On a Sunday afternoon in December, Jane Doe was attacked after parking her car in the garage underneath her apartment build *170 ing at Regency Square Apartments in Atlanta. After she exited her car and began walking away from it, a man approached her and demanded her purse. He threatened Doe with a knife, wrestled her to the ground, and shoved her over a nearby four-foot-high wall to the outside of the garage. After pushing her to a grassy area outside the garage and raping her, he fled, apparently taking her purse with him. These events occurred at midafternoon on a sunny day in December.
Doe brought this action against the owners/managers of Regency Square, alleging that Regency Square failed to maintain safe premises under OCGA §§ 51-3-1 and 44-7-14, failed to provide a premises free of latent defects, failed to provide adequate security, made fraudulent misrepresentations regarding the security at Regency Square, and failed to warn her of defects in the design of parking garages and security fences. 1 Regency Square moved for summary judgment on all claims, which was granted by the trial court.
1. Doe contends the trial court erroneously granted summary judgment to Regency Square on her OCGA § 51-3-1 claim. We disagree. To prevail against a proprietor when one is injured by the criminal act of a third party, a plaintiff must show that the act was reasonably foreseeable.
Savannah College of Art &c. v. Roe,
(a) A plaintiff may prove that the criminal act was reasonably foreseeable through evidence of prior substantially similar crimes.
Roe,
supra,
On motion for summary judgment, Regency Square submitted undisputed evidence that prior to Doe’s attack, there had been no physical attack against a person in the garages at Regency Square. Doe responded that during the five months before she began renting her apartment, twelve crimes were committed in the parking garages: nine thefts and threе acts of vandalism. Relying on police incident reports, she also stated that 19 thefts were reported during the time she lived at Regency Square. She contended that she was informed of only two incidents.
*171
We recognize that “substantially similar does not mean identical.”
Matt v. Days Inns of America,
A distinction
does
exist, however, between crimes against property and crimes against persons. In
Matt,
we distinguished
Roe,
noting that the prior crimes in
Roe
were not violent crimes against persons but were “offenses against property or public morals which would not put the college on notice that it was reasonable to expect a sexual attack on a dormitory resident.”
We have not the slightest doubt that Doe suffered a horrible and terrifying experience. However, unlike
Matt
and
Hudson,
the evidence was undisputed that no prior violent criminal attacks, sexual or otherwise, occurred on persons prior to Doe’s rape. As in
Roe,
supra, the evidence here did not create a factual issue as to whether
*172
Regency Square knew or should have known that its residents “were at risk of a violent criminal sexual attack.”
(b) We agree with Doe that proof of prior substantially similar incidents is not the only method of proving foreseeability. In
Hudson,
supra, evidence was presented that the restaurant’s management had previously “acknowledged that there was a potential for attacks on customers in the restaurant’s parking lot.”
Without pointing to evidence that Regency Square’s management actually acknowledged the potential for physical attack in its parking garages, Doe relies primarily on the affidavit of an individual she characterizes as an expert in premises security. She argues that Regency Square had knowledge that a crime against an individual was likely to occur because it knew of a large number of crimes in the parking garages. The expert made the following observations: Regency Square knew or should have known that the garages attracted criminals and that criminals were being allowed access to the premises; Regency Square knew or should have known that the regularly occurring crimes increased the risk of physical harm; Regency Square should have known that a tenant, if present during the commission of the crimes, could become a victim of a violent crime and that failure to detеr crimes against property would escalate into crimes against people. Doe argues that under Hudson, this evidence raises a factual question as to the foreseeability of her attack.
We disagree. In
Hudson,
an expert did testify by affidavit that the defendant should have provided uniformed security at night in defendant’s parking lot “because it was located in a high crime area and was surrounded by areas of dark shadows.”
(c) We also reject Doe’s contention that her attack was foreseeable because newspapers and other media in the metro-Atlanta area reported that a serial rapist, known as the “Buckhead rapist,” who had attacked women almost exclusively in parking garages was at large. Such reports, even if admissible and even if it was shown that agents of Regency Square had read or heard them, provide no basis for imposition of liability on Regency Square. To so impose liability would effectively make Regency Square and every other metro-Atlanta business with a parking garage an insurer of its own premises. Evidence that an alleged rapist was at large in another part of Atlanta is not comparable to the evidence in
Hudson
that “it was common knowledge that the restaurant in question was located in
the
highest crime area of any of the Shoney’s restaurants in Savannah.” (Emphasis supplied.)
(d) Doe also contends that “there is evidence that [Regency Square] had notice of the presence of the actual raрist in the parking garages at the complex just days before the rape” yet failed to respond to this knowledge, creating an issue of fact as to whether Regency Square breached its duty of exercising ordinary care. She contends that had Regency Square responded appropriately to the report about this individual, her rape could have been avoided.
