SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-5517-94T5
MARY CLOHESY, Executrix of the
Estate of KATHLEEN DALTON, Deceased,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
FOOD CIRCUS SUPERMARKETS, INC., t/a
TWIN COUNTY GROCERS or FOODTOWN OF
RED BANK,
Defendant-Respondent,
and
PHILIP REARDON, JR.,
Defendant.
___________________________________________________________________
Argued February 22, 1996 - Decided August 9,
1996
Before Judges King, Landau and Humphreys.
On appeal from Superior Court, Law Division,
Monmouth County.
Nicholas Caliendo argued the cause for
appellant (Schottland, Aaron & Manning,
attorneys; Chryssa Yaccarino on the brief).
Jane Garrity Glass argued the cause for
respondent (Garrity, Graham & Favetta,
attorneys; Ms. Glass on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
LANDAU, J.A.D.
Plaintiff Mary Clohesy, Executrix of the Estate of Kathleen
Dalton, appeals from a grant of summary judgment in favor of
defendant Food Circus Supermarkets, Inc., t/a Twin County Grocers
or Foodtown of Red Bank (Foodtown) dismissing her complaint that
alleged Foodtown's negligent failure to provide adequate security
in its parking lot for the decedent, Kathleen Dalton.
Mrs. Dalton, who was seventy-nine years of age, had been
shopping at the Foodtown supermarket in Red Bank during the early
afternoon of July 15, 1991. As she loaded groceries into her car,
an assailant, Philip Reardon, Jr., forced her into the car, covered
her nose and mouth with duct tape, and drove away. Mrs. Dalton
died of asphyxiation. Reardon was apprehended and later convicted
of kidnapping, robbery, theft, and murder.
Plaintiff sued Foodtown and Reardon. Depositions were taken
of Barry Elliott, Manager of Retail Loss Prevention for Twin County
Grocers, and Philip J. Scaduto, Director of Loss Prevention for
Food Circus Supermarkets.
Elliott testified that his duties primarily focused upon the
prevention of illegal activities inside of New Jersey and New York
Foodtown stores. He had no recollection of any request to evaluate
parking lot security at the Foodtown of Red Bank or the liquor
store located on the premises. Elliott admitted, however, that
security was hired during a period when construction materials were
being stored in the Foodtown of Red Bank lot.
Scaduto was in charge of security for stores operated by Food
Circus Supermarkets. Although he was responsible for parking lot
problems, in his experience these consisted of little more than
"shopping carts banging, carriages, basically people looking for
money on dents," and "proper lighting, potholes, things like that."
He did not recall any criminal activity in the parking lot of any
store operated by Food Circus prior to the abduction of Mrs.
Dalton.
Plaintiff's expert, William A. Torphy, provided a report
evaluating security at the Foodtown of Red Bank. Torphy concluded
that Foodtown deviated from industry standards of care by failing
to provide adequate security, and that this failure caused the
death of Mrs. Dalton. He noted the presence of a liquor store on
the premises, which attracted persons to drink and "hang around."
Torphy also asserted that a Mobil gas station on the edge of the
parking lot served as "a gathering place for loiterers" and earned
frequent attention from the police.
The Torphy report observed that the parking lot faced a side
of the supermarket that had no windows, making it impossible for
employees inside to scan the lot for problems. Foodtown employed
no security guards to monitor the parking lot. Torphy opined that
the Foodtown was "located in an area where criminal conduct could
reasonably be anticipated." He concluded that Foodtown's poor
design and lack of security deviated from industry standards and
contributed to Mrs. Dalton's death.
Police reports contained in the record indicate that sixty
criminal incidents had been reported in or around the Foodtown
store between January 1989 and the date of the Dalton incident, a
two and one-half year period. These included thirty shopliftings,
twelve thefts, four DWI offenses, four disorderly persons offenses,
four assaults, three occasions on which customers misplaced
property, one instance of criminal mischief, one charge of
trespassing, and one offense of possession of CDS. There were no
robberies or attempted robberies.
None of the assaults bore any resemblance to the attack upon
Mrs. Dalton. Two involved store employees who confronted alleged
shoplifters or thieves. In a third instance, a man assaulted a
police officer who had arrested his wife for disorderly conduct.
The remaining assault involved a fight arising out of a car
accident in the parking lot.
Foodtown moved for summary judgment. After hearing argument,
the judge granted Foodtown's motion on April 13, 1995, citing
plaintiff's failure to allege prior similar incidents necessary to
establish foreseeability. The motion judge distinguished
plaintiff's case from Butler v. Acme Markets, Inc.,
89 N.J. 270
(1982), in which seven muggings in the parking lot were deemed to
render foreseeable the likelihood of further criminal attacks, thus
generating a duty to provide reasonable protective measures.
Plaintiff moved for reconsideration, but advanced no new
arguments or proof. On May 26, 1995, the judge denied the motion
for reconsideration, again stressing that Butler required prior
similar incidents as a prerequisite to imposition of an actionable
duty.
Plaintiff voluntarily dismissed the complaint as to Reardon,
rendering final and appealable the summary judgment granted to
Foodtown. On appeal, plaintiff argues that the judge erred in
granting summary judgment solely because of the absence of prior
similar offenses.
We affirm. The evidence contained in the record before us is
legally insufficient to render foreseeable the likelihood of a
serious criminal attack occurring in the Foodtown parking lot, and
therefore is insufficient to create a duty to provide special
security for the Foodtown lot. Accordingly, we conclude that
Foodtown owed no duty to plaintiff's decedent to provide security
or to post warnings in the parking lot, and that Foodtown is
entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Unlike the situation in Butler, there were no prior incidents
of a nature that would render foreseeable the carjacking, assault,
kidnapping and fatal gagging of a patron, or, indeed, any of those
offenses. To the extent that a general theory of negligence was
asserted, thus including a failure to warn,See footnote 1 we believe that any
duty to warn patrons of the possibility of parking lot attacks
would have been, at most, coextensive with the existence of a duty
to provide security in the lot.
