7735
Hollywood Blvd. Venture v. Superior Court (Davis) (1981) 116 Cal.App.3d 901, 172 Cal.Rptr. 528
[Civ.
No. 60819. Court of Appeals of California, Second Appellate District, Division Two. March 16, 1981.]
7735
HOLLYWOOD BOULEVARD VENTURE et al., Petitioners, v. THE SUPERIOR COURT OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY, Respondent;
CHRISTY PUGH DAVIS, Real Party in Interest.
(Opinion
by Compton, J., with Fleming, Acting P. J., and Beach, J., concurring.) [116 Cal.App.3d 902]
COUNSEL
Robert
E. Long for Petitioners.
No
appearance for Respondent.
Michael
H. Silvers for Real Party in Interest. [116 Cal.App.3d 903]
OPINION
COMPTON,
J.
We
issued an alternative writ of mandate to review the trial court's order overruling a demurrer to a complaint for
personal injuries, which complaint is based on a novel theory of landowner's liability for the criminal acts of
third parties. We conclude that the complaint fails to state a cause of action and the demurrer should have been
sustained.
Plaintiff
instituted an action against the owner of an apartment house in which she is a tenant. The injury for which she
seeks compensation resulted from a forceable rape committed against her by an intruder who forced entrance into
her apartment. The crime was committed at approximately 4:30 in the morning.
The
property owner's liability for such injury is alleged to rest on a combination of two factors. (1) knowledge
that violent crime, including burglary and rape, had occurred in the "general area, vicinity and neighborhood"
within the previous six months; that some of these crimes, according to media accounts, were committed by the
same person who had been dubbed "The westside rapist" and (2) negligent failure to replace a burned out light
which had been "lighting the outside of plaintiff's apartment."
The
complaint, which seeks both compensatory and punitive damages, attempts to construct a bridge of causation
between these two factors and the injury which plaintiff suffered by purely conclusionary allegations that the
burglar-rapist would not have committed the crime had there been "adequate lighting."
[1a]
We observe that the complaint is silent as to several significant points: (1) there is no allegation that any
crime had previously occurred on these particular premises, (2) there is no description of the size or character
of the area embraced by the phrase "general area, vicinity or neighborhood." It cannot be determined whether
plaintiff is referring to an area of a few square blocks, a few square miles or in fact the City or County of
Los Angeles as a whole, (3) if there was such an individual known to the media as "The westside rapist" the
complaint does not allege that he is the one who attacked plaintiff, (4) there are no factual allegations to
support the claim that the owner of the apartment house possessed knowledge any more precise than the knowledge
of any citizen in Los Angeles County that there are violent crimes committed in [116 Cal.App.3d 904] this
county, (5) other than an allegation of the widely held notion that darkness is an ally of the stealthful
criminal, the complaint provides no basis for attributing to the apartment owner an ability to predict or
foresee where such criminals might strike next or just how such criminals could be deterred, (not even the
police can boast of such prescience), and finally (6) the complaint does not describe with any particularity the
area to be illuminated by the light in question or its relationship, if any, to the manner in which the intruder
entered the apartment.
Plaintiff
directs our attention to several sections of the Restatement of Torts, which recite the general and
well-established principles that while a criminal act of a third person is generally a superseding cause of
injury, such is not the case where intentional or negligent conduct creates a foreseeable and unreasonable risk
of harm from conduct of a third person and liability for that harm can be imposed on the original actor even
though the third party's conduct be criminal. (Rest.2d Torts, § 302B, p. 88; Tarasoff v. Regents of University
of California (1976)
17 Cal.3d 425 [131
Cal.Rptr. 14, 551 P.2d 334, 83 A.L.R.3d 1166].)
Of
course the application of these rules to a given factual setting requires an analysis which transcends simply a
recitation of the principle and an exercise in semantics. In situations where conduct affirmatively and directly
places another in a position of peril of which the latter is ignorant or where his ability to protect himself is
impaired, the original actor is not relieved of liability because the peril results in injury from criminal
conduct by third persons.
