Griffin v. West RS, Inc.

18 P.3d 558, 143 Wash. 2d 81, 2001 Wash. LEXIS 139
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 22, 2001
DocketNo. 68911-3
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 18 P.3d 558 (Griffin v. West RS, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Griffin v. West RS, Inc., 18 P.3d 558, 143 Wash. 2d 81, 2001 Wash. LEXIS 139 (Wash. 2001).

Opinion

Sanders, J.

The principal question is whether, or to what extent, a residential landlord is legally obliged to protect its tenants from the foreseeable criminal acts of third persons. But this question we need not answer as the jury here found the landlord’s negligence was not a proximate cause of the tenant’s injuries in any event. We therefore reverse the Court of Appeals and affirm the trial court’s dismissal of the tenant’s claim.

I

FACTS

Christie Griffin lived alone in a large residential apartment complex managed by West RS, Inc., d/b/a Trammell Crow Residential Services (Trammell Crow). In early April 1993 Griffin heard a loud noise while showering. She thought the noise came from an adjacent apartment, but became alarmed after she exited the bathroom and noticed dirt and debris on the floor beneath an attic crawl space door. Griffin also discovered the three locks on her front door had been undone from the inside. Convinced someone had entered her apartment through the crawl space and [84]*84exited through her front door, Griffin immediately reported the incident to her manager.

Two maintenance personnel were dispatched to the apartment and conducted a cursory inspection of the crawl space. Telling Griffin they hadn’t seen anything suspicious, they nevertheless placed a single two-by-four across the attic opening, securing it with screws.

The crawl space was not within the normal use of tenants, but was occasionally used for storage. The attic area was not open to the public, and could be accessed only by Trammell Crow through the private living space of residents. Access required consent by the tenant or proper notice to the tenant under RCW 59.18.150(2)-(3).

Two weeks later Griffin again heard a loud noise while showering. Stepping from the shower, wrapped in a towel, she walked around the corner into her kitchen where she encountered a man with a nylon stocking over his face who was taking a pan out of a drawer. Griffin ran for the door but was caught by the man, who began hitting her in the head with the pan and then broke her wrist. Griffin broke free as her attacker attempted to drag her into the bedroom and ran naked from the apartment. The man pursued her, but was apprehended and held by neighbors until police arrived.

Griffin’s attacker was Anthony Spencer, the tenant of an adjacent apartment. Investigation of the crawl space revealed a hole in the Sheetrock separating Griffin’s attic from Spencer’s. The hole was large enough to allow passage from Spencer’s to Griffin’s attic. Entry into Griffin’s apartment through the opening in her closet was not impeded by the two-by-four which the landlord had fastened across it.

Griffin sued Spencer for assault and battery and Trammell Crow for negligently violating its alleged duty to protect her from harm. At trial Griffin requested plaintiff’s proposed instruction 8 stating:

Trammell Crow had a duty to take reasonable steps to protect Christie Griffin from foreseeable criminal conduct of a third party.

[85]*85Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 359. However the court rejected the proposed instruction, preferring its own Instruction 12:

A landlord may be negligent if it undertakes to protect a tenant against a danger of which it knows or in the exercise of ordinary care ought to know, and fails to exercise ordinary care in its efforts, and if the tenant reasonably relied upon the landlord’s actions and therefore refrained from taking actions to protect herself.
Likewise, a tenant may be negligent for failing to use ordinary care for the tenant’s own safety.

CP at 1449. The court gave Griffin’s proposed instruction on probable cause:

The term “proximate cause” means a cause which in a direct sequence unbroken by any new independent cause, produces the event complained of and without which such event would not have happened.

There may be one or more proximate causes of an event. Instruction 16 (CP at 1453). At Griffin’s request the court also gave Instruction 17 on supervening cause:

If you find that Trammell Crow was negligent but that the sole proximate cause of the occurrence was a later independent intervening act of Anthony Spencer that Trammell Crow, in the exercise of ordinary care, could not reasonably have anticipated, Trammell Crow’s original negligence is superseded by the intervening cause and is not a proximate cause of the occurrence. If however, in the exercise of ordinary care, Trammell Crow should reasonably have anticipated the intervening cause it does not supersede Trammell Crow’s original negligence and Trammell Crow’s negligence is a proximate cause.
It is not necessary that the sequence of events or the particular resultant occurrence be foreseeable. It is only necessary that the resultant occurrence fall within the general field of danger which Trammell Crow should reasonably have anticipated.

CP at 366, 1454.

[86]*86During the trial, over continuing objection, counsel for Trammell Crow questioned its own expert concerning an extended hypothetical involving police investigation of a complaint occurring two weeks before the attack. The hypothetical explored the extent to which police would have been able to investigate an original complaint from Griffin and obtain a warrant to search Spencer’s apartment, given probable cause restraints and the likelihood Spencer would have refused entry into his apartment. At the conclusion of the trial the court gave Instruction 20:

A tenant of an apartment building has a reasonable expectation of privacy in an adjacent attic area which is accessible only through the living space of the tenant. A search warrant to search such an attic may not be obtained unless there is evidence of probable cause to search in the attic.

CP at 1457.

The jury found Spencer liable for assault, awarding $500,000 in damages. But while it also found Trammell Crow negligent under the standard articulated in Instruction 12, the jury nevertheless concluded by special verdict that Trammell Crow’s negligence was not a proximate cause of Griffin’s injury or damages and therefore awarded no damages against the landlord or manager.

By partially published opinion, Division One of the Court of Appeals, Cox, J., reversed and remanded for a new trial against Trammell Crow, holding landlords have an affirmative duty to protect tenants from foreseeable criminal acts of third parties, and concluding the trial court committed prejudicial error by refusing Griffin’s proposed instruction 8 which described that duty. Griffin v. W. RS, Inc., d/b/a Trammell Crow Residential Servs., 97 Wn. App. 557, 572, 984 P.2d 1070 (1999). The court adopted Restatement (Second) of Torts § 344 (1965) as an accurate statement of the landlord’s duty to protect its tenant against foreseeable criminal acts of third parties.1 Griffin, 97 Wn. App. at 570.

[87]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 P.3d 558, 143 Wash. 2d 81, 2001 Wash. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffin-v-west-rs-inc-wash-2001.