We do not deem the expert report, nor the factual basis upon
which it was rendered, sufficient to create a factual issue.
"[E]xpert testimony is useful to fact finders in determining
whether a standard of conduct has been violated, but only after a
legal duty has been found to exist. The question of whether a duty
exists is a matter of law to be decided by the judge alone in the
context of the circumstances of each case." Burroughs v. City of
Atlantic City,
234 N.J. Super. 208, 220-21 (App. Div.), certif.
denied,
117 N.J. 647 (1989). "The foreseeability of harm is a
significant consideration in the determination of a duty to
exercise reasonable care." Carvalho v. Toll Bros. & Developers,
143 N.J. 565, 572 (1996). "`[I]t is a crucial element in
determining whether imposition of a duty on an alleged tortfeasor
is appropriate.'" Id. at 572-73 (quoting Carter Lincoln-Mercury,
Inc. v. EMAR Group,
135 N.J. 182, 194 (1994)).
Among the factors properly considered in this case are the
broad daylight time of the incident (rendering adequate
illumination a non-issue; compare Picco v. Fords Diner,
113 N.J.
Super. 465 (App. Div. 1971)) and the undisputed evidence that there
had been no prior criminal attacks against patrons in the Foodtown
lot.
In Butler, supra, the Court recognized, as we do, that
[t]he historical classifications of the
degrees of care owing to visitors upon land
are undergoing gradual change in the law in
favor of a broadening application of a general
tort obligation to exercise reasonable care
against foreseeable harm to others.
[Butler, supra, 89 N.J. at 277.]
Also recognized was the duty of the proprietor of premises to which the public is invited for business purposes to provide a reasonably safe place to do that which is within the scope of the invitation. Id. at 275. Due care under all the circumstances is the proper measuring rod, and the question of foreseeability is that of the existence of an unreasonable risk or likelihood of harm. Id. at
276.
In Butler, however, seven muggings had occurred on the Acme
premises within one year's time, muggings of which the victim was
unaware. Id. at 274. No warnings had been posted to advise
patrons of the possibility of attack. Id. at 275. One guard
attended to store security and to the parking lot. Id. at 274.
The Court recognized that foreseeability of criminal conduct was
"apparent" and refused to allocate sole responsibility for security
to government with its attendant police power. Id. at 277, 280.
Neither the Supreme Court nor the Legislature has yet imposed
upon all parking lot operators or stores with parking areas an
absolute duty to maintain constant police-type protection of those
areas. It may be arguable that courts should take notice of an
alarming trend in "carjackings," an offense largely unknown until
recent years. However, such offenses can easily occur in any
parking lot, large or small, or indeed on any street or highway.
Police protection against such widespread criminal incidents is one
of the primary duties for which government exists. The Supreme
Court made clear that "we do not intend an absolute obligation to
prevent all crime." Id. at 279. Rather, the Court imposed a duty
upon Acme to provide adequate security and to warn patrons of the
danger, based upon foreseeability generated by the known, repeated
history of attacks in its parking lot. Accord Genovay v. Fox,
50 N.J. Super. 538, 554-55 (App. Div. 1958), rev'd on other grounds,
29 N.J. 436 (1959).
While we believe that certain showings of fact, for example
repeated carjackings or assaults upon persons in the immediate
vicinity, or an extraordinary increase of such incidents in the
community, see id. at 555, might well be sufficient to create a
duty,See footnote 2 that threshold has not here been crossed.
We are mindful of the view of our dissenting colleague that
"[s]ubstantial criminal activity had occurred in and around
Foodtown" and that, in consequence, the question of Foodtown's duty
to take reasonable security precautions for plaintiff should have
been submitted to the jury. Our review of the record satisfies us
that the dissent has overstated the nature and extent of the
various incidents in and near the market, none of which hinted at
an unusual potential for threat to the physical safety of patrons.
This was not Dodge City.
Of greater concern is the dissent's apparent desire to send to
a jury almost every case in which an allegation is made that a
store has failed to provide adequate security protection for its
business invitees, free of the judicial hand in measuring
foreseeability and in determining existence of a duty.
Contrary to the suggestion of the dissent, we do not interpret
Butler to have created an absolute prior similar incidents rule,
although the motion judge may have done so. Neither have we
created such a rule in this case. We read Butler to have made the
existence of prior similar incidents a highly significant, but not
exclusive, factor for the court to consider in making its critical
foreseeability/duty determination. In this respect, Butler is
consistent with the most recent opinion of the California Supreme
Court on this subject, Ann M. v. Pacific Plaza Shopping Center,
863 P.2d 207 (Cal. 1993).
The dissent relies heavily on the reasoning of that court in
an earlier decision, Isaacs v. Huntington Memorial Hospital,
695 P.2d 653 (Cal. 1985), which rejected a strict rule of law limiting
a business premises operator's foreseeability of criminal acts only
to cases in which prior similar acts had occurred on the same
premises. Isaacs rejected this strict rule in favor of a "totality
of circumstances" approach. Id. at 659-61. In Ann M., however,
the breadth of the Isaacs opinion was dramatically reconsidered and
modified.See footnote 3 While not adopting a strict prior similar incidents
rule, the California Supreme Court recognized the difficulty in
ascertaining what degree of security is adequate to constitute
effective deterrence, and concluded "that a high degree of
foreseeability is required in order to find that the scope of a
[shopping center owner's] duty of care includes the hiring of
security guards." Ann M., supra, 863 P.
2d at 215. Thus, that
court said, "the requisite degree of foreseeability rarely, if
ever, can be proven in the absence of prior similar incidents of
violent crime on the ... premises." Ibid.
Much as we have done, the California court left open the
possibility that, even absent prior similar incidents, other
circumstances might create the degree of foreseeability sufficient
to trigger a duty to provide security guards. Examples given were
immediate proximity to a similar business establishment which has
experienced violent crime on its premises, or evidence that a
particular type of commercial property has become inherently
subject to violent crime. Id. at 215 n.7, 216 n.8. Absent
legislative action, we believe that the Ann M. analysis is entirely
consistent with the business proprietor's general duty to guard its
business invitees against reasonably foreseeable harm.See footnote 4
We believe that the dissent has confused the issue of duty
analysis, and wrongly seeks to surrender for a jury's fact-finding
the legal determination of foreseeability in the context of
determining existence and scope of a duty. See id. at 215.
