**480On January 8, 2014, Maria Matta-Troncoso and her husband, Mario Matta ("the Mattas"), sued Michael and Lakeisha Thornton, alleging that the Thorntons were liable under OCGA § 51-2-7
We granted Tyner's petition for certiorari and posed a single question: Did the Court of Appeals err by reversing the trial court's grant of summary judgment in favor of Tyner? We answer that question in the affirmative, and therefore reverse the Court of Appeals.
1. On appeal from a ruling on a motion for summary judgment, we conduct a de novo review, viewing the evidence in the record and all inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. See Steagald v. Eason ,
The backyard of the house was enclosed by a wooden privacy fence. The front gate of the fence initially had a latch on it that prevented the gate from opening. Some time after moving in, the Thorntons discovered that a pest-control or lawn-service provider had broken the latch on the front gate. Although the parties presented contradictory evidence about whether the Thorntons ever notified Tyner about the broken latch, Tyner concedes that his knowledge of the broken latch must be assumed for purposes of summary judgment and for this appeal. Tyner never repaired the latch or ordered it to be repaired. Because the latch was broken, the Thorntons began securing the front gate with a tightly tied dog leash and with weights and a cement block at the base of the gate. Some years later, the Thorntons' Labrador retriever escaped from the backyard and was struck and killed by a car. The Thorntons then acquired two pit bull terriers and kept them outside in the backyard during the day and in the home at night. Because there is at least some record evidence indicating that Tyner may have known about the Thorntons' pit bulls, we assume at this stage that Tyner was aware of the dogs' existence. However, there is no record evidence that the Thorntons' pit bulls displayed aggressive behavior before they attacked Matta-Troncoso, or that Tyner knew the pit bulls had any kind of aggressive temperament or propensity.
On October 24, 2013, Michael Thornton secured the gate as he usually did before leaving the two dogs unattended in the backyard. Matta-Troncoso, who lived a few blocks away from the Thorntons, was walking her two small dogs in the neighborhood when the Thorntons' two pit bulls attacked her dogs. One of her dogs fled. While Matta-Troncoso attempted to defend the other, the Thorntons' dogs knocked Matta-Troncoso to the ground and began attacking her. A neighbor called the police and an officer arrived within minutes. The officer fatally shot both dogs and began administering first aid to Matta-Troncoso, who was airlifted to the hospital with serious injuries.
*103After the attack, the police took photographs of the front gate at the Thornton residence. The leash was still hanging from the top of the gate and fence where it had been tied. A few months later, the State charged Michael Thornton with four counts of violating Henry County's ordinances pertaining to keeping a vicious animal, failing to provide a collar and display of current vaccination tag for an animal, failing to keep an animal under restraint, and allowing an animal to become a public nuisance. He pled guilty to all charges. The Mattas **483now seek to hold the Thorntons' landlord, Tyner, liable for the injuries inflicted by the Thorntons' dogs.
2. The issue before us on certiorari review is whether the Court of Appeals erred by reversing the trial court's grant of summary judgment in favor of Tyner. As an initial matter, the Court of Appeals erred in its analysis of Tyner's motion for summary judgment because it applied OCGA § 51-2-7 to Tyner. By its plain terms, OCGA § 51-2-7 applies only to "[a] person who owns or keeps a vicious or dangerous animal." OCGA § 51-2-7 (emphasis supplied).
3. Identifying this misguided application of OCGA § 51-2-7 does not, however, resolve the question before us today. That is because the Court of Appeals went on to hold that the grant of summary judgment in Tyner's favor was erroneous even under OCGA § 44-7-14 because "there exists a genuine issue of material fact as to whether [Matta-Troncoso's] injuries arose from the Thorntons' dogs escaping their enclosure and then attacking [Matta-Troncoso] as a result of Tyner's failure to repair the latch on the fence's front gate."
*104Matta-Troncoso ,
The Mattas brought a negligence claim against Tyner under OCGA § 44-7-14, a statute that pertains to out-of-possession landlords and governs claims of negligence for failure to repair. Assuming that OCGA § 44-7-14 can be used to hold out-of-possession landlords liable for injuries resulting from dog bites,
Here, Tyner had a statutory duty to "keep the premises in repair." OCGA § 44-7-14. Given that Tyner concedes that his knowledge of the broken gate latch must be assumed at the summary judgment stage-and because the record shows that Tyner failed to repair that latch-we assume that Tyner breached his statutory duty in this case. With the first two elements of a negligence claim met, we turn to the third: whether Tyner's failure to repair the broken gate latch caused the injuries Matta-Troncoso suffered.
