for the Court:
¶ 1. “It is basic tort law that before one can be found negligent he must owe a duty to the injured party.”
¶ 2. On aрpeal, we find Hunter Oaks’ alleged failure to act can only support a claim of breach of duty if Hunter Oaks owed Doe a duty to act. And because Hunter Oaks had neither an existing duty nor a voluntarily assumed duty to control the conduct of Doe’s assailant outside its premises, we affirm the grant of summary judgment in favor of Hunter Oaks.
Background
¶ 3. Hunter Oaks lеased an-apartment to Joe Beard and his mother. Joe’s brother, Matthew Beard, though not on the lease, often stayed with Joe in the apartment. Apparently the Beard brothers were part of a group of loiterers who lived in “the back” of Hunter Oaks. They were also frequent trespassers on Shadowbrook’s proрerty, accessing the property through a hole in Shadowbrook’s wooden fence that separated the two apartment complexes. According to Doe, she complained to Hunter Oaks’ property manager, Lee Reese, about the trespassers and their drug activity on Shadowbrook’s property. Whеn Doe described the trespassers, Reese identified the Beard brothers as part of the group. Reese purportedly told Doe, “I’m going to take care of that; I’m cleaning up the riff-raff.” Based on this representation, Doe asserts she believed Reese meant Hunter Oaks was going to evict Joe.
¶ 4. A month later, Doe аgain spoke to Reese about the trespassers. Doe claimed Shadowbrook had just repaired the fence, only for the hole to immediately reappear. When Doe again complained to Reese about the fence, Reese assured her not to worry because Hunter Oaks was “getting rid of’ the troublemakers.
¶ 5. The day before the assault, one of the trespassers came onto Shadowbrook’s property. He entered Doe’s office and asked if he could use her restroom. Doe thought he had an ulterior motive because he acted suspiciously and immediately left when one of the groundskeepers entered the office. Believing the trespasser had
¶ 6. Doe sued Hunter Oaks for negligence.
¶ 7. Doe timely appealed.
Standard of Review
¶ 8. We review grants of summary judgment de novo, employing the same standard as the trial court. If all evidence before the court, viewed in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, shows the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law, summary judgment should be granted. M.R.C.P. 56(c); Clark v. Moore Mem’l United Methodist Church,
¶ 9. The circuit court granted summary judgment, finding, as a matter of law, Hunter Oaks owed no duty to Doe. Whether a duty exists in a negligence case is a question of law to be determined by the court, not a question of fact for the jury. Kimbrough v. Keenum,
Discussion
¶ 10. No one disputes Matthew assaulted Doe and caused her injuries.
¶ 11. Hunter Oaks certainly did not have an existing duty to control Matthew or protect Doe from Matthew’s criminal acts, which did not occur on Hunter Oaks’ premises. But Doe argues Hunter Oaks, nonethelеss, assumed a duty through Reese’s promises to clean up “the riff-raff” from Hunter Oaks’ property and to repair the fence.
¶ 12. “Common law traditionally has not imposed a broad duty upon individuals to control the conduct of others.” Warren ex rel. Warren v. Glascoe,
There is no duty so to cоntrol the conduct of a third person as to prevent him from causing physical harm to another unless
(a) a special relation exists between the actor and the third person which imposes a duty upon the actor to control the third person’s conduct, or
(b) a special relation exists between the actor and the other which gives to the other a right to protection.
Neither such relationship existed here.
A. No Special Relationship Between Hunter Oaks and Matthew
¶ 13. In Mississippi, only those who “take charge” of a third party have the duty to control that third party’s criminal acts. Doe v. State ex rel. Miss. Dept. of Corr.,
¶ 14. In Doe v. State, a rape victim sought to hold the Mississippi Department of Corrections (MDOC) liable because her attacker was a state parolee. But the Mississippi Supreme Court noted it was “a naive fiction to say parole officers have control over felons who are free on parole.” Id. Here, while Hunter Oaks’ manager said he was “taking care” of the trespassing problem and “getting rid” of the Beard brothers, Hunter Oaks did not have the ability to control Matthew’s actions. Hunter Oaks could have evicted Joe and instructed Matthew to stay off Hunter Oaks’ property. Yet it had no ability to control where Matthew went after he left Hunter Oaks’ property. Nor did it have the ability to prevent him from committing a crime off Hunter Oaks’ property. Drawing from Doe v. State, if the MDOC does not have the level of control over its parolees to impose liability for their criminal acts, Hunter Oaks, the mеre landlord of Matthew’s brother, certainly did not have the requisite control to impose a duty upon the complex.
B. No Special Relationship Between Hunters Oaks and Doe
¶ 15. While not exclusive, the Restatement specifically lists four special relationships that give rise to a right of protection from a third party’s actions: (1) a common carrier and its passengers, (2) an innkeеper and his guests, (3) a landowner and his invitees, and (4) a custodian (such as a jailer or schoolteacher) and a person who is deprived “of his normal opportunities for protection” (such as a prisoner or kindergartner). Restatement (Second) of Torts § 314A (1965). Hunter Oaks was in none of those relationships with Doe.