It is ironic that while the dissent has no difficulty in
ceding to the jury the court's traditional role in addressing the
policy considerations surrounding imposition of an actionable duty
to provide security guards,See footnote 5 our Supreme Court has struggled
mightily to uphold legislative enactments that impose similar
crime-prevention duties upon landowners. See, e.g., 515 Assocs. v.
City of Newark,
132 N.J. 180 (1993); Hudson Circle Servicenter v.
Town of Kearny,
70 N.J. 289 (1976). Justice O'Hern's dissent in
515 Assocs. reminds us of the negative consequences of transferring
the burden of police protection to private owners, who must then
pass the costs on to tenants or customers. See 515 Assocs., supra,
132 N.J. at 200-01 (O'Hern, J., dissenting).
The approach which we espouse, like that in Ann M., supra,
takes account of the special nature of the policy questions here
involved. If even legislative enactments of this nature are
troublesome, we must not casually experiment with the duty created
in Butler or the method of fixing that duty.
In this opinion we change no rule of law, nor do we seek to
establish a strict prior similar incidents rule. We believe that
the approach adopted by the California Supreme Court in Ann M.,
supra, is sound and consistent with Butler. As the motion judge
found, plaintiff's showing in this case was insufficient to
establish an actionable duty.
Affirmed.
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-5517-94T5
MARY CLOHESY, Executrix of the
Estate of KATHLEEN DALTON, Deceased,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
FOOD CIRCUS SUPERMARKETS, INC., t/a
TWIN COUNTY GROCERS, or FOODTOWN OF
RED BANK,
Defendant-Respondent,
and
PHILIP REARDON, JR.,
Defendant.
_________________________________________________________________
HUMPHREYS, J.A.D. (dissenting).
Kathleen Dalton, a seventy-nine year old widow, was about to
enter her car one afternoon in July 1991. She had been shopping
at the Foodtown Supermarket in Red Bank. Her car was parked in
the Foodtown parking lot. She was attacked and forced into her
car. Her assailant drove away with her. He covered her mouth
with duct tape and suffocated her. He was later convicted of
kidnapping, robbery, theft and murder.
Substantial criminal activity had occurred in and around
Foodtown. The criminal activity was increasing. Nevertheless,
security at Foodtown was non-existent. An expert on supermarket
security was prepared to testify that the supermarket had
violated and ignored industry standards for security in
supermarkets, and that this had resulted in the robbery and
murder of Kathleen Dalton.
The majority holds that under these facts the supermarket as
a matter of law is under no duty to its patrons to provide for
their security in the Foodtown parking lot. I disagree.
in the two and one-half years before the attack upon Kathleen
Dalton. These included assaults, disorderly persons offenses,
thefts, possession of CDS, criminal mischief, and DWI offenses.
Moreover, criminal activity at Foodtown itself had been
substantially increasing each year. In 1989, only four incidents
occurred at Foodtown; in 1990, there were seven; in 1991, there
were thirteen.
A security consultant engaged by plaintiff submitted a
report on Foodtown's failure to comply with industry standards
for supermarket security. The consultant had participated in the
development and design of numerous retail store facilities for K-Mart and Woolworth Department Stores as well as K-Mart food
stores throughout the East and in New Jersey. The stores were
designed to operate in suburban and urban central business
districts. The security consultant's background included
experience in facility design and security and in "management
control methods to protect patrons from being exposed to
dangerous conditions."
The security consultant's report contains the following.
Foodtown is located in a "busy section of the city between two
major streets and at a railroad crossing." The store "provided
parking for approximately 150 cars located at the side of the
market however activity in the area could not be observed from
inside the building."
A liquor store was adjacent to Foodtown. Defendants admit
that "`some guys used to sit around there and drink . . . they
used to hang around out there.'" Also, there is a Mobil gas
station located on the edge of Foodtown's lot. This area is a
"gathering place for loiterers. Police were frequently called to
the area to investigate thefts, assaults, trespassing, disorderly
persons and other criminal activities."
The security consultant states in his report that the
parking lot was not visible from the store. Foodtown did not
employ any security guards nor did it provide any deterrent to
criminal activity taking place in its parking lot. Plaintiff
also alleges that Foodtown did not provide parking lot security
in any of their Foodtown stores.
The security consultant further stated:
Prudent retailers design stores that face the front
parking area not only for customer convenience but also
to provide a deterrent to crime by increasing the
likelihood that criminal activity will be `spotted' by
store management or up-front store personnel and
reported. Any side parking defeats this purpose and
particularly in this case where the side wall was of
solid masonry. . . . Having the parking area in direct
view from the store also is a deterrent to loitering
and potential assaults. In its Tips on How to Deter
Robbery and Violence covering procedures used by the
convenience store sector are found typical instructions
used in training store personnel such as
"Observe if someone appears to be watching or
loitering. If so, try to stare down the
suspicious person. If he doesn't leave, call the
police."
The security consultant continued:
Industry practice is for such large cooperatives [the
defendant] to analyze and if necessary to recommend
outside security measures be taken to assure safe
parking lots as well, which the cooperative failed to
do for this Foodtown even though it was known to be
located in an area where criminal conduct could be
reasonably anticipated.
The security consultant concluded:
Where assaults on patrons could reasonably be
foreseen due to the absence of any deterrent to crime
in an area that was hidden from view, that attracted
loiterers and that had a history of criminal activity,
customary standards of care in the shopping center
industry require proprietors to provide adequate
security measures to safeguard patrons such as the use
of uniformed guards, to schedule periodic inspection of
the parking area by store personnel and to provide
means of visibility of the lot from the store through
window openings.