Doe mischаracterizes the evidence presented. She submitted evidence that a few days before the rape, a suspicious-looking man was seen “running from place to place” and that Regency Square did nothing in response to the report. The couple who saw him was shown a photograph of the actual rapist but could not identify the rapist as being the suspicious-looking man they saw in thе garage. Further, the rapist himself was described by Doe as being clean and pleasant-looking — like “someone who lived in the complex” — not as being suspicious. The evidence did not connect the unidentified, suspicious-looking man with the rapist, and we find no merit in Doe’s contention that Regency Square had notice of the rapist’s presence in the parking garage prior to the rapе. See
Revel,
supra,
2. Doe also argues that Regency Square should have taken additional security measures in light of its “knowledge that criminals were being allowed access to the garages and that their existing security measures were not deterring such entry.” She contends blind spots provided places for criminals to hide and that assaults could *174 occur without detection, both out of sight and out of earshot. She states that access could have been controlled by placing fencing over areas of open access and that the garages could have been patrolled at all hours. Doe again attempts to impose the status of insurer on Regency Square, and we reject this contention.
Even a threshold duty to provide security measures for the type of attack involving Doe requires a showing that the attack was foreseeable. “Knowledge of a dangerous condition giving rise to the incident is necessary in order to show the existence of even an initial duty to provide preventive security measures for this type of attack. [Cit.]” Id. at 303 (2). Here, as in Revel, “[s]ince there were no prior substantially similar attacks on the premises, there was no such knowledge and no duty to provide security adequate to protect against this kind of attack. [Cits.]” Id. Since the rape in this case was not foreseeable, we cannot state that measures additional to those undertaken by Regency Square were necessary.
3. Under a “breach of assumed duty” theory, Doe argues that because some security measures were undertaken, Regency Square should be liable because more were not undertaken. We disagree. “A landowner does not become an insurer of safety by taking some security precautions on behalf of invitees. Undertaking measures to protect patrons does not heighten the standard of care; and taking some measures does not ordinarily constitute evidence that further measures might be required. ... If a defendant undertakes to do more for the benefit оf another person than the law requires, he or she may be held liable if he or she acts unreasonably or makes the situation worse, by increasing the danger, or by misleading the plaintiff into belief that it has been removed, or by depriving the plaintiff of the possibility of help from other sources.” (Citations and punctuation omitted.) Id. at 303-304.
The record reveals that Regency Square employed both an outsidе security service and a courtesy officer. From 10:00 p.m. until 6:00 a.m., periodic patrols were made by both the courtesy officer and employees of the security service. In general, courtesy officers “walk[ed] the property” daily and responded to problems such as broken lights, lockouts, and loud music complaints. While the purpose of the courtesy and security services, acсording to Regency Square, was not necessarily to deter crime but to make tenants feel “more comfortable,” provision of these services could not reasonably lead to the conclusion that all danger had been removed from an area such as the parking garage, which Doe admitted was accessible from the outside. She acknowledged that if anyone wanted to еnter the garage, he could enter in one of the open areas over a wall only four feet high, could walk in the open area where the gate was located, or could come down the stairs or elevator. She also acknowledged that *175 she was never guaranteed that no danger would befall her. Despite Doe’s knowledge of the layout of the garage, she continuеd to park in the garage even though other parking was available. In short, “contrary to misleading [Doe] into believing that all generalized danger had been removed, aspects of the [garage] itself indicated that not all conceivable risks had been removed.” Id. at 304 (2).
4. Doe contends that Regency Square had a duty under OCGA §§ 44-7-13 and 44-7-14 to remedy latent defects in the premises. She maintains that Regenсy Square should have known the garages were defectively designed, having isolated hiding places that could not be seen from the apartments or by passersby. According to Doe, Regency Square should have known that the design was defective because of the other crimes and the suspicious individual, and her attack was “a natural and probable consequence of these dangerous conditions.” Again, the alleged “other crimes” were not violent crimes against persons that made Doe’s rape foreseeable. See Division 1, supra. And if any defect existed, it was open and obvious. Division 3, supra.
5. Doe bases a fraud claim against Regency Square on alleged statements regarding safety made by an unidentified individual. She contends that she was told by a leasing agent that the grounds and garages were “patrolled and secured” and that she chose to lease an apartment based on this representation. According to Doe, despite these “promises,” no patrols were provided that could have deterred the rapist. Instead, patrols occurred only during limited nighttime hours. She states that these “promises” and actions misled her into believing the dangers presеnted by the open access to the parking garages had been removed. She contends that if she had known the danger had not been removed, she would not have parked in the garage on the day of the rape.
Doe’s fraud claim fails. To prevail on such a claim, one must prove five essential elements, the first being that the defendant made a false representation. See, е.g.,
Pankowsky v. Sasine,
*176
Doe also attempts to create a jury issue by stating that the agent told her that the garage was “secured” in addition to being patrolled. This attempt fails because this statement was merely one of opinion, or sales puffing, which cannot form the basis of a fraud claim. See
U-Haul Co. of Western Ga. v. Dillard Paper Co.,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
She also sued her assailant in the same action.
In support of her argument that no “free bite” rule exists in this state, Doe cites
Wallace v. Boys Club of Albany &c.,