Thus
in O'Hara v. Western Seven Trees Corp. (1977)
75 Cal.App.3d 798 [142
Cal.Rptr. 487], a complaint for personal injury against a landlord where the plaintiff had been raped on leased
premises was held to survive a demurrer because it was alleged that the landlord had knowledge that several female
tenants had previously been raped on the premises by the same man, yet had concealed that fact from the plaintiff
at the time plaintiff leased the apartment, had in fact falsely told plaintiff that the building was safe and
misrepresented the security measures in effect.
Here
we deal with no such affirmative conduct by the property owner. Nor is this a case of the property owner placing
plaintiff in a particular situation of peril unique from that of any other person in the community who may
become a victim of crime. [116 Cal.App.3d 905]
Plaintiff's
position here, if accepted, would impose an affirmative duty, on any owner of rental property, to install
security devices "adequate" to deter crime, because under plaintiff's theory it was the lack of "adequate"
lighting which formed the basis for liability. That lack could include failure to install outside lighting in
the first place as well as failure to maintain existing lighting.
The
question is thus "Does an apartment owner have a duty to install and maintain lighting for security purposes?"
If such a duty could be said to exist, the questions that would logically follow are of what candle power? and
in what areas? To ask the questions is to demonstrate the futility of attempting to impose and define such a
duty.
Further,
plaintiff's theory proceeds from the premise that "lighting" in and of itself can deter crime. In this day of an
inordinate volume of criminal activity, there are a myriad of "security devices" available to the public,
including the hiring of armed guards. No one really knows why people commit crime, hence no one really knows
what is "adequate" deterrence in any given situation. While bright lights may deter some, they will not deter
all. Some persons cannot be deterred by anything short of impenetrable walls and armed guards.
It
would be intolerable and grossly unfair to permit a lay jury, after the fact, to determine in any case that
security measures were "inadequate," especially in light of the fact that the decision would always be rendered
in a case where the security had in fact proved to be inadequate.
"It
is an easy matter to know whether a stairway is defective and what repairs will put it in order ... but how can
one know what measures will protect against the thug, the narcotic addict, the degenerate, the psychopath and
the psychotic?" (Goldberg v. Housing Auth. of Newark (1962) 38 N.J. 578 [186 A.2d 291, at P. 297, 10 A.L.R.3d
595].)
[2]
A proprietor of premises is not the insurer of the safety of persons on those premises. His duty to control the
acts of third persons is a duty of reasonable care to protect against known or reasonably foreseeable risks. He
is not required to take precautions against attacks by third persons which he has no reason to anticipate.
(Totten v. More Oakland Residential Housing, Inc. (1976)
63 Cal.App.3d 538 [134
Cal.Rptr. 29]; Edwards v. Hollywood Canteen (1946)
27 Cal.2d 802 [167
P.2d 729]; Rest., Torts, § 314.) [116 Cal.App.3d 906]
Anyone
can foresee that a crime may be committed anywhere at any time. But that foreseeability which the owners of
rental property or the proprietors of public premises share with the public at large, does not, per se, impose a
duty on such property owners or proprietors to install a "security device" which meets a lay jury's concept of
adequacy.
[1b]
Plaintiff's complaint, given its most liberal interpretation, alleges simply the maintenance of a dangerous
condition on the property. That dangerous condition is said to inhere in the absence of "adequate" outside
lighting. There is no allegation that the property itself is defective in any regard.
In
Moncur v. City of Los Angeles (1977)
68 Cal.App.3d 118 [137
Cal.Rptr. 239], we dealt with a somewhat similar theory of liability. There an individual had placed a bomb in a
public locker at the Los Angeles International Airport. The bomb exploded killing and injuring several people.
Plaintiffs sought to impose tort liability for negligence on the city for failing to locate the lockers inside the
"security screen." We rejected that contention on the basis that the location of the locker could not be the cause
of the actions of the bomber and did not constitute a defective condition of the property. In short, the conduct of
the bomber could not have reasonably been foreseen or anticipated so as to impose a duty on the city to take
security measures concerning the use of the locker.
The
complaint here fails to plead sufficient facts to create any duty on the owner of the apartment building or to
establish any causal connection between the alleged delict and the injury.
Let
a peremptory writ of mandate issue directing the trial court to vacate its order overruling the demurrer and to
enter a new and different order sustaining the demurrer. The alternative writ is discharged.
Fleming,
Acting P. J., and Beach, J., concurred.
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