Because industry standards of care were not
followed or were ignored by Foodtown, . . . dangerous
conditions that were known or should have been known to
the defendants were allowed to exist. As a result of
the negligence, carelessness and disregard for the
safety of the plaintiff, Kathleen Dalton, she was
assaulted and subsequently murdered by an assailant
roaming the store's blind parking area and forcibly
entering the plaintiff's car unobserved and undetected
by defendants' store personnel.
Whether a defendant owes a legal duty is "generally
considered" a question of law for the court to decide. Carvalho
v. Toll Bros. & Developers,
143 N.J. 565, 572 (1996).
Foreseeability of harm is a significant consideration in the
determination of a duty to exercise reasonable care. Id. at 572.
Thus, courts "consider initially the factor of foreseeability as
the predicate for the duty to exercise reasonable care. " Id. at
573.
The New Jersey Supreme Court in Butler v. Acme Markets,
Inc.,
89 N.J. 270 (1982), held that an owner of business premises
owes a duty to exercise reasonable care to safeguard its
customers from the criminal acts of third parties. The Court
further held that it was for the jury to determine whether the
business owner had breached that duty of reasonable care. Id. at
280.
In Butler, a woman had been assaulted in the Acme parking
lot in Montclair in November 1977, while she was loading
groceries into her car. Id. at 274. The parking lot was well
lit. Ibid. Seven muggings had occurred within the past year,
including five evening attacks during the preceding four month
period. Ibid. Acme had hired off-duty police as security guards
to combat the problem. Ibid. The only guard on duty at the time
of the attack was inside the store and Acme did not have any
signs warning patrons of potential danger. Id. at 275.
Acme was granted a judgment notwithstanding the verdict.
Ibid. We reversed and the Supreme Court affirmed our reversal.
The Supreme Court said:
The proprietor of premises to which the public is
invited for business purposes of the proprietor owes a
duty of reasonable care to those who enter the premises
upon that invitation to provide a reasonably safe place
to do that which is within the scope of the invitation.
. . . The measure of that care has been described as
`due care under all the circumstances.' . . .
`Negligence is tested by whether the reasonably prudent
person at the time and place should recognize and
foresee an unreasonable risk or likelihood of harm or
danger to others.' . . . If the reasonably prudent
person would foresee danger resulting from another's
voluntary criminal acts, the fact that another's
actions are beyond defendant's control does not
preclude liability. . . . Foreseeability of the risk
that criminal acts of others would cause harm is the
crucial factor.
The historical classifications of the degrees of care owing to visitors upon land are undergoing gradual change in the law in favor of a broadening application
of a general tort obligation to exercise reasonable
care against foreseeable harm to others.
With respect to the allocation of costs issue, in
the modern context of merchandising, our placement of
these costs is consistent with the principles of the
common law. Just as it is deemed fair for the owners
and therefore indirectly the tenants of an apartment
building, . . . or the operators and patrons of a
parking lot, . . . to bear the costs of avoiding
negligence, it is fair that the costs of negligent
failure to protect against crime be similarly borne by
the operators and indirectly patrons of such shopping
facilities.
[Ibid. at 275-277 (citations omitted) (emphasis
added).]
The Court quoted from the Restatement (Second) of Torts, §
344 (1965), as to the duty owed by a storeowner to protect its
patrons from the acts of third parties. Id. at 280. The Court
concluded:
Thus under both Restatement, (Second) of Torts,
§ 344, supra, and the prior decisions of this Court, it
was for the jury to determine if Acme exercised
reasonable care in the performance of its duty to
safeguard its business invitees from the criminal acts
of third persons. Here, it was at least reasonable for
the jury to determine that absent warnings, hiring one
guard who primarily remained inside the store was an
insufficient response in light of the known, repeated
history of attacks on the premises.
[Id. at 280 (emphasis added).]
As to plaintiff's lack of expert testimony on the standard
of care, the Court said:
Obviously, such testimony would be an aid to a
jury and its use is encouraged in future cases. But
its absence is not fatal. The jury's finding on the
reasonableness of defendant's behavior was one where
`fair minded men may honestly differ as to the
conclusion to be drawn from disputed facts' and was
properly submitted to the jury.
[Id. at 283-284 (emphasis added).]
The Court summarized its holding as follows:
In the last analysis then:
Whether a duty exists is ultimately a
question of fairness. The inquiry involves
weighing of the relationship of the parties,
the nature of the risk, and the public
interest in the proposed solution. [Goldberg
v. Housing Authority, supra, 38 N.J. at 583]
Here, because the business invitor is in the best
position to provide either warnings or adequate
protection for its patrons when the risk of injury is
prevalent under certain conditions, and because the
public interest lies in providing a reasonably safe
place for a patron to shop, we affirm the judgment of
the Appellate Division.
[Id. at 284.]
To escape the broad reach of Butler, the majority apparently
attempts to limit Butler's holding, with only a few exceptions,
to instances in which prior similar criminal acts had occurred.
Under that view, Foodtown would only have a duty to take
reasonable precautions to protect its customers from criminal
attack if there had been "for example repeated carjackings or
assaults upon persons in the immediate vicinity, or an
extraordinary increase of such incidents in the community. . .,"
or possibly a type of commercial property "inherently" subject to
violent crime. Ante at ___ (7-8 & 10 slip op.)
My colleagues also embrace the majority opinion in Ann M. v.
Pacific Plaza Shopping Center,
863 P.2d 207 (Cal. 1993) in which
a "refinement" (id. at 215) of the prior similar incidents rule
is created. The refinement is that a "high degree of
forseeability is required in order to find that the scope of a
landlord's duty of care includes the hiring of security guards.";
and that "the requisite degree of forseeability rarely, if ever,
can be proven in the absence of prior similar incidents of
violent crime on the landowner's premises." Id. at 215 (emphasis
added). The majority in the present case finds that the
"approach" in Ann M. is "sound and consistent with Butler." Ante
___ (slip op. at 12).See footnote 6
The New Jersey Supreme Court in Butler did not expressly
adopt my colleagues' limitations upon its holding. Nor is there
any indication that the Court impliedly adopted such limitations.
