Traicoff v. Withers
Decision Date | 27 December 2000 |
Docket Number | No. A00A1844.,A00A1844. |
Citation | 544 S.E.2d 177,247 Ga. App. 428 |
Parties | TRAICOFF et al. v. WITHERS et al. |
Court | Georgia Court of Appeals |
OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE
Gray, Hedrick & Edenfield, L. Bruce Hedrick, Atlanta, for appellants.
Eastman & Apolinsky, Stephen D. Apolinsky, Lori A. Smith, Decatur, for appellees.
On June 18, 1996, Reed Withers was killed by James Salery following a quarrel at the apartment complex where Withers lived. Reed Withers' wife, Susan, sued James Traicoff, the owner of the complex, and Carolyn Loudermilk, the apartment manager, for failing to exercise due care to protect her husband from Salery's attack. The defendants moved for summary judgment, and the trial court denied their motion. On appeal, the defendants allege that the trial court erred. We agree and reverse.
So viewed, the record shows that the Witherses lived in an apartment across the driveway from the apartment shared by Carolyn Smoots and her boyfriend, Salery. Loudermilk lived next door to Smoots and Salery. According to Susan Withers, Smoots and Salery had a volatile relationship. Ms. Withers testified on deposition that she heard Salery yell at Smoots and that Loudermilk told her Salery "was not a nice person and could be mean." In addition, Ms. Withers testified that she "believe[d] at one time [Loudermilk] told me [that Salery] could be violent."2 Ms. Withers admitted, however, that she did not "actually have a recollection" of such conversation.
On the night of June 18, 1996, Salery was outside working on his truck. When Salery attempted to start his truck, it rolled backward before coming to a stop in front of the Witherses' apartment. When Reed Withers returned home, he parked next to Salery and demanded several times that Salery move "the goddamn truck." Evidently, Salery returned to his apartment and got a machete and a "stick."3 Reed Withers followed Salery. While the two were standing in front of Salery's apartment, Loudermilk stepped between them and told both men to go to their respective apartments. According to Loudermilk, Reed Withers shook his fist in her face and told her that he wanted "the goddamn truck" moved. He then turned to Salery, called him a racial epithet, and ordered him to move the truck.
At this point, Loudermilk went inside her apartment, called 911, and told the dispatcher that her "neighbors are getting ready to fight." The dispatcher asked if anyone had any weapons, and Loudermilk responded, "No." Moments later, Loudermilk heard a loud thump. When she looked outside, she saw Reed Withers slumped next to her door. She called 911 a second time and requested an ambulance. Reed Withers apparently died at the scene.
Following her husband's death, Susan Withers sued Loudermilk and Traicoff,4 alleging that they breached their "duty to intervene" and their "duty to warn."5 The defendants, on the other hand, maintain that they breached no duty. We agree with the defendants.
"A landlord's duty to exercise ordinary care to protect tenants against third-party criminal attacks extends only to foreseeable criminal acts."7 This is so because a landlord's liability is predicated upon superior knowledge of the existence of a condition that would subject a tenant to an unreasonable risk of harm.8
This case does not involve a prior criminal act that would make it foreseeable to the defendants that this type of crime would occur. Indeed, there is no evidence that any prior criminal attack had ever occurred much less that Salery was involved in an attack. Nevertheless, Ms. Withers contends that the defendants had reason to believe that Salery posed a threat to the tenants and that they failed to take reasonable steps to prevent the attack on Reed Withers. In order to prevail on this theory, Ms. Withers must point to some evidence that either Loudermilk or Traicoff had superior knowledge that Salery had violent propensities. This she failed to do.
Ms. Withers contends that the criminal attack was foreseeable because Loudermilk knew that Salery was "mean" and that he yelled at Smoots. But the fact that a person is unpleasant and/or yells does not put others on notice that the person is prone to deadly violence. Ms. Withers also testified that she "believed" that Loudermilk told her that Salery could be violent, but she had no actual recollection of the conversation. Although Ms. Withers is entitled to the benefit of any reasonable inference from the evidence, her equivocal testimony as to what Loudermilk might have told her is entirely too speculative to create a genuine issue of fact. Moreover, "[t]he exercise of ordinary care does not impose a duty to anticipate unlikely, remote, or slightly possible events."9 Thus, even if Loudermilk believed that Salery could become...
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...there remains no "duty to anticipate unlikely, remote, or slightly possible events." (Citation omitted.) Traicoff v. Withers , 247 Ga. App. 428, 430, 544 S.E.2d 177 (2000).Here, the trial court focused on evidence of the frequency of prior property crimes, and it relied on e-mails from Papp......
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