owed him a legal duty which he failed to perform. He must, for this purpose, prove facts from which it can be ascertained, with reasonable certainty, what precaution Mr. Pauli *452ought to have taken and did not take. He must also prove facts or circumstances from which it can be fairly inferred that Mr. Pauli’s negligence caused the injury of which he complains.” And again: “ Mr. Pauli, having died since the accident happened, the plaintiff himself is not competent to testify as to what occurred at that time, and there is no direct evidence as to the exact manner in which this injury took place. There are, however, circumstances from which, if you credit the testimony of the witnesses, you would be justified in finding that it was caused by falling while going up or down the stairs in question. That, however, is entirely a question for you, under all the evidence which has been given to you by the witnesses, taking into account the circumstances as they have been detailed to you, and you are to consider whether the fall was caused by the unsafe condition of the stairs or not.” A careful reading of the evidence satisfies us that the proximate cause of the injury could readily be inferred by the jury from the conditions which prevailed and the circumstances surrounding the plaintiff at the time of the injury, as detailed by the witness, who found him, and by other witnesses who testified as to the condition of the stairway, and this was fairly submitted for their finding.
8. The eighth, ninth and tenth assignments of error relate to the question of contributory negligence and much stress has been laid upon the failure of the court to instruct the jury as to that subject. Quotations are made from the charge of the court in support of this contention, but in a previous part of the charge we think the trial judge fully covered the ground, in which he says: “ But I am of opinion, and therefore instruct you as a matter of law, that where an owner of property such as this was, rents it out to several different and entirely unconnected persons, as in this case, and all those parties have to use a common entrance hall and. stairs as a means of ingress and egress to and from their rooms, the duty of keeping such stairs in ordinary repair is on the landlord, and, if he neglects to keep them in ordinary safe condition and an injury results to a tenant by reason of such negligence, without any contributory negligence on the part of the tenant, then the landlord is liable in damages.” This, it seems to us, was all that was necessary to be said upon that subject. A plaintiff in an action for per*453sonal injuries caused by the negligence of the defendant is bound to show a case clear of contributory negligence; that is, his own evidence must not contain anything which would show contributory negligence on his part, but he is not bound to prove a negative and show that he was not guilty of contributory negligence. The burden necessary to be borne by the plaintiff in this behalf was placed upon him by the court.
4. It was also claimed at the argument that the charge of the court was inadequate and did not properly present the defendant’s side of the case. We have read the charge repeatedly with reference to this exception and fail to find any ground upon which it may be fairly based. The defendant presented a number of points for charge which were either refused or answered by the court below fairly and fully, and, if she had desired further instructions in regard to any phase of the ease, she could have secured them by points properly prepared; or, if the court had failed to meet any point in the case fully, a verbal request calling attention to the neglect, would have secured all to which she was entitled. “In a negligence case, where the court has given instructions to the jury, a party who desires further instructions should make the proper request for them, and, if he fails to do so, cannot complain in the Supreme Court of the lack of such instructions: ” Leary v. Electric Traction Co., 180 Pa. 136.
The case was well tried. The charge of the court was clear, adequate, full and satisfactory. We find nothing in it of which the defendant has the right to complain. The assignments of error are all overruled and the judgment affirmed.