The issue in this appeal is whether the owner of an occupied urban building who has not kept the building’s security system in good repair may be held liable in tort solely because the building was used to complete a crime that began on a public street. Under the circumstances of this case, where neither the victim nor the crime were connected with the defendant’s building, we hold that plaintiff was not within the zone of foreseeable harm and that, as a consequence, liability cannot be imposed.
The complaint in this case was dismissed by Special Term on defendant Housing Authority’s summary judgment motion after affidavits were submitted and a hearing in which plaintiff gave sworn testimony was held. The alleged facts, briefly stated, are that at about 6:45 a.m. on July 25, 1982, 16-year-old Simone Waters was walking on a public street, just outside a public housing project, whén she was accosted by a man who displayed a knife and demanded that she walk with him to a building around the corner. Once inside the building, which was unlocked, the man forced her to the roof and, after taking her money, sodomized her. According to her bill of particulars, plaintiff suffered emotional trauma, as well as minor physical injuries, as a result of the incident.
An investigator’s affidavit submitted by plaintiff further alleged that the front door locks on the building, which was owned by defendant, had been either broken or missing for at least two years before the incident and that several tenants had registered complaints about the condition over that two-year period. According to the affidavit, the investigator’s inquiries also disclosed that there had been at least five criminal incidents in the building involving outsiders. Finally, the investigator stated, based on his experience, that "had the door locks on this building been in proper working order, this sexual attack would in all probability have not occurred.” This statement was supported by the additional allegation that because of the nature of the crime and the psychology of this type of criminal, crimes such as this one "almost invariably occur in secluded areas.”
Relying on Palsgraf v Long Is. R. R. Co. (
It is clear that when a governmental entity such as defendant acts in a proprietary capacity as a landlord, it may be held liable in tort to the same extent as is a private landlord (Miller v State of New York,
These basic principles, however, do not resolve the unusual problem presented here. Although plaintiff has made the necessary allegations of negligent security maintenance, notice of prior criminal intrusion and proximately caused injury,
It is often said that "[pjroof of negligence in the air * * * will not do” (Pollock, Torts, at 472 [10th ed]; Martin v Herzog,
The question of the scope of an alleged tort-feasor’s duty is, in the first instance, a legal issue for the court to resolve. In this analysis, "not only logic and science, but policy play an important role” (De Angelis v Lutheran Med. Center,
With these principles in mind, we turn now to the question whether this plaintiff was within the orbit of duty imposed on the owner of the building in which her injuries occurred. Initially, we note that the duty that was allegedly breached— to maintain the front door locks in working condition — exists principally to protect the safety and possessions of the tenants and visitors inside the premises (see, Miller v State of New York, supra). The risk to be reasonably apprehended in this instance is that of intrusion by outsiders with criminal motive who might do harm to those who have a right to feel at least minimally secure inside a dwelling place. Although it is argued that the duty to keep occupied residential premises secure also encompasses the risk that an unsecured building might become a safe haven for crime begun on the street, we cannot agree that the scope of a landowner’s duty should be extended to embrace members of the public at large, with no connection to the premises, who might be victimized by street predators.
In this regard, our decisions in Strauss v Belle Realty Co. (
Although strict notions of privity are not dispositive in defining the scope of a landowner’s duty (see, Basso v Miller,
Finally, we note that the important public goals of minimizing crime and encouraging the maintenance of urban property would not materially be advanced by expanding the scope of landowners’ duties in the manner plaintiff suggests. The possibility of tort liability arising from injury to tenants or others on the premises provides a strong incentive to landlords to keep locks and other security systems in good repair. Moreover, it is unlikely that the incidence of street crime would be meaningfully affected, since the urban environment includes many nooks and crannies, other than unsecured dwellings, which afford malefactors the privacy they need to commit their misdeeds. Thus, the social benefits to be gained do not warrant the extension of the landowner’s duty to maintain secure premises to the millions of individuals who use the sidewalks of New York City each day and are thereby exposed to the dangers of street crime.
Because defendant landowner had no relationship at all to the as-yet-unidentified wrongdoer whose presence on the street posed a threat to plaintiff’s safety (cf. Pulka v Edelman, supra,
Chief Judge Wachtler and Judges Simons, Kaye, Alexander, Hancock, Jr., and Bellacosa concur.
Order affirmed, with costs.
Notes
Plaintiff’s claim is based on the premise that the assailant’s apparent foreknowledge of the building’s existence was a substantial cause of his decision to commit this crime. Our conclusion that plaintiff was not within the zone of harm contemplated by the landowner’s duty to keep the premises secure makes it unnecessary for us to decide whether this theory would be a legally sufficient basis for a finding of proximate cause (cf. Nallan v Helmsley-Spear, Inc.,
