dissenting.
Ms. Helm explained the circumstances of her fall in her deposition testimony. Helm said that she had worked at Systems Alert Security, Inc. for over three months at the time of her fall. Because she had a prosthetic limb attached below her left knee, Helm said that, prior to her fall, she had expressed concern every day at work about the tripping hazard posed to her by the cell phone cord that she could see running across the floor near the area where she walked back and forth from her desk. She said that the cord ran from a cell phone charger which was always plugged in near her work area. It is undisputed that this same cell phone cord caused Helm’s *383fall. When she fell, Helm “noticed the cell phone cord had wrapped around my stump and my foot,” causing her prosthesis to detach from her leg and causing her to fall.
Helm was explicit about her prior knowledge of the cell phone cord which caused her fall. She testified that “every day” she was at work she saw the cord in the same location and complained to Mr. Nosiri (part owner of Systems Alert) about it, and that she had to move the cord out of her way “every day.” In response to deposition questioning about the cord, Helm testified:
A: The cell phone — there’s a plug here, and the cell phone charger was always plugged up here . . . and like I said, it was all right there, and every day this cord was there and I’d say something to Ben [Nosiri] about it, and I’d move it.
Q: The cell phone cord?
A: The cell phone cord. Now, I would be the one to move it out of the way . . .
Q: The plug that you indicated, you said there was a cell phone that had been there for a couple of days?
A: Uh-huh.
Q: And that’s where —
A: Well, it was there all the time . . .
Q: Now you said the wires from the cell phone cord had always been there?
A: Every day I had to move them out of the way. It was the little bitty wires I was afraid of.
Q: Okay. And they were there that morning then when you came in, correct?
A: Evidently.
The deposition continued with Helm again confirming that she knew and complained about the phone cord “every day” at work, and that she had complained about and moved the cord the day prior to her fall. Helm later altered her testimony by stating that the cord was there “just about every day,” but that she could not say it was there “every single day.”
Helm’s deposition testimony further shows that, just prior to her fall, she walked across the phone cord twice before she caught her prosthesis on the cord and fell while walking across it a third time. Helm testified that, just prior to falling, she walked from her desk to another desk and then back toward her desk while twice crossing the area where the phone cord ran. In walking across the area, Helm said that she had to pass in a “tight squeeze” between Nosiri and his partner who were standing in the area. She testified that, after she *384passed between Nosiri and his partner for the second time, she remembered something and turned back around, and that, as she passed between them for the third time, she fell. According to Helm, because Nosiri and his partner were standing there, “it’s probably why I didn’t notice [the phone cord].” Contrary to the majority opinion, Helm did not testify that Nosiri and his partner were “possibly standing on the cell phone cord.” Rather, Helm testified that, “I don’t know if somebody was standing on [the cord].”
Helm, who worked as an independent contractor, sued Systems Alert and Nosiri for injuries she incurred when she tripped on the cell phone cord and fell, alleging that they negligently failed pursuant to OCGA § 51-3-1 to keep the work premises safe. Amear v. Hall, 164 Ga. App. 163, 166 (296 SE2d 611) (1982) (independent contractor treated as an invitee to whom premises owner or occupier owed duty under OCGA § 51-3-1 to keep the work premises safe). Systems Alert and Nosiri claim that the trial court erred by denying their motion for summary judgment because the record shows that Helm’s knowledge of the tripping hazard posed by the cell phone cord was at least equal to their knowledge of the hazard.
