delivered the Opinion of the Court.
Wе granted certiorari to review the court of appeals decision in
Davenport v. Community Corrections of the Pikes Peak Region, Inc.,
I.
Community Corrections of the Pikes Peak Region, Inc. (Pikes Peak), is a private nonprofit corporation that operates a community corrections facility in Colorado Springs pursuant to a contract with the Division of Criminal Justice of the Colorado Department of Public Safety. Offenders housed at Pikes Peak are required to maintain steady employment, undergo random drug and alcohol testing, pay rent on a weekly basis, and attend budgeting classes. Pikes Peak participants are only permitted to leave the facility for work, job searching, or pursuant to a valid curfew, weekend, church, overnight, or furlough pass.
On April 21, 1988, Fred Rutledge was sentenced directly to community corrections for eight years after being convicted of second degree burglary. As a condition of his sentence, Rutledge was ordered to undergo treatment for alcohol abuse. Rutledge was admitted to Pikes Peak on April 28, 1988. On several occasions during his eight and one-half month stay at Pikes Peak, Rutledge violated rules pertaining to the administration оf the facility. Specifically, Rutledge (1) was late signing in; (2) failed to take anta-buse on three occasions; 1 (3) failed two drug tests; (4) twice tested positive for alcohol; 2 and (5) was involved in a careless driving incident. Although these offenses were classified by Pikes Peak as major offenses which could, depending upon the severity and circumstances of the offense, result in notification to the sentencing judge, the sentеncing judge was never notified.
On January 14, 1989, Rutledge was permitted to leave Pikes Peak on a weekend pass. Rutledge went to the house of Eric Davenport, a friend and former resident at Pikes Peak. At the house, Rutledge and Davenport began drinking beer. Later, they left in Rutledge’s car, which Rutledge drove. 3 After stopping at a liquor store, Rutledge drove at a high rate of speed and rolled the automobile. Davenрort suffered permanent debilitating injuries in the accident. 4 Rutledge was arrested and charged with vehicular assault, reckless driving, driving under the influence, driving with excessive alcohol content, driving with an expired temporary registration, and driving without compulsory insurance. Rutledge was subsequently terminated from the Pikes Peak program.
On July 13, 1990, Davenport sued Pikes Peak for negligent supervision of Rutledge. In responding to the complaint, Pikes Peak designated Rutledge as a non-party at fault pursuant to section 13-21-111.5, 6A C.R.S. (1987). On March 20, 1992, Pikes Peak filed a motion for summary judgment, asserting that Pikes Peak owed no legal duty to Davenport as a matter of law. The trial court denied the motion, concluding that “there is a duty upon entities such as [Pikes Peak] to exercise reasonable care to protect members of the public from harm caused by persons” in their custody.
Following a trial, the jury found Pikes Peak ninety percent at fault for Davenport’s *966 injuries and allocated the remaining ten percent of fault to Rutledge. No fault was assigned to Davenport. The jury then assessed economic damages at $435,000, disfigurement damages at $10,000, and non-economic damages at $1,468,000. After reducing the assessed non-economic damages to $250,000 pursuant to section 13-21-102.5, 6A C.R.S. (1987), the trial court еntered judgment for Davenport against Pikes Peak in the amount of $625,500, representing ninety percent of the total damages assessed.
The court of appeals reversed, concluding as a matter of law that Pikes Peak owed no duty to protect Davenport from Rutledge’s conduct. Specifically, the court of appeals determined that the statutes governing community corrections did not impose a statutory duty on Pikes Peak to protect members of the public from offenders participating in the program. Additionally, the court of appeals concluded that Pikes Peak owed no common law duty to protect Davenport from Rutledge’s conduct. Because it determined that no duty existed, the court of appeals remanded the case to the trial court with directions to dismiss Davenрort’s complaint.
II.
To recover on a claim of negligence, the plaintiff must establish the existence of a legal duty on the part of the defendant, breach of that duty by the defendant, causation, and damages.
See Observatory Cory. v. Daly,
In this case, Davenport challenges the court of appeals’ decision as it relates to two different issues concerning Pikes Peak’s duty. We address each issue separately.
A. Statutory Duty
Davenport argues that the legislative scheme authorizing community corrections supports the imposition of a duty of care on Pikes Peak. We disаgree.
A legally imposed duty of care may be derived from a legislative enactment.
See Leake v. Cain,
Section 17-27-101, 8A C.R.S. (1989 Supp.), in effect at the time of the accident, provides as follows:
(1) It is the purpose of this аrticle to encourage flexibility in the development of community correctional facilities and programs by the department, units of local government, and nongovernmental agencies and to encourage the use of such facilities and programs by sentencing courts. It is the further purpose of this article to provide a procedure through which units of local government and nongovernmental аgencies may provide adult services to the department and to sentencing courts.
(2) It is the intent of the general assembly that community correctional facilities and programs be used to protect the public safety by serving the following purposes:
(a) With respect to offenders sentenced to community corrections by the courts, to provide a sentencing option and to increase the рotential for victim restitution and offender access to rehabilitation programs;
(b) With respect to offenders transferred to community corrections by the department of corrections for long-term placement, to provide the least restrictive and least expensive custodial setting for such offenders;
(c) With respect to other offenders transferred to community corrections by the department of corrections for short-term, prerelease placement, to provide programs to effectuate the reintegration of such offenders into the community and to *967 ensure that such offenders have the opportunity for transitional community placement before their release from custody.
