Yolanda Mason,
Respondent,
v.
U.E.S.S. Leasing Corporation, et
al.,
Appellants.
(and a third-party action.)
2001 NY Int. 82
MEMORANDUM:
The order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs. The certified question should be answered in the affirmative, but on the narrower grounds stated in the Memorandum.
Plaintiff resided in a Queens apartment building that
was part of a larger complex known as Lefrak City. Defendant
U.E.S.S. Leasing Corporation and Builders and Realtors
Corporation, Inc. owned the complex, and defendant Mid-City
Plaintiff, in her first cause of action, alleges that defendants negligently allowed Toole to enter the building so as to gain access to her apartment. The second cause of action charges that defendant Mid-City negligently performed its security contract, and the third cause of action asserts that defendants violated RPL § 235-b and breached the implied warranty of habitability by failing to properly staff the security desk or secure the complex.
Supreme Court granted defendants' motions for summary
judgment and dismissed the complaint. The court reasoned that
plaintiff's deposition testimony established that defendants had
taken minimal security precautions and that plaintiff failed to
show that defendants' negligence was a proximate cause of her
injuries. A divided Appellate Division reversed, concluding that
a question of fact existed as to whether defendants negligently
permitted Toole, a nonresident and known troublemaker, to enter
Landlords have a common-law duty to take minimal
precautions to protect tenants from foreseeable harm, including
foreseeable criminal conduct by a third person (see, Jacqueline
S. v City of New York, , 81 NY2d 288, 293-294; Burgos v Aqueduct
Realty Corp., , 92 NY2d 544, 548). A landlord has a duty to
minimize the foreseeable danger from criminal acts when past
experience alerts it to the likelihood of criminal conduct on the
part of third persons. Whether knowledge of criminal activities
occurring at various points within a unified housing complex * *
* can be sufficient to make injury to a person in one of the
buildings foreseeable, must depend on the location, nature and
extent of those previous criminal activities and their
similarity, proximity or other relationship to the crime in
question" (Jacqueline S. v City of New York,
On a motion for summary judgment, a plaintiff need only
raise a triable issue of fact regarding whether defendant's
Finally, we agree with the Appellate Division majority that, on the facts of this case, plaintiff's opening of her apartment door without looking through the peephole or inquiring who was there was not an independent intervening act that, as a matter of law, absolved defendants of responsibility.