Appellant, Marilyn Bruno, sustained serious injuries during a robbery inside appel-lee Apex Petroleum’s gas station, and thereafter sued Apex, Western Union, and First Data Corp. for negligence. 1 The trial court granted the motions of Western Union and First Data for summary judgment, and subsequently granted appellee Apex’s renewed motion for summary judgment. Appellant now appeals these decisions, arguing that the trial court erred by finding that the assault that caused her injuries was not foreseeable and ruling that Apex was not the actual or apparent agent of Western Union. We affirm.
I.
In this case, we are confronted with the consequences of a violent crime. The appellant suffered serious physical and psychological injuries in a vicious robbery. At her deposition, appellant gave a detailed account of the events leading to her injuries, which we accept as accurate for the purposes of this appeal. On June 13, 2000, appellant went to a gas station owned by Apex at 2830 Sherman Avenue in Northwest Washington, D.C., to send money via a Western Union Wire transfer to her daughter, who was in urgent need of money. Appellant had initially called Western Union and asked if she could perform the transfer over the telephone with a credit card; she was told that the transfer could be made only by reporting to a Western Union service center with cash in hand. The Western Union telephone representative first directed appellant to a video store located one street away from appellant’s residence in the Logan Circle area of Washington, D.C. 2 Appellant called the video store and found that it was closed. She therefore called Western Union again and was referred to Apex’s gas station on Sherman Avenue. According to appellant’s deposition testimony:
And this time I was put on hold while the Western Union woman called that station, got back on with me and said, Olu is waiting for you. ■ He can give you directions on how to get there. He’s waiting for your call. Here’s his name and number.
Appellant next called and confirmed with Olu Ogundimu, an employee of Apex, that the station was open and that he would be able to process the $700 transfer to her daughter.
Appellant arrived at Apex at approximately 9:30 p.m. and immediately identified herself to the Apex employees who were on duty behind a plexiglass window. 3 Despite appellant’s earlier conver *716 sation with Ogundimu, he did not have the forms ready when she arrived and took some ten minutes to find them. As appellant continued to wait, she noticed a person in the corner of the store, twelve to fifteen feet away, staring fixedly at her. While she felt “[v]ery concerned” about her safety, she did not bring it to the attention of the two Apex employees in the enclosure because she thought it would be “impolite” and because she “was trying to be very inconspicuous and hope[d] that this was going to be over soon.” She also noted that Olu “fanned out [the] seven hundred dollar bills” she gave him while “looking over at this guy in the corner.” Although she was becoming increasingly uneasy, appellant “didn’t want to be confrontational in any way with anybody.... [She] did not want to provoke.”
During this time, appellant had her brief case over her shoulder, but had twisted the strap around her arm. Approximately fifteen minutes after she entered the store, with Ogundimu still processing her transfer, appellant felt someone grab her bag with such force that she was flung against a cement wall. Appellant screamed and implored bystanders, who included Ogun-dimu and another employee, to help her, but no one intervened. While appellant was willing to give the bag to her attacker, she could not extricate herself from the strap. Finally, the strap on the bag broke, and the assailant escaped through the door. In the meantime, Ogundimu had called 911, and police and EMS arrived on the scene. Despite her injuries, appellant would not leave for the emergency room until she received a receipt indicating that the funds had been successfully transferred, a process that took until 11:30 p.m. To date, the assailant has not been identified or apprehended.
Appellant testified at a deposition about the extent of the injuries she sustained in the assault. The fingertip on the middle finger of her right hand was “ripped off ... about half an inch, three quarters of an inch down,” and was “ultimately stitched back on.” She also suffered extensive lacerations to her left arm where she had been holding her briefcase, a broken front tooth, and neck injuries. In addition, both of appellant’s eyes were injured in the attack and as a result, she suffered from frequent headaches, visual deficiencies, vertigo, and repeated surgeries. She described the injuries to her eyes “as a major, major life-changing problem.” After the attack, appellant experienced nightmares, nervousness, and “acute fear,” and she has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder. Appellant also testified that her career as a Foreign Service Officer with the Department of State has suffered as a result of the attack because she has not been “functioning at peak performance.” Following discovery, Western Union and First Data 4 filed a motion for summary judgment, asserting that no material facts refuted their claim that Apex was not First Data or Western Union’s agent and that even if such an *717 agency relationship existed, appellant could not recover because appellant’s injuries were caused by the criminal act of a third party that was not foreseeable to the defendants. Apex then filed its own summary judgment motion based on the un-foreseeability of the third-party robbery and assault. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Western Union and First Data, ruling that no agency relationship existed between Western Union and Apex and that the assault by a third party was not foreseeable to Western Union and First Data. However, the trial court did not immediately grant Apex’s summary judgment motion, but it gave appellant additional time to obtain documentation from the Metropolitan Police Department regarding Apex’s ability to foresee the incident. The deadline for appellant to supplement her opposition to the motion passed without any additional filings, and on December 15, 2005, the trial court granted Apex’s motion for summary judgment.
II.
On appeal, Ms. Bruno argues: (1) the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in appellees’ favor because the criminal assault she suffered was foreseeable to appellees, and (2) a principal-agent relationship exists between Western Union and Apex Petroleum, and Western Union is vicariously liable for the negligence of Apex, its agent. We affirm the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of appellees on the issue of foreseeability, and as a result, we do not reach appellant’s second argument.
A. Standard of Review
“In reviewing a trial court order granting a summary judgment motion, we conduct an independent review of the record, and our standard of review is the same as the trial court’s standard in considering the motion for summary judgment.”