The Supreme Court reaffirmed in Robinson v. Kroger Co., 268 Ga. 735, 736-738, 740 (493 SE2d 403) (1997), that the fundamental basis for imposing liability under OCGA § 5Í-3-1 on the premises owner or occupier is proof that the owner/occupier had superior knowledge of the hazard. In explaining why an owner/occupier without superior knowledge is entitled to summary judgment, Robinson cited to a line of cases where the invitees admitted knowledge of the hazard. Id. at 737. In those cases, “the evidence was undisputed that the plaintiff had knowledge of the hazard equal to or greater than that of the owner/occupier, making it impossible for the plaintiff to prove that the owner/occupier had the superior knowledge necessary for the plaintiff to prevail.” Id. As an example of this type of case, Robinson cited Gateway Mgmt. Co. v. Sutton, 189 Ga. App. 296, 298 (375 SE2d 462) (1988), and explained that in Sutton “[a] plaintiff who had complained about the presence of construction debris on [an] apartment complex’s grounds and who had just walked through [the] debris-strewn area in which she fell had intimate knowledge of the risk and chose to assume that risk.” (Punctuation omitted.) Robinson, 268 Ga. at 737. According to Robinson, a plaintiffs behavior in cases like Sutton “constituted ‘voluntary negligence,’ classified by the Second Restatement of Torts as a ‘type’ of contributory negligence: ‘an intentional and unreasonable exposure of the plaintiff to danger created by the defendant’s negligence, of which danger the plaintiff knows or has reason to know.’ ” (Citation and punctuation omitted.) Id. at 737-738; accord City of Winder v. Girone, 265 Ga. 723, 724-725 (462 SE2d 704) (1995) *385(because fall resulted from a hazard on the premises of which plaintiff was aware, plaintiff was barred from recovery for failure to exercise ordinary care for her own safety).
The evidence is undisputed that Helm had actual knowledge of the hazard posed by the cell phone cord which her deposition testimony established she saw in the same location every day; complained about every day; and moved every day during the three months that she worked for Systems Alert.1 On the day of her fall, Helm obviously did not move the cord, but instead chose to walk across the area where she knew the cord was located.2 Assuming Systems Alert and Nosiri had knowledge of the hazard, because the evidence plainly, palpably, and undisputably shows that Helm’s knowledge of the hazard was at least equal to that of Systems Alert and Nosiri, Helm cannot prove the fundamental element necessary to establish her claim — that Systems Alert and Nosiri had superior knowledge of the hazard. Robinson, 268 Ga. at 736-738, 740. Moreover, the undisputed evidence shows that Helm’s recovery was barred by her own “voluntary negligence” when she knowingly exposed herself to the hazard posed by the phone cord she knew was there. Id. at 737-738; City of Winder, 265 Ga. at 724-725. The trial court erred by denying summary judgment to Systems Alert and Nosiri. Robinson, 268 Ga. at 737; Law’s Corp. v. Haskins, 261 Ga. 491 (405 SE2d 474) (1991).
Despite undisputed evidence that Helm knew the phone cord was in the same location every day, the majority opinion concludes that “there is no evidence that she was aware of its exact position at the time it tripped her” (because people were standing in the area), and therefore a factual issue existed as to whether Helm was “aware of the continuing nature of the hazard.” This construes the “equal knowledge” and “voluntary negligence” defenses set forth in Robinson, supra, so narrowly as to virtually eliminate the owner/occupier’s right to summary judgment. Surely an invitee with undisputed knowledge that a specific hazard occurs every day at the same location on a premises cannot choose to walk across the hazard at that location, incur an injury, and then avoid summary judgment on a damages *386claim by simply declaring that, “When I tripped and fell on the hazard I knew was there, I had no knowledge of its exact position because someone was blocking my view.” I respectfully dissent.
Decided December 1, 2009 Freeman, Mathis & Gary, Jacob E. Daly, for appellants. Albert M. Yates III, for appellee.I am authorized to state that Presiding Judge Johnson joins in this dissent.
Helm’s altered testimony, given without explanation, that the hazard occurred “just about every day,” and that she could not say it was there “every single day,” contradicted her repeated testimony that the hazard occurred “every day” she was at work. Pursuant to Prophecy Corp. v. Charles Rossignol, Inc., 256 Ga. 27-30 (343 SE2d 680) (1986), Helm’s self-contradictory testimony must be construed against her for purposes of summary judgment.
This is not a case where a jury issue exists as to whether Helm had no choice but to encounter the hazard as a condition of her work. Rather, the record shows that, on prior occasions, she avoided the hazard by simply moving the cord. Gillis v. Foodonics Intl., 273 Ga. App. 759, 760-761 (615 SE2d 854) (2005).