¶ 16. Hunter Oaks is a lаndowner. And as such, it “owes a duty to exercise reasonable care to protect the invitee from reasonably foreseeable injuries at the hands of another.” Simpson v. Boyd,
¶ 18. Like Kimbrough, in addition to not controlling Matthew, Hunter Oaks had no control over Shadowbrook, where the assаult occurred. So Hunter Oaks was not in a special landowner-invitee relationship giving rise to a duty to protect Doe.
II. When a Legal Duty Is Assumed
¶ 19. Doe argues that, while no duty arose out of a special relationship between Hunter Oaks and Matthew or Hunter Oaks and Doe, Hunter Oaks assumed a duty. Doe claims Hunter Oaks assumed a duty to evict Joe and keep the Beards off both Hunter Oaks’ and Shadow-brook’s property when Reese assured Doe he was going to “get [the Beards] off the property” and “take care of the problem.” And by once repairing the hole in Shadow-brook’s fence, Doe claims Hunter Oaks assumed the duty to maintain the fence to keep its tenants from accessing Shadow-brook’s property. But Doe fails to show detrimental reliance on Reese’s promises — a requirement for a gratuitous promise to create a legal duty — or that preventing Matthew from assaulting Doe off Hunter Oaks’ premises fell within the scope of any promise undertaken by Reese.
A. No Detrimental Reliance
¶ 20. A duty can be assumed either by contract or by a gratuitous promise that induces detrimental reliance. Doe ex. rel Doe v. Wright Sec. Servs., Inc.,
¶ 21. The mere promise to act does not create a duty to act. Wagner,
¶ 22. There is nо evidence Doe detrimentally relied on Reese’s assurances. Doe did not forego any security measures already in place in light of Reese’s comments. Nor did she refrain from trying to
¶ 23. Similarly, without detrimental reliance, providing a gratuitous service in the past does not create a duty to continuously perform the service in the future. Wagner,
B. Not Within the Scope of the Undertaking
¶ 24. Even if Doe can show an assumed duty based on detrimental reb-anee, the assumed duty is limited to the scope of the gratuitous undertaking. Wagner,
¶ 25. For example, Wagner was a slip- and-fall case in which the plaintiff sued, among other parties, the company that had cleaned and made a few repairs to the location where the plaintiff fell, before the lessee had moved in. The plaintiff alleged she fell on a ridge in the floor, left when the old lessee, a grocery store, moved its shelving units out. She claimed the cleaning compаny had assumed the duty to remove the ridge because it was reasonably foreseeable she would be injured if the ridge was not removed. Id. at 886 (¶ 22). But this court rejected that logic. Because the issue was an assumed duty, we found the cleaning company’s duty was limited to the scope of its undertaking, which did not include removing the ridges from the floor. Id. at (¶ 23). And because the plaintiff “did not allege that breach of any of these assumed duties caused her injuries,” her claim against the cleaning company failed. Id.
¶ 26. So even if Hunter Oaks, through Reese’s gratuitous promises, assumed a duty to evict Joe and, through previous repair of the fence, assumed a duty to continue to reрair the fence, its duties were limited to those tasks. Doe places a great deal of emphasis on what Reese knew or should have known about: (1) the hole in the fence, (2) Matthew’s living in Joe’s apartment, and (3) Joe’s criminal background. But what Reese knew or should have known goes to the issue of foreseeability, which is not relevant in determining whethеr an assumed duty exists. See id. at 884 (¶ 17), 886 (¶ 22); see also Kimbrough,
¶27. Instead, the relevant inquiry is whether Doe alleged that the breach of any of Hunter Oaks’ duties caused her injuries. See Wagner,
¶28. The victims in Kimbrough had also argued assumption of duty, based on the landlord’s admission in her deposition that she had a duty to protect her neighbors from the dogs on her property. Kimbrough,
¶ 29. Because Doe failed to establish the existence or assumption of a duty owed to her by Hunter Oaks in relation to Matthew’s criminаl attack, we affirm the circuit court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Hunter Oaks on Doe’s negligence claim.
¶ 30. THE JUDGMENT OF THE HINDS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT IS AFFIRMED. ALL COSTS OF THIS APPEAL ARE ASSESSED TO THE APPELLANT.
Notes
. Century 21 Deep S. Properties, Ltd. v. Corson,
. Doe also sued Shadowbrook, who settled, and Shadowbrook’s management company and her supervisor, who were both dismissed based on the exclusive remedy provided under workers’ compensation law, leaving Hunter Oаks as the only defendant.
. Matthew was convicted of sexual battery and is currently serving a twelve-year sentence.
.“It is well settled that to prevail on a negligence claim, a plaintiff must prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, duty or standard of care, breach, causation and damages. [And][s]ummary judgment is appropriate where the nonmoving party cannot make a prima facie showing of all of the elements of his or her claim.” Huynh v. Phillips,