On the contrary, the broad language in Butler quoted above
compels the conclusion that the Butler Court intended no such
narrow interpretation of its ruling.
Furthermore, subsequent New Jersey cases have not given
Butler a restrictive interpretation. See Kuzmicz v. Ivy Hill
Park Apts.,
282 N.J. Super. 513, 521 (App. Div.), certif.
granted,
143 N.J. 322 (1995) (Butler extended to require landlord
to take reasonable steps to protect a tenant from criminal attack
on adjoining property); see also Blazovic v. Andrich,
124 N.J. 90
(1991) (patron of a restaurant assaulted in restaurant's parking
lot successfully sued restaurant for, among other things, failing
to provide adequate security in lot). Thus, the Butler decision
affords no support for the restrictive position adopted by the
majority.
Nor does the weight of modern out of State authorities
support the majority decision. Essentially, the majority has
adopted the "prior similar incidents" rule with its refinement in
Ann M., supra. Under that rule, a business proprietor, has, with
only rare exceptions, no duty to take reasonable precautions to
protect its patrons from criminal attack in the absence of prior
repeated similar criminal incidents. In the past, some courts
have espoused that rule. See cases cited in Marjorie A. Caner,
Annotation, Liability of Owner or Operator of Shopping Center, or
Business Housed therein, for Injury to Patron on Premises from
Criminal Attack by Third Party,
31 A.L.R. 5th 550 (1995); James
L. Isham, Annotation, Parking Facility Proprietor's Liability for
Criminal Attack on Patron,
49 A.L.R. 4th 1257 (1986); see also
Deborah T. Landis, Annotation, Liability of Owner or Operator of
Shopping Center, or Business Housed therein, for Injury to Patron
on Premises from Criminal Attack by Third Party,
93 A.L.R.3d 999
(1979). However, more recently, many courts have jettisoned the
rule.
As stated by the Supreme Court of Idaho, "[t]he solid and growing national trend has been toward the rejection of the `prior similar incidents' rule." Sharp v. W.H. Moore, Inc., 796 P.2d 506, 510 (Idaho 1990). Accord, Small v. McKennan Hosp., 403 N.W.2d 410, 417 (S.D. 1987) (strict adherence to the prior similar acts rule "is unduly restrictive and places too great a burden on the plaintiff"); Whittaker v. Saraceno, 635 N.E.2d 1185, 1188 (Mass. 1994) ("the previous occurrence of similar criminal acts on or near a defendant's premises is a circumstance to consider, but the foreseeability question is not conclusively answered in favor of a defendant landlord if there has been no prior similar criminal act"); Hickman v. Warehouse Beer Sys., Inc., 620 N.E.2d 949, 953 (Ohio Ct. App. 1993) (totality of the circumstances is a "better indicator to establish knowledge of [the] defendant than focusing in on any particular criminal occurrences"); Shea v. Preservation Chicago, Inc., 565 N.E.2d 20 (Ill. App. Ct. 1990) (rather than a rigid application of the prior incidents rule, the proper inquiry is to consider all relevant circumstances in order to determine whether a landlord has assumed the duty to protect the tenant from reasonably foreseeable criminal attacks); Jardel Co., Inc. v. Hughes, 523 A.2d 518, 525 (Del. 1987) (Foreseeability standard is not limited to specific crimes; "[s]o called `property crimes,' such as shoplifting, may turn violent if a chase ensues and . . . family quarrels may become violent with the risk that deadly weapons may be used. Moreover, the repetition of criminal activity,
regardless of its mix, may be sufficient to place the property owners on notice of the likelihood that personal injury, not merely property loss, will result"); Small v. McKennan Hosp., 437 N.W.2d 194, 201 (S.D. 1989) ("Failure to prove any criminal activity in the area is not fatal to the submission of the foreseeability issue to the jury, because criminal assaults occur in all neighborhoods. . . . A violent criminal activity can be foreseeable simply upon common experience"); Samson v. Saginaw Professional Building, Inc., 224 N.W.2d 843, 849 (Mich. 1975) (no prior incidents could possibly indicate a very low probability of an event occurring in the future but this low probability must be balanced against the magnitude of the potential harm involved to determine whether or not inaction under these circumstances is reasonable; "reasonableness, as foreseeability, is normally a question for the jury to determine"); Rowe v. State Bank of Lombard, 531 N.E.2d 1358, 1369 (Ill. 1988) (absence of any past violent crimes at an office park does not preclude liability of the owner of the park to persons working there who were attacked); Galloway v. Bankers Trust Co., 420 N.W.2d 437, 439-440 (Iowa 1988) (prior non-violent incidents may provide a basis for a finding of foreseeability of "personal confrontation crimes"; evidence of foreseeability fortified by report of security consultant); Seibert v. Vic Regnier Builders, Inc. 856 P.2d 1332, 1339 (Kan. 1993) (in suit by a person shot in an armed robbery in a parking lot of a shopping center, the totality of the circumstances, not prior similar acts, is the better reasoned
basis for determining foreseeability); Morgan v. Bucks Assocs., 428 F. Supp. 546, 550 (E.D. Pa. 1977) (numerous car thefts occurring in a parking lot are sufficient for a jury to determine that defendant knew or should have known that a visitor might be assaulted); Garner v. McGinty, 771 S.W 2d, 242, 248 (Tex. Ct. App. 1989) (totality of the circumstances is the correct standard; "lack of prior similar incidents does not necessarily preclude a finding of foreseeability"); Kendrick v. Allright Parking, 846 S.W.2d 453, 458 (Tex. Ct. App. 1992) (lack of specific incidents of prior criminal activities not conclusive on the issue of foreseeability); Allright, Inc. v. Pearson, 711 S.W.2d 686, 690 (Tex. Ct. App. 1986), (in suit by person robbed at gunpoint in parking garage; "fact that an event has not previously occurred is neither conclusive on the issue of its foreseeability nor dispositive of a duty to reasonably anticipate its occurrence"), aff'd in part, rev'd in part, 735 S.W.2d 240 (Tex. 1987); Onciano v. Golden Palace Restaurant, Inc., 219 Cal. App.3d 385, 268 Cal. Rptr. 96 (Ct. App. 1990) (prior similar incidents is an important factor to be considered in determining foreseeability, but "lack of such incidents does not by itself negate the foreseeability as a matter of law"; "foreseeability is measured by all of the circumstances"); Brock v. Watts Realty Co., Inc. 582 So 2d, 438, 440-441 (Ala. 1991) (landlord's duty to reasonably provide protection from criminal attack does not have to be implied from prior similar occurrences on the leased premises); Willie v. American Casualty Co., 547 So.2d 1075, 1083
(La. Ct. App. 1989) (some level of criminal activity could impose
a duty to post warnings or increase security; what crime is
foreseeable under what circumstances is a question of fact);
Mullins v. Pine Manor College,
449 N.E.2d 331, 337 (Mass. 1983)
(rule requiring evidence of prior criminal acts rejected as
leading to arbitrary results and distinctions); Crain v.
