Plaintiff contends the trial court erred by granting defendant’s motion to dismiss under N.C.R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6). We disagree.
Plaintiff’s complaint contained the following allegations: on 22 September 1989, Randy Cable (Randy) cut plaintiff with a knife 37 times. Defendant is the grandmother of Randy and at the time of the incident, Randy was living with defendant. Defendant knew Randy was “intoxicated,” “visibly emotionally disturbed,” and “had a history of committing acts of violence” against plaintiff. Paragraph 11 accuses defendant of the following acts of negligence:
a. The Defendant carelessly and negligently provided Randy . . . the use of her vehicle at a time when she knew or reasonably should have known that he posed a present danger to the person of the Plaintiff.
b. The Defendant carelessly and negligently provided Randy . . . the use of her vehicle at a time when she knew or reasonably should have known that he was likely to travel to the Plaintiff’s residence, and commit an assault and battery, or some other act of violence upon the Plaintiff.
*694 Defendant moved to dismiss plaintiffs complaint on grounds it failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. N.C.R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6). On 14 January 1993, the trial court granted defendant’s motion.
In order to avoid dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6), a party must “state enough to satisfy the substantive elements of at least some legally recognized claim.”
Hewes v. Johnston,
Plaintiff argues her complaint sets forth a cause of action based upon principles of ordinary common law negligence. To establish a
prima facie
case of actionable negligence, a plaintiff must allege facts showing: (1) defendant owed plaintiff a duty of reasonable care; (2) defendant breached that duty; (3) defendant’s breach was an actual and proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury; and (4) plaintiff suffered damages as the result of defendant’s breach.
Southerland v. Kapp,
An inherent component of any ordinary negligence claim is
reasonable foreseeability of injury,
which has been discussed by our courts both in terms of the duty owed,
see, e.g., James v. Board of Education,
Plaintiff maintains the foreseeability element of her claim is satisfied by her allegation that defendant provided Randy with the use of her vehicle “at a time when she knew or reasonably should have known that he was likely to travel to the [pjlaintiff’s residence, and commit an . . . act of violence upon the [p]laintiff.” She relies almost exclusively upon the recent case of Hart v. Ivey to support this contention.
*695
In
Hart v. Ivey,
plaintiffs suffered injury when their automobile was struck by a drunken driver. They brought suit against defendants who had served alcoholic beverages to the driver, alleging negligence in providing an alcoholic beverage “to a person they knew or should have known was under the influence of alcohol” and who “would shortly thereafter drive an automobile.”
Hart,
The Hart defendants in effect placed a dangerous instrumentality, a drunken driver, behind the wheel of a motor vehicle. That instrumentality, while operating the vehicle, thereafter crashed into plaintiffs’ automobile causing them injury. We agree with the Hart court that a person of ordinary prudence would have known that an automobile collision, or some similar injurious result, was foreseeable at the time alcohol was served to the drunken driver.
The case sub judice bears similarity to Hart v. Ivey in that plaintiff herein claimed defendant had placed a dangerous instrumentality —a driver known by defendant to be intoxicated, emotionally upset, and to have a history of violence towards plaintiff — behind the wheel of a motor vehicle. However, the similarity ends at that point. In Hart v. Ivey, the intoxicated driver was alleged to have subsequently injured plaintiffs who were also operating a motor vehicle; as previously indicated, such injuries are foreseeable consequences of placing a drunk driver behind the wheel of an automobile. Here, plaintiffs complaint stated the intoxicated driver (Randy) drove to her home and thereafter attacked her. Thus, unlike Hart, the case sub judice involves an assault by a driver removed from the defendant’s alleged act of placing that driver (drunken or otherwise) on the roadway and also removed from the driver’s use of the automobile itself. Under these circumstances, we find two other cases from our Supreme Court more pertinent to the present controversy.
In
Moore v. Crumpton,
In
Toone v. Adams,
“One is bound to anticipate and provide against what usually happens and what is likely to happen; but it would impose too heavy a responsibility to hold [defendants] bound in like manner to guard against what is unusual and unlikely to happen or what, as it is sometimes said, is only remotely and slightly probable.”
Hiatt,
After considering the relevant law, in particular
Toone
and
Moore,
we are persuaded that a person of ordinary prudence, with the knowledge ascribed to defendant in the complaint, would not have anticipated that plaintiff’s injury or one similar was likely to occur. In reaching this conclusion, we necessarily focus on defendant’s alleged
*697
negligent act,
i.e.,
furnishing her automobile to Randy. Plaintiff asserted only that defendant loaned the vehicle to Randy with awareness he was “intoxicated,” “visibly emotionally disturbed,” and had a “history of committing acts of violence” against plaintiff. While a motor vehicle collision may be a reasonably foreseeable consequence of such an act,
see Hart,
Under these circumstances, plaintiffs complaint fails to allege facts sufficient “to satisfy [one of] the substantive elements,” of a claim of common law negligence,
i.e.,
foreseeability.
Hewes v. Johnston,
Affirmed.
Judge WELLS concurred prior to 30 June 1994.