Additionally, section 17-27-114(1), 8A C.R.S. (1986), provided that,
[wjhere the administrator of a community correctional facility ... has cause to believe that an offender placed in a community correctional facility has violated any rule or condition of his placement in that facility ... or cannot be safely housed in that facility, the administrator ... shall certify to the appropriate judicial or executive authority the facts which are the basis for his belief and execute a transfer order ... to transport the offender to the county jail in the county in which the facility is located where he shall be confined pending a determination by the appropriate court or executive authorities as to whether or not the offender shall remain in community corrections.
The legislative scheme authorizing the use of community corrections explicitly provides that one of its goals is to promote public safеty.
See
§ 17-27-101(2). Contrary to Davenport’s arguments, however, the community corrections statutes are not designed to protect the public from the immediate threat posed by participating offenders.
5
Instead, community corrections promote long-term public safety by gradually reintegrating the offender into society using nontraditional rehabilitation techniques.
See
§ 17-27-101(2);
Wilson v. People,
The community corrections statutes do not create a class of persons requiring legislative protection and offer no indication that, in authorizing the use of community corrections, the General Assembly sought to prevent injuries such as Davenport’s.
See Leake,
B. Common Law Duty
Davenport also argues that Pikes Peak owed him a common law duty to protect him from Rutledge’s misconduct. We disagree.
Where a person should reasonably foresee that his act, or failure to act, will involve an unreasonable risk of harm to another, there is a duty to avoid such harm.
See Leake,
Whether a special relationship exists between Pikes Peak and Rutledge depends, in large part, upon the level of control exercised by Pikes Peak over its residents.
See Perreira,
Furthermore, there is no special relationship between Pikes Peak and Davenport because Davenport did not depend upon Pikes Peak to alert him of the known and obvious dangers associated with riding in Rutledge’s car after both men had been drinking.
See
Restatement (Second)' of Torts § 314 A cmt. b (1965) (dependence is a basis for recognition of a special relationship);
see also Mile Hi Concrete, Inc. v. Matz,
While it is foreseeable that reintroducing convicted criminals into the community will result in some aberrant behavior, the dangers associated with community сorrections in general are insufficient to establish the requisite foreseeability needed to impose a duty of care.
See Henderson v. Gunther,
On a more general level, there is a high degree of social utility associated with community corrections programs such as Pikes Peak. Community corrections are state-funded community-based programs designed to divert offenders from correctional facilities and reintegrate incarcerated offenders into society.
See People v. Abdul,
[c]ommunity corrections programs utilize a variety of means, including halfway houses and work release programs, to enable offenders to reside in the community. The basic objective of such programs is “to limit confinement to the extent necessary to assure reasonable supervision while per *969 mitting a gradual reintegration of the offender into the society to which the offender would eventually return.”
Wilson,
Imposing an actionable duty in this case would have wide-ranging practical consequences in the community corrections system. Clearly, each offender sent to community corrections poses a potential danger to the public because the offender has engaged in criminal behavior in the past and is likely to have a substance abuse problem.
8
See Martinez v. California,
After considering each of the factors used to determine whether a defendant owes a common law duty to prevent a third person from harming the plaintiff, we hold that the court of appeals correctly ruled as a matter of law that Pikes Peak owed Davenport no duty to protect him from Rutledge’s misconduct.
III.
The decision of the court of appeals is affirmed.
Notes
. Antabuse contains the drug disulfiram, which produces a severe adversе physical reaction when mixed with alcohol. Antabuse is used to create an aversion to alcohol in the treatment of chronic alcoholism.
. One of the two tests revealed that Rutledge’s blood alcohol content was 0.27. On the night of that test, Rutledge apparently drove himself and two other residents back to Pikes Peak following a disagreement with his ex-wife. Following an administrative hearing, Rutledge was plаced on fourteen days' disciplinary restriction, ordered to perform ten hours of extra duty, and lost seven days of good time credit.
. Prior to being allowed to drive a vehicle, offenders housed at Pikes Peak had to obtain driving authorization. This process required production of a valid license, driving record, ownership information, and proof of insurance. Although Rutledge had received authorization from Pikes Peak to drive three separate vehicles, the vehicle Rutledge was driving on the night in question was apparently not authorized by Pikes Peak.
. Following the accident, Rutledge had a blood alcohol content of 0.141.
. In fact, placing offenders in the "least restrictive and least expensive custodial setting” seemingly places the public in more immediate danger than the restrictive and cosily option of placing offenders in prison. See § 17-27-101 (2)(b).
. The difference between misfeasance and non-feasance has been summarized as follows:
In determining whether a defendant owes a duty to a particular plaintiff, the law has long recognized a distinction between action and a failure to act — "that is to say, between active misconduct working positive injury to others [misfeasance] and passive inaction or а failure to take steps to protect them from harm [non-feasance].” ... "The reason for the distinction may be said to lie in the fact that by ‘misfeasance’ the defendant has created a new risk of harm to the plaintiff, while by ‘nonfea-sance’ he has at least madé his situation no worse, and has merely failed to benefit him by interfering in his affairs.”
Whitlock,
. One commentator has explained that in 1993, it cost an average of $19,118.70 tо confine one person in jail for a year. See Branham, supra at 403. Conversely, the commentator explains that
[i]f offenders are punished in the community rather than incarcerated, they can, if employed, retain their jobs and continue work-ing_ [Tjhere are economic benefits — to taxpayers, to victims, and to the families of offenders. Offenders who work add, through the payment of taxes, money to the public coffers. They are also better able to pay restitution to the victims of their crimes. And they can continue to financially support their families, instead of having the taxpayers support them through welfare payments.
Id. at 407.
. Steven Gilmore, the director of operations at Pikes Peak, testified that approximately eighty-five percent of offenders participating in the Pikes Peak diversion program have some level of substance abuse problem.