Cleveland Lodge 1532, Order of Moose, Inc.,
641 So.2d 1186, 1192
(Miss. 1994) (amount and type of criminal activity in general
vicinity of business' premises is a factor in determining
foreseeability); Zacharias, The Politics of Torts, 95 Yale L.J.
698 (1986) (stores such as supermarkets attract crime and should
be liable for their negligence in providing security for their
customers in the stores and their parking lots); see also Michael
J. Yelnosky, Business Inviters' Duty to Protect Invitees from
Criminal Acts,
134 U. PA. L. Rev. 883 (1986) (general criminal
activity occurring on or near business premises can be sufficient
to give rise to duty to protect against violent attack in a
jurisdiction which has adopted the Restatement (Second) of Torts,
§ 344).
The prior similar incidents rule was subjected to scathing
criticism by the Supreme Court of California in Isaacs v.
Huntingdon Memorial Hosp., 695 P.2d, 653, 659 (Cal. 1985).
The Court said:
This rule is fatally flawed in numerous respects.
First, the rule leads to results which are contrary to
public policy. The rule has the effect of discouraging
landowners from taking adequate measures to protect
premises which they know are dangerous. This result
contravenes the policy of preventing future harm.
Moreover, under the rule, the first victim always
loses, while subsequent victims are permitted recovery.
Such a result is not only unfair, but is inimical to
the important policy of compensating injured parties.
Surely, a landowner should not get one free assault
before he can be held liable for criminal acts which
occur on his property.
Second, a rule which limits evidence of
foreseeability to prior similar criminal acts
leads to arbitrary results and distinctions.
. . . Under this rule, there is uncertainty
as to how "similar" the prior incidents must
be to satisfy the rule. The rule raises a
number of other troubling questions. For
example, how close in time do the prior
incidents have to be? How near in location
must they be? The rule invites different
courts to enunciate different standards of
foreseeability based on their resolution of
these questions.
Third, the rule erroneously equates
foreseeability of a particular act with
previous occurrences of similar acts. This
court has already rejected that notion.
"'The mere fact that a particular kind of an
accident has not happened before does not . .
. show that such accident is one which might
not reasonably have been anticipated.' . . .
Thus, the fortuitous absence of prior injury
does not justify relieving defendant from
responsibility for the foreseeable
consequences of its acts." . . .
Finally, the "prior similar incidents"
rule improperly removes too many cases from
the jury's consideration. It is well
established that foreseeability is ordinarily
a question of fact. . . .
There is a general reluctance to remove
foreseeability questions from the jury. . . .
Foreseeability "`is not to be measured by what is more
probable than not, but includes whatever is likely
enough in the setting of modern life that a reasonably
thoughtful [person] would take account of it in guiding
practical conduct.' . . . One may be held accountable
for creating even `"the risk of a slight possibility of
injury if a reasonably prudent [person] would not do
so."'"
Thus, foreseeability is determined in light of all
the circumstances and not by a rigid application of a
mechanical "prior similars" rule. . . . As this court
has held, "what is required to be foreseeable is the
general character of the event or harm . . . not its
precise nature or manner of occurrence." . . . Prior
similar incidents are helpful to determine
foreseeability but they are not necessary. A rule that
limits evidence of foreseeability to prior similar
incidents deprives the jury of its role in determining
that question.
[Isaacs v. Huntington Memorial Hospital,
695 P.2d 653, 658-659 (Cal. 1985) (citations
omitted).]
Cf. Ann M. v. Pacific Plaza Shopping Center, supra,
863 P.2d 207.
Other jurisdictions have severely criticized the prior
similar incidents rule. In Sharp, supra, 796 P.
2d at 510, the
Supreme Court of Idaho said:
Reduced to its essence, the "prior similar
incidents" requirement translates into the familiar but
fallacious saying in negligence law that every dog gets
one free bite before its owner can be held to be
negligent for failing to control the dog. That license
which is refused to a dog's owner should be withheld
from a building's owner and the owner's agents as well.
There is no "one free rape" rule in Idaho.
The "prior similar incidents" requirement is not
only too demanding, it violates the cardinal negligence
law principle that only the general risk of harm need
be foreseen, not the specific mechanism of injury. . .
. Such a requirement would remove far too many issues
from the jury's consideration. Foreseeability is
ordinarily a question of fact.
[(Citations omitted).]
In Ronk v. Parking Concepts of Texas, Inc., 711 S.W.2d 409, 418 (Tex. Ct. App. 1987), the court in adopting the totality of circumstances rule said: "A rule which limits proof of foreseeability to evidence of prior similar incidents automatically precludes recovery to first-injured victims. Such
a rule is inherently unfair and contrary to public policy."; see
also Business Inviters' Duty to Protect Invitees from Criminal
Acts, supra,
134 U. Pa. L. Rev. 883 (criticizing the prior
similar incidents rule, and other specific rules, for failing to
recognize the "prevalence of the invitee victimization problem,
the deterrent effect of adequate and properly implemented
security systems, and the propriety of imposing liability on the
business inviter. . . .").
