Opinion
On thе evening of January 31, 1997, plaintiff Jamal Hassoon was wounded when he was hit by a round fired from a semiautomatic weapon by a passerby. The shooting occurred as Hassoon stood in Daldas Grocery, defendants’ grocery store on Eddy Street in the Tenderloin district of San Francisco. Plaintiff filed this suit for personal injury damages against the store’s.owners and one of their employees, alleging defendants had breached a duty of care to protect him from violent acts by third parties while he was present on their premises. Following a period of discovery, defendants moved the trial court for an order granting them summary judgment on the ground that, because the shooting was not reasonably foreseeable, they owed plaintiff no duty of care that сould be breached to support liability in tort. After the trial court granted the motion, plaintiff timely filed this appeal. We affirm.
Background
Plaintiff argues the evidence before the trial court on defendants’ motion for summary judgment showed the following. Plaintiff went to defendants’ store on the evening of January 31 to buy groceries. He had bought food there several times before and knew the store’s employees, one of whom, defendant Natour, was working behind the counter at the time of plaintiff’s visit. While plaintiff was inside the grocery, he and Natour observed as many as 10 men on the sidewalk outside the store beating another man. Natour, according to the complaint, knew the victim of the attack as someone who, in the past, had sold expensive personal items to Natour and other store employees at greatly reduced prices. All the men involved in the fight, including the victim, sold drugs on the sidewalk near the grocery, the complaint alleged. Seeing the victim being beaten, defendant Natour left the store, approached the group, and pulled the victim into the store, rescuing him. The victim asked Natour if he could borrow Natour’s pistol. Natour declined to give him his gun but assured the beating victim he would be safe if he remained in the store. When other members of the group of men who had beaten the victim attempted to enter the store, armed store employees warned them not to. Stopping at the door, the men warned the beating victim they were going to shoot him.
*1194 At this point, plaintiff told Natour the victim should not remain in thе store because the men outside were going to shoot him, and others in the store might be harmed. Unable to go outside, plaintiff telephoned the police. Before the police arrived, however, several shots were fired by someone sitting in a car in the street next to the grocery. Bullets passed through the front door, wounding plaintiff and two other customers within. Asked in his depоsition whether “you had time to do anything to avoid being injured?” plaintiff replied, “No.” Q. “Do you think there was time for anybody to stop that shooting?” A. “No way.” Q. “Too fast, right?” A. “Very fast, yes.” [10 ... [10 Did you do anything to try to get out of the way from that shooter?” A. “I couldn’t. I didn’t have time to breathe.” Q. “To breathe?” A. “Yeah.” Q. “Just too fast?” A. “Yeah.” Q. “Did you try to duck down?” [10 ... [10 A. “I couldn’t.”
In a declaration filed in support of the motion for summary judgment, dеfendant Shamieh stated that “Since my ownership of Daldas Grocery, it has never been robbed nor has there ever been any shooting or violent assault on the premises. [10 ... [10 As part of my business practices, a videotape recorder is in operation at the store. Said videotape recorder was in operation [on] 1/31/97. The occurrences of 1/31/97 were vidеotaped. Said videotape was given to the police.” In opposition to the motion for summary judgment, plaintiff filed his own declaration, summarized above. He concluded with this assertion: “Had defendant Natour not brought the [beating victim] into the store, I would not have been shot. Had he remained outside, the co-combatant who appeared to be one of the people who sold drugs on the sidewalk, would have been rescued by the drug dealers who were friendly to him, as his friends did come to his aid[] in the store. [10 If the violence escalated on the sidewalk, the combatants would have been shooting each other in the street, as opposed to shooting into a store with innocent customers.”
Analysis
As explained below, the judgment of the trial court must be affirmed for three independent reasons. In the context of tort law, “[t]he existence of a duty is a question of law for the court.”
