Title: PREMISES LIABILITY UPDATE
1PREMISES LIABILITY UPDATE
- GREGORY G. JONES
- Russell, Turner, Laird Jones
- Fort Worth and Dallas, Texas
2CHANGE IS IN THE AIR
- PREMISES LIABILITY AND SECURITY CASES
- Legislative Proposals/Judicial Review
- The Question of Duty
- The Question of Control
- The Question of Proximate Cause
- The Question of Foreseeability
3Introduction-Trends in Texas and Across the
Country
- Tougher Juries
- Tougher Judges
- Tougher Laws
- Tougher Insurance Companies and Defendants
4Topics of Discussion
- Trends in Settlements and Verdicts
- Trends in the Common Law
- Trends in Statutory Law
- Trends in the Behavior of Insurance Companies and
Defendants
5Lefmark Management Company v. Old, 946 S.W. 2d 52
(Tex. 1997)
- Justice Owens concurring opinion.
- Many issues relating to premises liability-as
related to criminal acts not addressed - Watch for 1998
6Duty
- A landlord who maintains control over the safety
and security of the premises owes a duty to use
reasonable care to protect tenants against
unreasonable and foreseeable risk of harm from
the acts of third parties. Centeq Realty v.
Seigler, 899 S.W. 2d 195 (Tex. 1995)
7Premises Liability and Criminal Acts of Third
Parties
- The area of most significant developments in
premises liability. - The slip and fall case.
- General Contractors and Independent Contractors
8 THE NO DUTY RULE
- There is no duty and therefor no liability
without first establishing that there was a
foreseeable risk of harm from the acts of third
persons. Centeq, at p. 197 - Also noted in Lefmark, at p.53.
- NOTE Duty is closely related to the issue of
CONTROL.
9CREATING DUTY
- By an affirmative act on the part of a party
(creation of a hazard) - Employment / relationship of parties
- Foreseeability of an incident or occurrence
- Control over premises and/or activity
- Statutory Duty
- Restatement
10STATUTORY DUTY
- Section 95.003 of Tex. Civ. Prac. Rem. Code
- Premises defect cause of action where there is
injury to contractor, subcontractor, or an
employee of same, which results from failure to
provide a safe workplace. - Requires actual knowledge on part of owner of
condition resulting in death, injury, damage
11Statutory Duty
- 1995 legislation
- Subchapter D, Security Devices, Texas Property
Code - Section 92.153 Landlord required to provide
- Section 92.157 Tenant Requested Devices
- Section 92.158 Repair/Replace security devices
- Etc.
12Statutory Duty Does Not Limit Other Rights of
Tenant
- The tenant still has rights under the common law,
or under other right, to bring an action and that
is unaffected by the changes in the Property
Code. Moreno v. Brittany Square Associates,
L.P., 899 S.W. 2d 261 (Tex. App. --Houston 14th
Dist. 1995, writ denied)
13THE RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS
- Section 343 adopted by the state of Texas.
- One who posses land will be subject to liability
for physical harm to invitees by a condition the
party knows or reasonably should have known
existed and was an unreasonable risk of harm.
Papania v. Stelly, 939 S.W. 2d 653 (Tex. App.
--Beaumont 1997, no writ)
14Duty and Foreseeability
- Whatever duty a lessor may have to protect
persons injured on the leased premises against
the criminal acts of third parties, that duty
does not arise in the absence of a foreseeable
risk of harm. - Walker v. Harris, 924 S.W. 2d 375 (Tex. 1996)
15The Requirement of a Duty
- Liability in tort requires that a duty must exist
and a duty must be violated - See, Centeq, at p 197 and Greater Houston Transp.
Co. v. Phillips, 801 S.W. 2d 523, 525 (Tex. 1990).
16Duty
- If there is a duty is a question to be decided by
the court as a question of law based on
surrounding facts.