In view of the sweeping language in the Butler decision, I
perceive little likelihood that New Jersey will follow the
discredited prior similar incidents rule or its refinement in Ann
M. In contrast, the totality of circumstances approach is well
rooted in New Jersey jurisprudence. State v. Jones,
143 N.J. 4,
20 (1995) (Court looked at "totality of circumstances" to
determine whether police acted in an objectively reasonable
manner); State v. Smith,
134 N.J. 599, 621 (1994) (Court looked
at totality of the circumstances to test the legality of a pat-down search); State v. New Jersey Trade Waste Assoc.,
96 N.J. 8,
25 (1984) (totality of circumstances test will be used in
determining whether a course of conduct constitutes a single
conspiracy or two or more separate conspiracies).See footnote 7
Applying the totality of circumstances approach and giving
plaintiff the benefit of reasonable inferences under summary
judgment principles, more than a sufficient showing has been made
to permit plaintiff's case to go forward. To foresee the
likelihood of crime is unfortunately not difficult today. The
omnipresence of crime is irrefutable. It is an "inescapable fact
of modern life. Its presence threatens the suburban enclave as
well as the inner city." Trentacost v. Brussel,
82 N.J. 214, 227
(1980). Large numbers of people congregate in supermarkets.
Parking lots of supermarkets are not "likely to be crime free."
See Seibert, supra, 856 P.
2d at 1339; see also Business Inviter's
Duty to Protect Invitees from Criminal Acts, supra,
134 U. Pa. L.
Rev. at 904 (outside parking lots are high risk areas for crime).
Predators such as the killer of Kathleen Dalton, go where the
prey is.
Owners of supermarkets in 1991 were surely not unaware of
these basic facts or of the fact that crime in New Jersey had
escalated drastically between 1977, when Helen Butler was
attacked, and 1991 when Kathleen Dalton was murdered. In 1977,
the total crime index in the State of New Jersey was 373,450. By
1991, the crime index had risen to 421,863. Violent crime rose
even more sharply. In 1977, it was 28,732. By 1991, violent
crime had climbed to almost 50,000. See State of New Jersey
Uniform Crime Reports (1977 and 1991). The clairvoyance of
Cassandra is not needed to foresee an attack in a supermarket
parking lot invisible from the store and in a vicinity in which
numerous crimes had occurred over the prior two and one-half
years.
Furthermore, Kathleen Dalton was a victim of carjacking, a
highly publicized criminal phenomena which emerged in the late
eighties and early nineties. The legislative history of the
federal carjacking statute of 1992 (
18 U.S.C.
§2119) reflects
the widespread public knowledge and concern about this crime.
One Congressman said "[p]eople are outraged and terrified by the
heinous carjacking epidemic currently upon us." See 138 Cong.
Rec. H11,819. Senator Lautenberg of New Jersey referred to the
"emerging problem of violent carjacking" and noted that it is
"especially prevalent in New Jersey. . . ." See 138 Cong. Rec.
S17,961. Another senator referred to carjacking as a national
problem which was "becoming more and more linked to violence - to
severe beatings, and even murder." Ibid. In 1993, New Jersey
enacted a carjacking statute. N.J.S.A. 2C:15-2. Carjacking was
made a crime of the first degree carrying a sentence of ten to
thirty years and a minimum parole ineligibility term of at least
five years. N.J.S.A. 2C:15-2(b).
A supermarket owner in an urban or suburban location can
hardly plead ignorance of this rising crescendo of virulent
violence. The supermarket here had an adjacent liquor store and
a nearby gas station which was a haven for loiterers. Some sixty
criminal offenses had occurred in or about its premises in the
two and one-half years before Kathleen Dalton's abduction and
murder. Criminal incidents on the supermarket's premises had
sharply increased from 1989 through 1991. Despite these facts,
the supermarket provided no security for its customers. If
security guards were too costly, the supermarket could have still
met "customary standards of care in the shopping center industry"
by having "periodic inspection of the parking area by store
personnel" and by providing "means of visibility of the lot from
the store through window openings." (See excerpts from security
consultant's report supra at ___ (slip op. at 5)). Instead
Foodtown did nothing!
Moreover, a reasonable inference from the discovery and the
security consultant's report is that the supermarket never made
an inquiry as to whether a security problem was present, and, if
so, what security measures should be considered. See Romaguera
v. Piccadilly Cafeterias, Inc.,
648 So.2d 1000 (La. Ct. App.
1994) (in "the modern urban environment," a business which
provides a parking lot for customers should determine whether
security is required and, if so, provide it). See also 515
Assocs. v. City of Newark,
132 N.J. 180, 189 (1993) (upheld
ordinance requiring owners of apartment houses to provide armed
security guards); Hudson Circle Service Center, Inc. v. Kearny,
70 N.J. 289, 305-311 (1976) (upheld ordinance requiring parking
lot to be supervised by a uniformed guard). In sum, the
foreseeability of criminal attack under the facts here should
have been determined at trial, not on a motion for summary
judgment.
The torts process, like the law itself, is a human
institution designed to accomplish certain social
objectives. One objective is to ensure that innocent
victims have avenues of legal redress, absent a
contrary, overriding public policy. . . . This
reflects the overarching purpose of tort law; that
wronged persons should be compensated for their
injuries and that those responsible for the wrong
should bear the cost of their tortious conduct.
Other policies underlie this fundamental purpose.
Imposing liability on defendants for their negligent
conduct discourages others from similar tortious
behavior, fosters safer products to aid our daily
tasks, vindicates reasonable conduct that has regard
for the safety of others, and, ultimately, shifts the
risk of loss and associated costs of dangerous
activities to those who should be and are best able to
bear them. Although these policies may be unevenly
reflected or imperfectly articulated in any particular
case, we strive to ensure that the application of
negligence doctrine advances the fundamental purpose of
tort law and does not unnecessarily or arbitrarily
foreclose redress based on formalisms or technicalisms.