Critckell v. Critchell,
The judgment sought shall be rendered forthwith if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Super. Ct. Civ. R. 56(c). “[O]ne who moves for summary judgment has the burden of demonstrating clearly the absence of any genuine issue of fact, and any doubt as to the existence of such an issue is resolved against the movant.”
Doolin v. Environmental Power Ltd.,
*718 B. Foreseeability of the Criminal Assault
To prevail in a negligence cause of action, a plaintiff must prove “ ‘the applicable standard of care, a deviation from that standard by the defendant, and a causal relationship between that deviation and the plaintiffs injury.’ ”
Evans-Reid v. District of Columbia,
When a plaintiff is injured by an intervening criminal act of a third party, liability is dependent “ ‘upon a more heightened showing of foreseeability than would be required if the act were merely negligent.’ ”
Beretta, supra,
Here, the combination of factors relied upon by appellant is insufficient to establish that appellees had increased awareness of the danger of the particular criminal act that underlies this litigation. Appellant presented evidence of only two specific crimes that occurred at the gas station prior to the assault against her. First, a police report indicates that an assault involving a handgun occurred on April 26, 1998, two years prior to the assault in this case. The officer who completed the form report indicated that the assault took place “in front of’ the “customer area,” leaving blank a box on the form that would have so indicated if the crime took place inside the gas station. Second, another report indicates that a theft occurred a few months prior to the attack upon appellant. This theft amounted to the snatching of cash and credit card receipts from a cigar box while the attending employee was in the restroom. 6 There was no evidence that *719 any offense in the nature of an assault had occurred previously inside the gas station.
We are not persuaded by appellant’s contention that this case is governed by
Viands, supra,
We find guidance in cases which, unlike the one before us, involved the use of weapons.
See Potts, supra,
Similarly, in
Bailey, supra,
In
Potts, supra,
a case in which the plaintiffs were shot as they were leaving a boxing match held at the Washington Convention Center (“WCC”) and sponsored by Spencer Promotions, Inc., we also affirmed the grant of summary judgment to the defendants, noting that the plaintiffs had not proffered “evidence of any prior gun-related violence at any other event held at the WCC or promoted by Spencer Promotions!.]”
By way of contrast, the plaintiffs in
District of Columbia v. Doe
prevailed in meeting the heightened foreseeability standard. The plaintiffs in
Doe
were a ten-year-old girl who attended a District of Columbia public school and her next friend, her mother.
crimes against persons in and around the school- — an arson in the school and a robbery on the school’s playground; sexual assaults and other violent activity in the surrounding area; and deficient school security — the open rear gate, broken doors, malfunctioning intercom, and presence of adult males who freely roamed throughout the school.
Id.
at 34. In
Beretta, supra,
First, in other invitor-invitee cases similar to this one, we have distinguished
Doe
based on the relationship between school officials and young children in that case.
See Clement, supra,
Although the instant case does not concern a criminal act involving a firearm, as did Clement, Bailey, and Potts, the evidence here, as in those cases, fails to show that appellees had an increased awareness of the likelihood that this particular act would take place. The prior crimes at the gas station are remote from or dissimilar to the robbery in this case. As stated above, the one previous assault took place outside the gas station, two years prior to the robbery in this case. It also occurred one and one-half years before Apex purchased the gas station and nine months before Western Union signed its contract with Apex. Likewise, and as in Clement, supra, the previous “snatching” of money from the cigar box was a nonviolent offense that would not have placed appellees on notice that a customer would be assaulted during a robbery.
Appellant also argues that the attack upon her was foreseeable because of the “inherent danger of standing in line for an extended period at a location with a large sum of money,” but cites no persuasive authority that a business owed her a heightened obligation under the circumstances present in this case.
See Nigido, supra.
This court expressed a different view in sustaining a verdict directed on opening statement in the somewhat similar situation of a customer injured as a result of a purse snatching in a supermarket in a high-crime area.
Cook v. Safeway Stores, Inc.,
The record suggests that the assault against appellant was committed by a loiterer; however, there is no evidence that loiterers had ever caused or attempted to cause physical harm to customers of the gas station in the past. Therefore, appellant has not made a persuasive showing that the prior crimes or the presence of the loiterers gave appellees a “heightened or increased awareness of the danger of this particular criminal act.”
Clement, supra,
For the foregoing reasons, the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of appellees is affirmed.
So ordered.
Notes
. Appellant's complaint contains three substantive counts against each named defendant: (1) failure to provide reasonable and necessary security measures; (2) negligent failure to warn; and (3) gross negligence. She also sought punitive damages from each appellee for willful and wanton conduct.
. At the time of the attack, appellant lived on 13th Street, N.W., between N and O Streets.
. The Apex gas station is located within two miles of where appellant lived at the time of the attacks. " ‘Judicial notice may be taken at any time, including on appeal.' ”
Robert Siegel, Inc. v. District of Columbia,
. According to appellant’s complaint, First Data "is the parent corporation and/or corporate successor of Defendant Western Union, and Defendant Western Union is a subsidiary of First Data.”
. In
Viands,
the Municipal Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia held that a store owner has a duty to protect customers from foreseeable dangers while they are in the store and also while they are "using the exit doorway and the approach thereto!.]”
Viands v. Safeway Stores, Inc.,
. Olu Ogundimu, one of the Apex employees who was working on the night of the robbery, was impeached at his deposition by statements that he made to an investigator. Ogun-dimu admitted that he told the investigator that in 2000, there were security cameras at the gas station but “those boys that were hanging around outside [the station] took *719 away the camera and broke it.” Appellant asserts that the security camera at the gas station was stolen three months before the robbery.
. In appropriate circumstances, a victim of crime may file a claim under the Victims of Violent Crime Compensation Act, D.C.Code § 4-501 et seq. (2001), for medical expenses, loss of income and other specified economic loss.