17The Duty in all Premises Cases
- A landowner who has control of the premises must
use reasonable care to make a premises safe for
business invitees
- Invitees must be warned of hidden dangers that
present a risk of harm.
18Duty and Creation of Dangerous Situation
- Where the dangerous situation is created by a
party and it is reasonable that the party should
foresee that others may be injured when
exercising their lawful rights, then a DUTY
arises to take steps to prevent the injury or
damage. Jacobs-Cathy Co. v. Cockrum, __ S.W. 2d
__, W.L. 292622 (Tex. App. - Waco 1997, no writ)
19General Information on Inadequate Security Cases
- Liability Consultants Study
- Sudbury, Massachussetts
- Mr. Norman Bates and John D. Groussman
20Types of Crimes
- 39.45 Assault and Battery
- 26.97 Rape/Sexual Assault
- 15.41 Wrongful Death (Murder)
- 10.28 Robbery
- 4.04 Other
- 3.85 False Imprisonment
21Where Crimes are Occurring
- Parking Lots
- Stores
- Apartment Units
- Interior Common Area
- Exterior Common Area
- Bar
- General Commercial
22Type of Businesses Sued
- Apartment Complex
- Restaurant
- Retail Store
- Security Contract Company
- Bar
- Property Management Company
- Governmental Entity
- Hotel/Motel
- Supermarket
- Shopping Center
- Other Commercial Industry
- School
- Convenience Store/Gas Station
23Case Results Study 1993-1995
- 51.91 Defense Verdict
- 19.49 Remanded
- 17.30 Plaintiff Verdict
- 11.29 Settled
24ELEMENTS OF THE CAUSE OF ACTION
- CONTROL OF THE PREMISES
- Centeq v. Siegler, 899 S.W. 2d 195 (Tex. 1995)
- The right to control the premises is one of the
factors that determines whether a legal duty
should be imposed on the owner or possessor of
the property. Id at 197 - There is still a question over the extent and
nature of control needed.
25CONTROL
- Lefmark Mngmnt Co. v. Old, No. 95-0983, May 16,
1997, TxSCt. - A former property manager does not have any duty
to prevent the criminal acts of others when the
manager did not own, occupy or control the
property on the date of the incident - BUT...
26WATCH FOR THE PROGENY OF LEFMARK
- Justice Owen Concurrence
- I do not intend to convey the impression that
those articulations (the Lefmark majority
opinion) have fully defined the extent of the
duty owed by an employer, landlord, business
owner, or possessor of property when the danger
of injury or death from a violent criminal act
is, in a legal sense, foreseeable. - Responsibility of law enforcement for police
protection
27What Kind of Control?
- Cain v. Timberwalk Apartments, 942 S.W. 2d 697
(Tex. App.- Houston 14th Dist. 1997.
- a landowner or apartment manager has a duty to
use ordinary care to protect against an
unreasonable and foreseeable risk of harm from
the criminal acts of third parties
28Control Over the Activity Causing Injury
- Specific control over the injury causing
activity, was necessary to impose vicarious
liability. Ely v. General Moters Corp., 927
S.W. 2d 774 ( Tex. App. - Texarkana 1996, writ
denied) - NOTE Lefmark does not seem to mandate control
over specific aspects of safety and/or security.
Compare to the more limited view of Exxon.
29Adjacent Property
- The Duty to protect invitees and licensees from
the criminal acts of third parties extends of
those premises adjacent to public walkways.
Silva v. Spohn Health System Corp. 951 S.W. 2d 91
(Tex. App. --Corpus Christi 1997, no writ)
30Control Lessors and Franchise Operations
- Exxon v. Tidwell, 867 S.W. 2d 19 (Tex. 1993)
inquiry must focus on who had specific control
over the safety and security of the premises,
rather than the more general right of control
over operations.
