[114] In the present case I find that the circumstances include that the stairs were old; that, contrary to the plaintiff's evidence (para 35 of her statement) the stairs were not "very steep"; that each part of the stairs contained only a few steps; that at the time the plaintiff was using the stairs the stairs were well lit; and that there was no feature of the design of the stairs which would not have been obvious to any user of the stairs. I will make further findings about the stairs later in the judgment.
18 Subsequently, he elaborated on the submission for the appellant made in paragraph [90]:
[115] At the hearing counsel for the plaintiff submitted that the plaintiff's account of how she slipped and fell, on which there had been little cross-examination, should be accepted. It is true that there was little cross-examination on the plaintiff's account. However, as was submitted by counsel for the defendant, the plaintiff's evidence about how the fall had occurred was brief and non-specific. In para 40 of her statement the plaintiff simply said that she felt her foot slip on the front of the step, she started to fall and was unable to save herself. The instructions given to Mr Burn were simply that the plaintiff had slipped and fallen. In cross-examination at the hearing the plaintiff agreed that she had told some doctors she had seen that she had no recollection of the fall, other than walking down two or three steps and then ending up on the landing.
19 The primary judge then dealt with submissions based on Jones v Dunkel [1959] HCA 8; (1958 - 1959) 101 CLR 298:
[116] In summarising the submissions of the parties I have referred to a submission, or rather a group of submissions, made by counsel for the plaintiff that, in the absence of evidence from or on behalf of the defendants on a number of matters, inferences adverse to the defendants could and should be drawn on those matters, including whether there had been previous accidents on the stairs and whether there had been previous complaints about the stairs and whether a fresh polyurethane coating had been applied to the stairs from time to time, which might have made the stairs more slippery. Counsel for the plaintiff referred to Brady v Girvan Bros Pty Ltd (1986) 7 NSWLR 241.