[Id. at 254-255 (citations omitted).]
Perhaps the most singular and enduring quality of tort law
is its flexibility as it is applied to the myriad patterns of
modern day life. Tort law resists the foreclosing of "redress"
to injured parties based on "formalisms", "technicalisms" and
"chrystalline formulae" such as the prior similar criminal
incidents rule and its refinement in Ann M. The totality of the
circumstances approach best accords with the fundamental purposes
of tort law as set forth in Butler and exemplified by the "solid
and growing national trend" of authority. Sharpe v. W.H. Moore,
Inc., supra 796 P.
2d at 510.
I would reverse and remand for a trial to determine whether
the supermarket violated its duty to take reasonable precautions
for the safety of its business invitee, Kathleen Dalton, when,
despite a history of increasing and substantial criminal
activity, the supermarket provided no security for its patrons in
its parking lot and made no inquiry as to whether some form of
security was required on the "blind" side of its business
premises.
Footnote: 1See Butler, supra, 89 N.J. at 278.
Footnote: 2See also Kuzmicz v. Ivy Hill Park Apartments,
282 N.J. Super. 513, 516-17, 519-22 (App. Div.), certif. granted, 143 N.J. 322
(1995)(notice of murders and other violent crimes on adjacent
property created duty of landlord to tenants).
We note that the dissent refers to Blazovic v. Andrich,
124 N.J. 90 (1991). In Blazovic, the negligence of the restaurant-bar
defendant was asserted to arise from failure to exercise reasonable
care in disbursing alcoholic beverages to plaintiff's assailants,
as well as for failure to provide adequate lighting and security.
Id. at 94. Both plaintiff and his assailants had been patrons at
the bar. Id. at 93. The negligence asserted did not involve
failure to guard against a criminal assault unrelated to the
defendant's activities, but to an assault alleged to be
consequential to the assailants' consumption of alcohol on the
defendant's premises and defendant's failure to protect its patrons
from such foreseeable action by providing adequate parking lot
security and lighting at night.
Footnote: 3The court said:
Unfortunately, random, violent crime is endemic in today's society. It is difficult, if not impossible, to envision any locale open to the public where the occurrence of violent crime seems improbable. Upon further
reflection and in light of the increase in
violent crime, refinement of the rule
enunciated in Isaacs ... is required.
[Ann M., supra, 863 P. 2d at 215.] Footnote: 4Some of the authorities in accord are: J.C. Penny Co. v. Spivey, 452 S.E.2d 191 (Ga. Ct. App. 1994), cert. denied (1995); Taylor v. Hocker, 428 N.E.2d 662 (Ill. App. Ct. 1981); Whittaker v. Saraceno, 635 N.E.2d 1185 (Mass. 1994); K.L. v. Riverside Medical Ctr., 524 N.W.2d 300 (Minn. Ct. App. 1994); Madden v. C & K
Barbecue Carryout, Inc.,
758 S.W.2d 59 (Mo. 1988) (en banc);
Erichsen v. No-Frills Supermarkets,
518 N.W.2d 116 (Neb. 1994).
Footnote: 5See Goldberg v. Housing Auth.,
38 N.J. 578, 583 (1962).
The question whether a private party must
provide protection for another is not solved
merely by recourse to "foreseeability."
Everyone can foresee the commission of crime
virtually anywhere and at any time. If
foreseeability itself gave rise to a duty to
provide "police" protection for others, every
residential curtilage, every shop, every
store, every manufacturing plant would have to
be patrolled by the private arms of the owner.
And since hijacking and attack upon occupants
of motor vehicles are also foreseeable, it
would be the duty of every motorist to provide
armed protection for his passengers and the
property of others. Of course, none of this
is at all palatable.
The question is not simply whether a
criminal event is foreseeable, but whether a
duty exists to take measures to guard against
it. Whether a duty exists is ultimately a
question of fairness. The inquiry involves a
weighing of the relationship of the parties,
the nature of the risk, and the public
interest in the proposed solution.
[Ibid.]
Footnote: 6 The majority cites five cases as "Some of the cases in
accord (with the Ann M. analysis)". Ante at ___, (slip op. at 10).
Two of the five cases appear to adopt the totality of the
circumstances approach. Whitaker v. Saraceno,
635 N.E 2d
1185,1188 (Mass. 1994) ("All the circumstances are examined in
defining the scope of a duty of care based on the reasonable
foreseeability of harm"); Madden v. C & V Barbecue Carryout, Inc.,
758 S.W 2d 59, 62 (Mo. 1988). (Business owners are under a duty
to protect their invitees from criminal attack "depending upon the
facts and circumstances of a given case"). Two of the five cases,
J.C. Penny Co. v. Spivey, 452 S.E. 2d 191 (Ga. Ct. App. 1994) and
Taylor v. Hocker,
428 N.E 2d 662 (Ill. App. Ct. 1981) follow the
outmoded, prior similar criminal incidents rule. In addition, J.C.
Penny Co. is later criticized and not followed in Piggly Wiggly
Southern Inc. v. Snowden,
464 S.E.2d 220 (Ga. 1995). Only K.L. v.
Riverside Medical Center,
524 N.W 2d 300 (Minn. Ct. App. 1994) is
in accord with the Ann M. analysis.
Footnote: 7 The totality of the circumstances approach does not, as the
majority appears to contend, "surrender" to the jury the question
of whether a duty exists; nor have the many courts which have
adopted the totality of the circumstances "Confused the issue of
duty analysis." Ante at ___ (slip op. at 10-11). A judge will
retain the ability to determine in a given case whether the
totality of the evidence bearing on the existence of a duty is "so
one-sided that one party must prevail as a matter of law," Brill v.
Guardian Life Ins. Co. of America,
142 N.J. 520, 540 (1995) quoting
from Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Ins., 477 U.S. 242 at 250, 106 S. Ct. 2505 at 2512 and 91 L.Ed.2d 202 at 214. Here the evidence is clearly not "so one-sided" and the motion for summary judgment should not have been granted.