OPINION
This is an appeal from a summary judgment entered by the Jefferson Circuit Court dismissing appellant April Brack’s negligence claim against appellee Wayne L. Thompson. After Thompson left the ignition key in an unlocked track on his driveway, a thief took the vehicle, drove negligently and injured Brack. For the reasons stated hereafter, we affirm.
On August 25, 2001, Thompson was working on his 1987 Ford F-150 truck, which was parked in his private driveway. Between 2:30 and 3:00 p.m., Thompson left home in another vehicle. Upon his return home between 5:00 and 6:30 p.m., his truck was missing. After verifying that none of his sons had borrowed the track, Thompson reported it as stolen to the police.
Meanwhile, at about 4:00 p.m. that same day, Brack attempted to cross Dixie Highway on foot. While standing in the center median after crossing two lanes, Brack was struck by a Ford F-150 track which narrowly missed her two companions. The truck continued onto the Gene Snyder Parkway and the driver was never identified. Brack, who suffered injuries to her head, arm and back, was treated and released that evening from the University Hospital. The police found Thompson’s Ford F-150 track abandoned on the Greenbelt Highway the next morning. With the help of witnesses to the accident, the police identified the vehicle as being the truck that hit Brack.
The record discloses that during his absence from home on August 25, Thompson left his unlocked truck in his driveway with the ignition key on the floorboard. The record indicates that Thompson had a car stolen from his property thirty years earli *766 er, and that his home had been burglarized at least twice prior to January 1982.
The Jefferson Circuit Court relied on
Frank v. Ralston,
A party moving for summary judgment in a negligence case is entitled to judgment as a matter of law if the moving party shows that (1) it is impossible for the non-moving party to produce any evidence in the non-moving party’s favor on one or more of the issues of fact,
2
(2) under undisputed facts, the moving party owed no duty to the non-moving party, or (3) as a matter of law, any breach of a duty owed to the non-moving party was not the proximate cause of the non-moving party’s injuries.
Pathways, Inc. v. Hammons,
Ky.,
Based on
Isaacs v. Smith,
Ky.,
Here, Brack contends that the risk of theft and her injuries were foreseeable because Thompson left the keys in his unlocked truck on his driveway even though he had a car stolen from that property thirty years earlier, his home was burglarized twice before 1982, he lived in an urban area, he did not know his neighbors, and the yearly rate of car thefts in America has risen from 300,000 in 1960 to 1.2 million in 2000.
4
Brack cites
Ney v. Yellow Cab Co.,
Even if we assume, however, that Thompson breached his duty of care and that it was foreseeable that his track would be stolen, the thief s negligence constituted a superseding cause of Brack’s injury. In Kentucky, a “superseding cause is an independent force” which breaks the chain of causation and relieves the original actor from liability.
NKC Hospitals, Inc. v. Anthony,
Ky.App.,
In
NEC Hospitals,
1) an act or event that intervenes between the original act and the injury;
2) the intervening act or event must be of independent origin, unassociated with the original act;
3) the intervening act or event must, itself, be capable of bringing about the injury;
4) the intervening act or event must not have been reasonably foreseeable by the original actor;
5) the intervening act or event involves the unforeseen negligence of a third party [one other than the first party original actor or the second party plaintiff] or the intervention of a natural force;
6) the original act must, in itself, be a substantial factor in causing the injury, not a remote cause.
In this case, the original action was the leaving of the key in the car, and the intervening act was the negligent driving of the thief. All the factors indicate that the thief s intervening action, i.e., his negligent driving, was. a superseding cause, which was not reasonably foreseeable. Thus, the leaving of the key in the truck was a negligent act which merely created a condition.
Courts in other jurisdictions that have addressed this issue as it relates to vehicles taken from private property have similarly held that the owners of such vehicles are not hable for the actions of negligent thieves. See
Hensler v. Renn,
In the present case, the evidence that Thompson did not know his neighbors and that he lived in an urban neighborhood did not constitute a special circumstance. Moreover, a car theft 30 years earlier did not establish a pattern of thefts such that Thompson was on notice that another theft was imminent. Thus, no special circumstance existed which provided Thompson with sufficient notice that a theft was likely to occur. Further, the thiefs negligence was an independent unforeseeable act which intervened between Thompson’s act in leaving the key in an unlocked truck on his driveway and Brack’s injuries. That intervening act was a superseding cause which relieved Thompson of liability. We conclude, therefore, that the circuit court properly held that it would be impossible for Brack to produce evidence at trial warranting a judgment in her favor.
Hubble v. Johnson,
Ky.,
The judgment of the Jefferson Circuit Court is affirmed.
ALL CONCUR.
Notes
. Although
Frank
is not controlling in Kentucky, it is persuasive. See
Embs v. Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co.,
Ky.,
.
Steelvest, Inc. v. Scansteel Service Center Inc.,
Ky.,
. In
McCoy v. Carter,
Ky.,
. Federal Bureau of Investigation, <http:// www.fbi.gov/ucr/00cius.htm>.
. In fact, the holdings in
Anderson
and
Sullivan
both support Thompson’s argument that, notwithstanding the violation of the statute/ordinance, the thief's negligent driving was the proximate cause of the injury, and any negligence of the owner in leaving keys in the car was too remote.
Sullivan,
318 Mass, at 361-62,
. Similarly, courts in other jurisdictions have denied recovery to the victim based on the theory that even though the car owner's violation of the key-in-ignition statute was evidence of negligence
per se,
it was not the proximate cause of the accident, having been superseded by the intervening criminal activity of the intermeddler.
See, e.g., Lambotte v. Payton,
. In
Hensler,
the court upheld summary judgment in favor of the vehicle owner notwithstanding that the privately owned convenience store was in a high crime area and heavily trafficked. The court held that the facts did not amount to "special circumstances” placing a duty on the owner to remove his keys from the ignition.
. Illustration 2 under Restatement (Second) of Torts § 302B, comment d in essence sets forth the facts of the instant case with the conclusion that the vehicle owner is not negligent.