On this point, Tyner argues (among other things) that his failure to repair the gate latch was not the proximate cause of Matta-Troncoso's injuries because the Thorntons had "superior knowledge to their landlord regarding the dogs' temperament" and because **485Tyner's failure to repair the latch did not cause the dogs to escape from the yard. The Mattas, on the other hand, contend that OCGA § 44-7-14 contains no express knowledge requirement, and it is therefore "doubtful that Plaintiffs even need to show evidence of propensity to recover [damages]." According to the Mattas, the statute requires only that "Plaintiffs show evidence that Tyner kn[e]w of the defective condition (that the gate latch was broken and would not contain the dogs) and that the injuries 'arose from' the breach (Tyner's failure to repair)." They also argue that proximate cause "is always a jury question," so summary judgment should not have been granted in Tyner's favor. We again disagree.
"[I]n order to recover for any injuries resulting from the breach of a duty, there must be evidence that the injuries were proximately caused by the breach of the duty." Goldstein, Garber & Salama, LLC , 300 Ga. at 841,
Based on the foregoing, the Mattas ultimately must show that the injuries the Thorntons' dogs inflicted on Matta-Troncoso were a reasonably foreseeable result of Tyner's failure to repair the gate latch-and to defeat summary judgment, they must show that there exists a genuine issue of material *106fact on this point.
Turning to the record in this case, we see no evidence that the Thorntons' dogs had aggressive tendencies or that they had injured anyone in the past, let alone that Tyner knew of those things (if they had indeed been true). To the contrary, the record reveals that in the Mattas' Response to Tyner's Statement of Material Facts as to Which There Is No Genuine Issue To Be Tried, the Mattas admitted that **488"[t]he dogs at issue had never previously bitten or attacked anyone, or shown any signs of aggression."
Presented with a record that contains no evidence that Tyner, as an out-of-possession landlord, had knowledge that his renters owned and kept dogs that previously had demonstrated some kind of aggression, we conclude that there is no evidence to create a jury issue as to whether Matta-Troncoso's injuries were reasonably foreseeable here. And without reasonable foreseeability-a hallmark of proximate cause-there exists no genuine issue of material fact as to the third element of the Mattas' negligence claim: causation. See Goldstein, Garber & Salama, LLC , 300 Ga. at 843,
There being no genuine issue of material fact as to whether Tyner's failure to repair the gate latch caused Matta-Troncoso's injuries, summary judgment in Tyner's favor was appropriate. The Court of Appeals' opinion reversing the trial court's grant of summary judgment for Tyner is therefore reversed.
Judgment reversed.
All the Justices concur.
The relevant part of that statute provides:
A person who owns or keeps a vicious or dangerous animal of any kind and who, by careless management or by allowing the animal to go at liberty, causes injury to another person who does not provoke the injury by his own act may be liable in damages to the person so injured. In proving vicious propensity, it shall be sufficient to show that the animal was required to be at heel or on a leash by an ordinance of a city, county, or consolidated government, and the said animal was at the time of the occurrence not at heel or on a leash.
OCGA § 51-2-7.
OCGA § 44-7-14 provides:
Having fully parted with possession and the right of possession, the landlord is not responsible to third persons for damages resulting from the negligence or illegal use of the premises by the tenant; provided, however, the landlord is responsible for damages arising from defective construction or for damages arising from the failure to keep the premises in repair.
The Thorntons did not move for summary judgment, and at the time appellate briefs were filed in this case, the Mattas' claims against the Thorntons remained pending in the trial court.
The Mattas, in fact, concede in their brief here that their "claims against Tyner are pled under OCGA § 44-7-14 and no claim was made against Tyner pursuant to OCGA § 51-2-7."
Specifically, the Court of Appeals invoked OCGA § 51-2-7 for the proposition that "[i]n proving vicious propensity, it shall be sufficient to show that the animal was required to be at heel or on a leash by an ordinance of a city, county, or consolidated government, and [that] the said animal was at the time of the occurrence was not at heel or on a leash," noted that the Mattas' complaint alleged that the pit bulls were "running at large in the neighborhood unrestrained" in violation of Henry County ordinances, and concluded that "the rule requiring evidence that the Thorntons and Tyner were aware of the dogs' vicious propensities is not implicated here." Matta-Troncoso ,
See Johnston v. Warendh ,
Cases pertaining to landlord liability for third-party criminal acts are also informative. In those cases, reasonable foreseeability of the risk is essential to proving liability; plaintiffs must show that the landlord had a reason to anticipate or foresee the harmful acts of others based on prior experience with substantially similar types of acts that gave the landlord superior knowledge of the danger posed. See, e.g., Doe v. Prudential-Bache/A.G. Spanos Realty Partners, L.P. ,
We thus reject Tyner's argument that Colquitt v. Rowland ,
Our conclusion also aligns with our previous explanation that the General Assembly enacted OCGA § 44-7-14 to "limit the potential liability of out-of-possession landlords," and that "any alteration or expansion of an out-of-possession landlord's statutory liability must emanate from the legislature and not from the courts of this State."Martin ,
Although the Mattas admitted this fact, they also contended that it was "irrelevant."
