Appellant Joe Washington (‘Washington”) appeals the summary judgment dismissal of his state law negligence action against the Resolution Trust Corporation (“RTC”). Washington argues that the district court misapplied Texas negligence law to the summary judgment evidence and abused its discretion in not allowing him to supplement the record after judgment. Because we find that the district court erred in its analysis of Texas negligence law, and because Washington did not have adequate notice of that portion of the summary judgment entered sua sponte, we reverse the summary judgment and remand for further proceedings.
FACTS
Washington was an employee at NuLook Dry Cleaners (“NuLook”), located at the Bruton Masters Retail Center (“Retail Center”), a strip shopping center in Dallas, Texas. The store fronted on a common area and parking lot owned and controlled by the Retail Center. John Kapdia, NuLook’s owner, privately leased the area inside NuLook. In the late afternoon of May 14,1992, three men entered NuLook as part of a robbery. During the crime, Washington was shot in the head.
Washington filed suit in state court against Kapdia, P. O’B. Montgomery & Company, the property management company, and Independent American Savings Association (“LASA”), the one-time owner of the Retail Center. He claimed that LASA should be hable because they had not provided adequate security. As LASA had failed, however, its assets at the time of suit were held by the RTC. The RTC removed the case to federal court and sought summary judgment on the ground that it owed no duty to protect Washington from third-party intentional torts occurring within NuLook’s premises.
Washington settled or dismissed his claims against Kapdia and the management company. The district court then granted summary judgment for RTC against Washington because it concluded that Washington had *937 not shown that the Retail Center attracted or provided a climate for crime, a showing which, according to the district court’s analysis, was necessary to prove that the RTC owed a duty of care under a premises liability theory. The district court also found that Washington had not submitted sufficient evidence to establish a fact question on breach or proximate cause. Washington then moved to supplement the record and have the district court reconsider its judgment. This motion was denied.
RTC’S DUTY TO WASHINGTON UNDER TEXAS LAW
a. Standard of review
We review a grant of summary judgment
de novo,
applying the same standard as the district court.
Hanks v. Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Corp.,
We begin our determination by consulting the applicable Texas substantive law to determine what facts and issues are material.
See United States v. Muniz,
b. Washington’s relationship to RTC
No Texas court has decided whether a duty exists in this unique fact situation. We are therefore charged with making an Erie 2 prediction concerning what the Texas courts would do if they were faced with the question before us.
As a preliminary matter, we must determine Washington’s relationship to the RTC at the time of the shooting. The district court held, and the parties do not dispute, that Washington was a business invitee. An invitee is one who enters onto another’s land with the owner’s knowledge and for the mutual benefit of both parties.
Rosas v. Buddies Food Store,
However, regardless of whether Washington was a business invitee, he enjoyed a landlord-tenant relationship with RTC. A landlord is generally not liable to a tenant for injuries caused by an unsafe condition, which can include the unreasonable risk of harm from criminal intrusions, unless the landlord was aware of the condition at the time the premises were let.
Exxon Corp. v. Tidwell,
c. The nature of the duty owed
Generally, a landowner has no duty to prevent criminal acts of third parties who are not under the landowner’s supervision or control.
See El Chico Corp. v. Poole,
There was evidence that this tenant alone had ten prior robberies and RTC had in fact taken precautions against such incidents by hiring part time security guards. If the fact finder concludes that RTC had recognized the danger and responded to it, the factual basis of foreseeability must be resolved against RTC.
In premises liability cases, control is also a central factor in deciding the question of duty. When an employee attempts to hold someone with contractual ties to both the land and his employer liable for negligence in failing to prevent harm inflicted by a third party which would not have occurred but for the operation of the business, we must examine whether the defendant had the right of control over the security defects which allegedly led to the injury.
Brooks v. National Convenience Stores, Inc.,
The district court relied on
Castillo v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
There is no duty upon the owners or operators of a shopping center, individually or collectively, or upon merchants and shopkeepers generally, whose mode of operation of their premises does not attract or provide a climate for crime, to guard against the criminal acts of a third party, unless they know or have reason to know that acts are occurring or are about to occur on the premises that pose imminent probability of harm to an invitee; whereupon a duty of reasonable care to protect against such act arises.
Id. at 66. Based on this articulation of the Texas law of duty, the district court concluded that Washington’s summary judgment evidence failed because it did not raise a genu *939 ine issue of material fact concerning whether RTC’s operation of the Retail Center “attracted or provided a climate for crime” or that RTC knew or had reason to know that “criminal acts were occurring or were about to occur that posed imminent probability of harm to an invitee.” The district court’s ruling is in error.
The common law of torts, including the concept of duty, evolves in light of the changing conditions and circumstances of society.
El Chico Corp.,
The record on appeal contains evidence that the lease was silent regarding who was responsible for providing security in the parking lot/common area, but that RTC had assumed that responsibility by hiring an off duty police officer a few hours a week. There is also evidence that NuLook had been robbed ten times prior to Washington’s injury and that the budget devoted to security had more than tripled between 1989 and 1992. Further, it is undisputed that the person who shot Washington gained access to NuLook from the common area. Based on this evidence, we find that Washington created a genuine issue of material fact concerning both foreseeability and control. A rational fact finder could conclude that the history of repeated robberies in NuLook committed by individuals who gained access to NuLook’s leased premises from the common area, combined with a rapidly growing budget devoted to providing premises security over this same time period established that a crime problem at the Retail Center directly affecting NuLook was foreseeable. A rational fact finder could further conclude that by setting the security budget and deciding the type and amount of security to provide, the RTC controlled the center’s safety and security response to that problem. We therefore hold that the district court’s grant of summary judgment for RTC on the question of duty was error.
BREACH AND CAUSATION
The district court went on to hold that even assuming that RTC had a duty to provide security, Washington failed to submit evidence that raised a fact issue as to breach or causation. Washington moved to supplement the record and to have the district court reconsider the summary judgment. Because RTC’s motion for summary judgment was based on the issue of duty, Washington argued that he did not have notice that the district court would reach the questions of breach and causation, and for that reason did not submit summary judgment evidence on those questions. RTC opposed the motion, taking the position that the district court’s ruling on duty mooted Washington’s claims on breach and causation, and the district court denied the motion without a discussion of its reasons. On appeal, Washington contends that the district court erred in denying him the opportunity to supplement his summary judgment record prior to ruling on breach and causation. We agree.
District courts can enter summary judgment
sua sponte,
so long as the losing party has ten days notice to come forward with all of its evidence.
Judwin Properties, Inc. v. United States Fire Ins. Co.,
To summarize, Washington must prove that RTC breached its duty to him as an employee of a tenant (NuLook) by negligently failing to provide adequate security in the common area and that such failure was a proximate cause of his injuries and damages.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reason we REVERSE the summary judgment granted by the district court to RTC, and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
.
Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins,
. The question of whether RTC "at least partially created" the danger that resulted in Washington’s injury by negligently failing to adequately provide for safety and security of the area is a problem of causation rather than duty. In the event this case survives for trial, Washington must prove that any such negligence was causally connected to his injuries and damages. Causation is not before us. Consequently, we do not reach that question.
