Myles M. Mattenson
ATTORNEY AT LAW 5550 Topanga Canyon Blvd. Suite 200 Woodland Hills, California 91367 Telephone (818) 313-9060 Facsimile (818) 313-9260 Email: MMM@MattensonLaw.com Web: http://www.MattensonLaw.com |
You Are Assaulted In A Parking Area Where No Security Is Provided. Is The Landlord Liable? |
|
|
You Are Assaulted In A Parking Area A recent decision of the Court of Appeal in California suggests that a landlord's liability for an assault upon a tenant's employee or customer in a parking area may depend, among other factors, upon whether parking is provided in a parking structure or an uncovered surface parking lot. The Court considered the claim of a female plaintiff who alleged that she was attacked and sexually assaulted at gunpoint in a subterranean parking garage in a commercial office building located on South Beverly Drive in Los Angeles, California. The plaintiff alleged that she entered the building's underground parking garage at about 11:00 a.m. and parked in her assigned space. When she exited the vehicle, a man in a ski mask, pointing a gun at her, approached. The woman was forced back into the car and sexually assaulted. It was also charged that there were darkened areas of the garage and that lights were out in the immediate area of her parking space. The woman claimed she never saw any employees of the landlord monitoring or inspecting the garage and that after the attack, she learned that the security cameras in the garage had not been working for months. The plaintiff also submitted evidence of "various crimes in the surrounding neighborhood, including a number of robberies in a bank located above the parking garage . . . ." The court noted that a subterranean parking garage or parking structure can invite acts of theft and vandalism because "numerous tempting targets (car stereos, car contents, the cars themselves) are displayed for the thief. High walls, low ceilings and the absence of the cars' owners allow the thief or vandal to work in privacy and give him time to complete his task. Such circumstances increase the likelihood of criminal misconduct. In addition, the deserted, labyrinthine nature of the structures, especially at night, makes them likely places for robbers and rapists to lie and wait." As a result of such increased likelihood of crime, the court determined that parking structures are inherently dangerous and further observed that they "are not policed except to the extent that those parties making a profit from their operation can be persuaded to do so." Because parking structures are considered inherently dangerous, violet crime is foreseeable by the landlord. Since such conduct is foreseeable, the landlord must take steps to provide security, or face liability arising out of the failure to do so if injury results. In considering the potential liability of the landlord, the court specifically stated that "we do not include single-level, uncovered surface parking lots because their physical characteristics do not present the level of danger . . . which is inherent in a covered parking garage." The court thus did not change existing law regarding surface parking lots which requires the demonstration of prior similar incidents of violent crime upon the landlord's premises to establish liability. A duty will be imposed upon the landlord to provide parking area security for surface lots only when physical violence is sufficiently foreseeable. If there has not been a prior incident, physical violence is arguably not foreseeable. Finally, the court concludes "Absent sufficient and desirable mass transit, parking garages are, and will continue to be, as common as vehicles themselves. They are entrenched part of our lives, whether in shopping malls, educational institutions, sports facilities, government complexes, or the work environment. The need for such facilities can hardly be avoided, especially given California's love affair with the automobile and its lack of effective mass transportation. Therefore, they should be made to be both functional and safe. However, as they are located on private property, they are not routinely, or even sporadically, patrolled by the police. It must be the responsibility of the owners and operators of commercial parking garages or structures to make them reasonably safe for use by tenants and visitors. Public policy dictates that persons who profit from owning or managing facilities, which by their very nature create . . . [a] temptation and opportunity for criminal conduct,' should supply at least the minimal amount of security warranted under the particular circumstances of the case. As for the economic consequences of such a duty of care, there is no evidence that the cost of providing sufficient protection cannot reasonably be passed on to the persons who utilize the parking garage . . . . The `cost' of parking should include its entire cost, including reasonable security measures." The message of the story? Be careful where you park your automobile. Don't place yourself or your possessions at risk by parking in a dark corner of a parking structure. Better to be uninjured and happy, than to be emotionally or physically scarred and entitled to pursue a lawsuit against the landlord! [This column is intended to provide general information only and is not intended to provide specific legal advice; if you have a specific question regarding the law, you should contact an attorney of your choice. Suggestions for topics to be discussed in this column are welcome.] Reprinted from New Era Magazine Myles M. Mattenson © 1997-2002 |