(Ann M. v. Pacific Plaza Shopping Center
(1993)
A. Absence of proof of prior similar incidents on defendants’ premises.
First, the short answer to plaintiff’s contention that defendants are liable to him in tort for the gunshot wound he sustained at the grocery that night is that the absence of proof of prior similar incidents at defendants’ place of business is fatal to a successful damages claim in tort. Plaintiff’s failure to point to a material factual dispute regarding prior similar incidents of violence at defendants’ grocery means the shooting was not foreseeable. From that premise, it fоllows defendants were under no duty of care running to the victim to take measures to protect him against such an event, and thus had no liability to plaintiff in tort. Together, the opinions in
Ann M., supra,
In the specific circumstances presented by this case—the foreseeability required to warrant raising a duty on the premises owner to take protective measures against
third party
violence—the California Supreme Court has imposed a requirement of
heightened
foreseeability, a requirement that goes beyond the general foreseeability of the risk of harm to visitors imposed on any owner of real property. The reason for that enhanced requirement of foreseeability, according to the opinion in
Ann M., supra, 6
Cal.4th 666, is that “random, violent crime is endemic in today’s society. It is difficult, if not impossible, to envision any locale open to the public where the occurrence of violent crime seems improbable.”
(Id.
at p. 678; see also
Sharon P.,
*1196
supra,
As we read these controlling precedents, the requirement of “prior similar incidents” is
more
than a factual precondition to premises liability; it is the objective event that separates the duty of care imposed by the law on ordinary property owners from the higher duty imposed on that smaller class of owners whose prior experience with physical violence on their premises makes it reasonable for the law to impose upon them a duty to take reasonable security measures, a breach of which resulting in injury is answerable in damаges. As an element of the threshold legal duty analysis, foreseeability is a component of “duty,” that “ ‘expression of the sum total of those considerations of policy which lead the law to say that the particular plaintiff is entitled to protection.’ ”
(Dillon v. Legg
(1968)
B. Absence оf a duty to prevent events occurring off the premises.
Second, a string of cases from the Court of Appeal indicates that a landowner has no legal duty to take measures to prevent foreseeable violence occurring
ojf
of his property. The analysis in
Medina v. Hillshore Partners
(1995)
C. Absence of a duty of care under a Rowland v. Christian analysis.
The third and longer answer to plaintiff’s claim for damages is that, analyzed under the criteria set forth in
Rowland
v.
Christian
(1968)
In litigation presenting comparable factual situations, several Court of Appeal opinions, applying a
Rowland
analysis, have concluded there was no liability in tort. In
Forrand v. Foodmaker, Inc.
(1986)
The court in
Foodmaker, supra,
We believe the judicial intuition underlying the result in
Foodmaker, supra,
We see nothing in the description of the incident that morally distinguishes the conduct of one participant from the other, much less that provides a basis for imposing a legal obligation on one to compensate the other for his injuries. Precisely because of the unlikelihood that Natour had the capacity to act as the fictive “reasonable person” would have, it would be unrealistic (and unjust) to hold him to a legal standard of care which, as the court in
Foodmaker, supra,
*1200 Conclusion
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Reardon, Acting P. J., and Chiantelli, J., * concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied June 8, 2001, and appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied August 15, 2001. George, C. J., and Werdegar, J., did not participate therein.
Notes
Plaintiff also contends it was error for the trial court to vacate the default of one of the defendants, Natour, on the ground that it lacked jurisdiction to do so. We disagree. Consideration of this issue and its resolution are matters lying within the broad discretion of the trial court. We find no abuse here, where defendant Natоur sought relief from default within a month after being served with process.
(In re Marriage of Connolly
(1979)
Thus, in premises liability cases presenting issues of third party criminal conduct, duty is not coextensive with foreseeability. The notion that duty and foreseeability
are
coextensive goеs back at least to Judge Cardozo’s famous statement in the
Palsgraf
case that the “risk reasonably to be perceived defines the duty to be obeyed”
(Palsgraf
v.
Long Island R. Co.
(1928)
Our Supreme Court recently has discussed at length a variation on this very theme, reaching a result consistent with the one we reach here. In
Kentucky Fried Chicken, supra,
Judge of the San Francisco Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
