dissenting.
I respectfully dissent.
Jaffs brought this action against Watts for injuries she suffered when she lost her footing and fell while ascending stairs leading to second story apartments located in an apartment building owned and rented by Watts. Jaffs was not a tenant in the building, but was going to visit a friend who was a tenant in one of the upstairs apartments. Jaffs contends that, if there had been a handrail on the stairs, she could have grabbed it and avoided the fall. The record shows that the stairs did not have a handrail at the time of the fall because Watts had temporarily removed it to make repairs to the handrail. Jaffs claims that Watts was negligent in failing to have a handrail on the stairs when the accident occurred, and she produced evidence that the lack of a handrail violated a city housing ordinance. Jaffs admitted that the absence of a handrail was plainly visible.
Relying on Thompson v. Crownouer, 259 Ga. 126 (381 SE2d 283) (1989) and Bastien v. Metropolitan Park Lake Assoc., 209 Ga. App. 881 (434 SE2d 736) (1993) (applying Thompson, supra), the majority states that “the fact that a defect is obvious does not necessarily bar recovery when the defect is in violation of a duty created by a statute or administrative regulation.” Majority, p. 566. Then, citing Spencer v. Little Brownie Properties, 203 Ga. App. 324, 325 (416 SE2d 851) (1992), the majority concludes that, despite Jaffs’ admission that the defect was plainly visible, a jury question remains as to Watts’ liability.
The effect of Thompson v. Crownover, supra, on the application of the equal or superior knowledge rule as a bar to recovery in landlord-tenant cases has been variously characterized by this Court. See Phillips v. King, 214 Ga. App. 712 (448 SE2d 780) (1994) (Thompson found strict application of equal or superior knowledge rule would be inconsistent with the landlord’s statutory duty to repair; tenant’s equal knowledge will not always preclude recovery; issue is whether the tenant could have avoided the accident); Roth v. Wu, 199 Ga. App. 665 (405 SE2d 741) (1991) (Thompson involved case where the defect rendered the apartment unsafe or uninhabitable); Harris v. Sloan, 199 Ga. App. 340 (405 SE2d 68) (1991) (Thompson not applicable in latent defect cases); Wells v. C & S Trust Co., 199 Ga. App. 31 (403 SE2d 826) (1991) (unsafe heater in Thompson was inherently dangerous and tenant had no alternative but to use it); Spence v. C & S Nat. Bank, 195 Ga. App. 294 (393 SE2d 1) (1990) (dicta suggesting that, after Thompson, issues such as negligent failure to repair, knowledge of the danger, and the “necessity rule” are reserved solely to the factfinder); Hall v. Thompson, 193 Ga. App. 574 (388 SE2d *569381) (1989) (Thompson involved inherently dangerous defect where a jury question existed as to whether or not the tenant could have avoided the danger).
In Thompson, the tenant notified the landlord on several occasions that the heater in the apartment was defective and in need of repair. In addition, the housing inspector notified the landlord that the heating facilities were in poor condition and constituted a hazard rendering the property unsafe for human occupancy. The landlord failed to repair the heater after these notices, and the tenant was eventually seriously burned by the defective heater.
The majority opinion in Thompson v. Crownover, supra, was fully adopted by only three justices; one justice in the majority wrote a special concurrence, and three justices dissented without opinion. In declaring that a landlord cannot avoid duties created by statute or housing codes (see OCGA §§ 44-7-13; 44-7-2 (b)), the majority opinion in Thompson, supra at 129, stated that “[t]he public policy of this state supports the position advanced by the Restatement of Law 2d, Property, § 17.6, which [states as] follows: ‘A landlord (should be) subject to liability for physical harm caused to the tenant and others upon the leased property with the consent of the tenant or his subtenants by a dangerous condition existing before or arising after the tenant has taken possession, if he has failed to exercise reasonable care to repair the condition and the existence of the condition is in violation of: (1) an implied warranty of habitability; or (2) a duty created by statute or administrative regulation.’ ” However, official comment (b) accompanying the Restatement section quoted in the majority opinion makes clear that, although the landlord is subjected to tort liability, “he has available all the usual defenses to an action in negligence, including contributory negligence and assumption of risk.”
Despite the tenant’s knowledge of the defective heater, a four-justice majority in Thompson, nevertheless, concluded that there was a jury question as to the landlord’s liability for the tenant’s injuries. However, only three of the four justices in the majority adopted the unqualified position that whether or not the tenant had assumed the risk of injury was a jury question. Id. at 129 (5). The same three justices also concluded that whether or not the tenant was compelled by necessity to use the defective heater was a question of fact. Id. at 130 (6). Justice Hunt, one of the four justices comprising the majority, concurred specially writing that: “[T]he central issue is whether [the tenant’s] admitted knowledge of the heater’s condition acts, under the doctrine of assumption of the risk, as a bar to any recovery. But for the ‘rule of necessity’ I think it would.” (Footnote omitted.) Id. at 130.
Thus, there was no majority holding in Thompson abandoning application of the equal or superior knowledge rule as a bar to recov*570ery by tenants in cases where landlords are alleged to be in violation of duties created by statute or housing codes, nor did Thompson establish that in all such cases it is a jury question as to whether the landlord is liable for damages arising from a violation of those duties. “[Although Thompson has reaffirmed the existence in Georgia of the landlord’s duty to exercise reasonable care in repairing defective conditions and keeping his premises in repair . . . nevertheless the classic rules of negligence still apply in this state. These rules impose liability only where the landlord lias actual or constructive superior knowledge [of the alleged defective condition], and the plaintiff has a duty to exercise ordinary care for her own safety.” Hall, supra at 575; Powell v. Woodridge Condo. Assn., 206 Ga. App. 176, 178 (424 SE2d 855) (1992). “This is merely a manifestation of the general rule regarding the liability of proprietors for injuries to invitees occurring on the premises.” (Citations omitted.) Richardson v. Palmour Court Apts., 170 Ga. App. 204, 205 (316 SE2d 770) (1984).
