The issue presented is whether an employer is liable for damages caused by the criminal conduct of an employee. Appellant Rose Houser sued David Smith d/b/a Accurate Transmission for the criminal acts of Robert Sylvester, an employee of the transmission shop. The jury found in favor of Smith and the trial court rendered judgment that nous-er take nothing. We will affirm the judgment of the trial court.
BACKGROUND
Accurate Transmission, owned by David Smith, allegedly sponsored a barbecue at a tavern near San Marcos owned by Smith’s mother. Houser had been a customer of the transmission shop and was invited to the barbecue by Sylvester, an employee of the garage. On the day of the barbecue, Sylvester and Houser drove to the tavern together after leaving Houser’s car in the shop’s garage in San Antonio. Late that night at the tavern, Houser asked Sylvester to drive her back to San Antonio. Because he was drunk, Sylvester refused and Houser drove them both back to the transmission shop to retrieve her car. Houser claims upon their return Sylvester sexually assaulted her at gunpoint in the garage. At the time of the incident, the shop was closed to business.
Appellant originally sued Robert Sylvester, Accurate Transmission, David Smith, and other defendants for negligence. 1 A default judgment was entered against Sylvester upon his failure to appear in court. In the related criminal case, Sylvester plead guilty to a criminal charge of sexual assault on Rose Houser and was sentenced to ten years’ imprisonment. At trial in the present case, the jury charge contained among others two essential questions: (1) at the time of the occurrence in question was Robert Sylvester acting in the scope of his employment, and (2) did the negligence, if any, of certain persons proximately cause the occurrence in question. The jury failed to find Sylvester was acting in the scope of his employment. Although the jury declined to find either Sylvester or Smith negligent, it did find Rose Houser negligent. Houser brings this appeal in four points of error. At oral argument, appellant clarified her appeal by stating she does not challenge the jury’s failure to find that Sylvester was acting in the scope of employment at the time of the assault.
*544 DISCUSSION
Houser complains there were at least three evidentiary errors made by the trial court that led to an improper jury verdict 2 and that the jury’s failure to find damages was against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence. We need not decide whether the trial court abused its discretion in admitting or disallowing evidence 3 or whether the verdict is against the evidence; we must affirm the trial court’s judgment that Houser take nothing on her negligence claim because as a matter of law Smith owed no duty to Houser for the wrongs of his employee under the facts even as alleged by the appellant.
To sustain a cause of action for negligence, it is necessary to show the existence of a legal duty of one party to another, a breach of that duty, and damages which were proximately caused by the breach of the duty.
See Greater Houston Transp. Co. v. Phillips,
Here, the issue is whether Smith owed a duty to Houser to protect her in some way from Sylvester’s conduct. The general rule is that there is no duty to protect another from the conduct of a third person.
See id.; Otis Eng’g Corp.,
In
Guidry v. National Freight, Inc.,
we have recently addressed the issue of an employer’s duty under similar circumstances.
In the present case, Houser claims Smith had a duly to investigate Sylvester’s criminal background. Such an investigation would have revealed that Sylvester had three forgery convictions. 5 Whether Smith would have fired Sylvester had he discovered Sylvester’s forgery convictions is irrelevant. As in Guidry, the question presented is whether Sylvester’s criminal conduct and the type of harm that befell Houser were foreseeable and presented a risk that Smith was required to guard against by investigating Sylvester’s criminal background. Under these facts, we hold the conduct and harm were not foreseeable and therefore Smith did not owe appellant a legal duty beyond the duty to provide a competent transmission mechanic to his customers, including Houser.
We acknowledge certain distinctions from Guidry; Houser was a customer and the assault occurred on the business premises. However, we do not think these differences are legally significant when the record indicates that the assault did not occur at the company-sponsored event but later at the shop which under Smith’s direction should have been closed to business. At the time of the assault, Sylvester was off-duty and was not by reason of his employment required to be at the shop which was closed. He and Houser returned to the garage only because her car had been left there while they traveled in Sylvester’s car to the out-of-town barbecue. Although the driver in Guidry was placed in the vicinity of the victim’s apartment complex by traveling in a company truck, this Court refused to hold the employer liable for his employee’s criminal conduct in the absence of a legal duty to a public that included Guidry. Similarly, we will not hold Smith liable for Sylvester’s criminal actions committed on the premises after midnight even though Sylvester had a key to the garage because he was an employee. The type of conduct and harm that occurred were not foreseeable when Smith hired, retained, or supervised Sylvester as an employee of a transmission shop.
The present case is unlike those in which the employee is placed in a situation that foreseeably creates a peculiar risk of harm to others by reason of the employment duties.
E.g., Estate of Arrington v. Fields,
Nor does this case impose on the employer a duty to diligently investigate the employee’s background because of potential contact with particularly vulnerable individuals.
E.g., Porter v. Nemir,
In this ease, appellant was not the member of a vulnerable or specially protected group, see
Guidry,
Even if Smith had used reasonable care in discovering Sylvester’s criminal background in forgery, he could not have foreseen that hiring or retaining Sylvester created an unreasonable risk of harm to Houser as a customer.
See, e.g., Porter,
To obtain a reversal of a judgment on an evidentiary ruling, appellant must show that the trial court did commit error and that such error was reasonably calculated to cause and probably did cause rendition of an improper judgment.
New Braunfels Factory Outlet Ctr., Inc. v. IHOP Realty Corp.,
Notes
. The defendants other than Sylvester and Smith d/b/a Accurate Transmission were non-suited.
. Appellant complains the trial court erred by (1) admitting in evidence Sylvester's deposition testimony; (2) admitting in evidence her past sexual history; and (3) not admitting in deposition testimony of Smith’s mother for purposes of impeachment.
. We do concede that a finding of negligence on the part of Houser under the facts of this case indicates the jury may have been unfairly prejudiced against Houser or confused on the issues.
.The other theory creating a duty is respondeat superior.
Dieter v. Baker Serv. Tools,
. Houser further claims that Smith’s mother, Helen Owen, had general knowledge of Sylvester's violent nature and drinking tendencies. Sylvester frequented Owen’s tavern and for a time rented a cottage owned by Owen. We decline to impose a duly on an employer to fire or refuse to hire an employee based on allegations by a relative or local rumors.