- Note This is a case where an employee of the
lessee was injured - Exxon was merely the Lessor of the gas station
and had a sales agreement with lessee - Restrictions and standards to protect their name
and profits
31Control Lessors and Franchise Operations
- Exxon v. Tidwell, 867 S.W. 2d 19 (Tex. 1993)
inquiry must focus on who had specific control
over the safety and security of the premises,
rather than the more general right of control
over operations.
- Note This is a case where an employee of the
lessee was injured - Exxon was merely the Lessor of the gas station
and had a sales agreement with lessee - Restrictions and standards to protect their name
and profits
32HOW TO ATTACK ISSUES OF CONTROL
- Distinguish employee situations with guests
and/or business invitees on the premises - Look for any aspect of control in franchise
agreements which give the franchisor control over
the franchisee - Identify any aspects of the agreement/s between
the lessor-lessee/franchisor-franchisee which
address issues of safety, security.
33APPARENT AGENCY
- Restatement (Second) Agency Section 267
- One who represents that another is his servant
or other agent and thereby causes a third person
justifiably to rely upon the care and skill of
such apparent agent is subject to liability to
the third person for harm caused by the lack of
care or skill of the one appearing to be a
servant or other agent as if her were such.
(Actual reliance is required)
34FRAUD
- The elements of common law fraud based upon the
actions and representations of a franchise
operation - How do they hold themselves out to the public?
- Do they want the public to think the operation
is another operation controlled by the national
company with the national name that is franchised?
35Franchise Agreements and Agency
- Texas courts have held that franchise agreements
dont create agency relationship - Requiring corporate standards to be followed does
not translate into day to day control. If no such
control then no liability under theory of agency
for an employer, particularly where no mention of
employee screening procedures.
36Smith v. Foodmaker, Inc.
- 928 S.W. 2d 683 (Tex. App.-Fort Worth 1996, no
writ)
37REASONABLE FORESEEABILITY
- NO DUTY RULE
- PRIOR SIMILAR INCIDENT RULE
- TOTALITY OF THE CIRCUMSTANCES
38The Rule in Texas Modified Totality of the
Circumstances?
- Before a duty arises on the part of the
landowner, occupier or controller, there must be
foreseeability - As applied to the issue of duty foreseeabilty is
an issue of law for the court while it is a
question of fact as applied to proximate cause.
Exxon Corp. v. Tidwell, 816 S.W. 2d 455 ( Tex
App.-Dallas, 1990) rev on other grounds, 867
S.W. 2d 19 (Tex. 1992)
39TOTALITY OF THE CIRCUMSTANCES
- Nixon v. Mr. Property Mgt. Co., 690 S.W. 2d 546
(Tex.1985) Criminal history in the area in
general, not only the specific property, is
relevant to foreseeability, as is the flavor of
the area. - BUT COMPARE...
- Walker v. Harris, 924 S.W. 2d 375 (Tex. 1996)
Plaintiff did not bring sufficient summary
judgment evidence to raise fact issue where
apartments in area of low to moderate crime no
previous similar incidents
40UNDER THE HEADING OF ITS OK TO FIGHT BACK
- Phuong Anh Thi Truong and Duc La v. Sears Roebuck
et. al. ( Ct. App.- 1st Dist, Houston No.
01-95-00683-CV, March 13, 1997) - Duty does not arise until risk of injury
foreseeable - Affidavit of owner saying he was not aware of
criminal activity or acts not enough where the
test is whether he knew or should have known of
previous assaults - The Plaintiff was not responsible for her own
injuries because she fought back. Against public
policy to decide otherwise.
41DAMAGES
- POST TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER (PTSD)
- Recognized as a diagnosis by DSM-IV
- Recognized as a diagnosis by nearly all
psychologists and psychiatrists - RAPE TRAUMA SYNDROME (RTS)
- Not recognized as a diagnosis criteria by the
DSM-IV - controversial
- Term coined by Dr. Ann Burgess
- Combine with a PTSD diagnosis as primary
diagnosis. - Robinson and Havner ?