The four-justice majority in Thompson did, however, conclude that, despite the tenant’s knowledge of the defective heater, she was not barred from recovery because a question of fact existed in that case under the “necessity rule.” Id. at 130. Accordingly, the primary significance of Thompson as to application of the equal or superior knowledge rule was the Supreme Court’s sanction of a developing line of “necessity rule” cases decided in this Court tempering strict application of the rule by recognizing that a tenant’s equal knowledge of a defective condition will not necessarily bar recovery where a factual issue exists as to whether the tenant had no alternative but to assume the risk and encounter the dangerous condition. See Phelps v. Consolidated Equities Corp., 133 Ga. App. 189, 193 (210 SE2d 337) (1974); Hull v. Mass. Mut. Life Ins. Co., 142 Ga. App. 269 (235 SE2d 601) (1977); Grier v. Jeffco Mgmt. Co., 176 Ga. App. 158 (335 SE2d 408) (1985); Fitzgerald v. Storer Cable Communications, 213 Ga. App. 872, 874 (446 SE2d 755) (1994). By implication, Thompson overruled contrary authority in cases such as Alexander v. Rhodes, 104 Ga. 807 (30 SE 968) (1898); Clements v. Blanchard, 141 Ga. 311, 312 (80 SE 1004) (1914); and Hearn v. Barden, 115 Ga. App. 708, 710 (155 SE2d 649) (1967), which held that, where the tenant knew of the defective condition in the rented premises and failed to avoid it, he assumed the risk of injury and was barred from recovering from the landlord, despite any showing of necessity.
Since the absence of a handrail was plainly visible to Jaffs, she had equal knowledge of the defect in this case, and is barred from recovery under the equal or superior knowledge rule.2 As demon*571strated above, Thompson, supra, does not require a contrary result. In Bastien, supra, cited by the majority, the facts were similar to those in the present case. There, a tenant fell while negotiating steps leading to her apartment and sued the landlord alleging that there was no handrail on the stairs, and that the absence of a handrail violated an applicable building code. Id. at 881-882. Thompson was relied upon to support the conclusion that, even though the defect was obvious to the tenant, the trial court erred by granting summary judgment in favor of the landlord under the equal knowledge rule because the landlord could not avoid duties created by housing codes. Id. at 882. There was no discussion as to whether the tenant claimed under the “necessity rule” that there was no other means of ingress or egress to the apartment. To the extent Bastien construes Thompson as abolishing the equal knowledge rule as a bar to recovery under these circumstances, it should be overruled. The majority’s further reliance on Spencer, supra, as authority that a factual issue exists as to whether Jaffs had equal knowledge of the defect is misplaced. In Spencer, the plaintiff fell after she lost her balance on stairs and reached out for the handrail, which came loose when she grabbed it. The alleged negligence was not an obvious failure to provide a handrail, but a negligent failure to properly maintain the handrail, which presented no obvious hazard to an invitee. Id. at 324.
Violation of a housing code is negligence per se, no more — no less. Negligence per se is not liability per se (see Northwestern Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. McGivern, 132 Ga. App. 297, 301 (208 SE2d 258) (1974); Biggs v. Long, 212 Ga. App. 195, 199, n. 4 (441 SE2d 677) (1994)), nor does it foreclose a determination, as a matter of law, that a tenant’s own negligence was the sole proximate cause of injury. Thompson v. Crownover, 186 Ga. App. 633, 636 (368 SE2d 170) (1988), rev’d on other grounds, 259 Ga. 126, supra. As this Court noted in addressing a premises liability claim against a restaurant in Sullivan v. Quisc, Inc., 207 Ga. App. 114, 116 (427 SE2d 86) (1993), “[e]ven if plaintiff could show that the maintenance of the threshold was negligence per se as a violation of the building code, she would nevertheless by [sic] precluded from recovering because of the equal knowledge rule.”
*572Decided March 9, 1995 Beckmann & Pinson, Luhr G. Beckmann, Jr., Tracy A. Chesser, Walter W. Ballew III, for appellant. Richard C. Metz, for appellees.The majority’s holding is neither good law nor good “policy.”
I am authorized to state that Presiding Judge Birdsong joins in this dissent.
I agree with the majority that, as a guest present by express or implied invitation, Jaffs *571stood in the tenant’s shoes, and her rights of recovery for failure of the landlord to keep the premises in repair are generally controlled by the rules governing the tenant’s right to recovery. Hohnerlein v. Thomas, 186 Ga. App. 282 (367 SE2d 95) (1988). However, an important exception exists. Because she was not a tenant in the apartment she was visiting, Jaffs was not entitled to claim under the “necessity rule” that there was no other means of ingress or egress, and that she was forced to assume the risk of ascending the stairs without a handrail. Taylor v. McDonald, 183 Ga. App. 320, 321 (359 SE2d 1) (1987); Hohnerlein, supra at 283. In any event, Jaffs does not attempt to make any claim under the necessity rule, and her claim is subject to application of the equal or superior knowledge rule.