Tan v. Arnel Management Co.

170 Cal. App. 4th 1087, 88 Cal. Rptr. 3d 754, 2009 Cal. App. LEXIS 107
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 29, 2009
DocketB197706
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 170 Cal. App. 4th 1087 (Tan v. Arnel Management Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tan v. Arnel Management Co., 170 Cal. App. 4th 1087, 88 Cal. Rptr. 3d 754, 2009 Cal. App. LEXIS 107 (Cal. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Opinion

ALDRICH, J.

INTRODUCTION

Plaintiff Yu Fang Tan was shot in an attempted carjacking in the ungated portion of the common area of his apartment complex. He, along with his wife Chun Kuei Chang and son (together, plaintiffs), sued the management company and property owners, defendants Amel Management Company, Pheasant Ridge Investment Company, and Colima Real Estate Company, for failure to take steps to properly secure their premises against foreseeable criminal acts of third parties. After an Evidence Code section 402 hearing held in limine, the trial court ruled that three prior violent crimes against others on the premises’ common areas were not sufficiently similar crimes to the one perpetrated on Tan to impose a duty on defendants to protect tenants of the apartment complex. The court entered judgment for defendants, and plaintiffs appeal.

In the published portion of this opinion, we hold that plaintiffs’ evidence of three prior violent attacks by strangers in the common areas of the apartment complex were sufficiently similar to the attack on Tan to provide substantial evidence of the necessary degree of foreseeability to give rise to a duty on defendants to provide the relatively minimal security measures that plaintiffs seek. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Defendant Amel Management Company manages the Pheasant Ridge Apartments. Pheasant Ridge is a 620-unit, multibuilding apartment complex, *1091 with over 1,000 residents, situated on 20.59 acres in Rowland Heights, California. Entrance to the complex is gained from Colima Road. The entrance road bisects the property. The beginning of the entrance road has a grassy median and is bordered on both sides by tennis courts. A little farther up the road lie two open parking lots. One is a visitor lot, located on one side of the entrance road, and the other is the parking lot for the leasing office, located on the other side of the road. Just before the two parking lots, in the middle of the entrance road, sits a “guard shack.” Continuing past the two parking lots to the back of the property, the entrance road fans out into a circle by which vehicles can turn left or right through two security gates. The apartments are located beyond the security gates. The gates are remote control operated. Most of the property’s parking spaces lie behind these gates by the apartments.

Plaintiffs moved into Pheasant Ridge in July 2002 and received one assigned parking space. Tenants could pay an additional fee for a garage, but plaintiffs chose not to rent one. At the time they leased the apartment, plaintiffs learned that if they had a second car, they could park it in unassigned parking spaces located throughout the complex, or in one of the two lots for visitors and the leasing office, as long as the car was removed from the leasing office lot before 7:00 a.m.

At around 11:30 p.m. on December 28, 2002, Tan arrived home. He drove around the property looking for an open parking space because his wife had parked the family’s other car in their assigned space. Unable to locate an available space, Tan parked in the leasing office parking lot outside the gated area.

As Tan was parking his car, an unidentified man approached him and asked for help. When Tan opened his window, the man pointed a gun at Tan and told him to get out of the car because the man wanted it. Tan responded, “Okay. Let me park my car first.” But the car rolled a little, at which point the assailant shot Tan in the neck. The incident rendered Tan a quadriplegic.

In their ensuing complaint against defendants, plaintiffs alleged three causes of action: negligence, loss of consortium, and fraud. The trial court granted summary adjudication of the fraud cause of action, but denied summary adjudication of plaintiffs’ negligence and loss of consortium causes of actions.

Before trial, the court granted defendants’ motion for an Evidence Code section 402 hearing to ascertain plaintiffs’ evidence of prior similar criminal activity. Defendants wanted to investigate whether the prior incidents raised by plaintiffs were sufficiently similar to make the assault on Tan foreseeable *1092 and hence to impose a duty of care on defendants under Ann M. v. Pacific Plaza Shopping Center (1993) 6 Cal.4th 666 [25 Cal.Rptr.2d 137, 863 P.2d 207] (Ann M.).

At the hearing, plaintiffs’ expert, UCLA (University of California at Los Angeles) sociology professor Jack Katz, looked at police reports, complaints to the police, property management reports, and records of Pheasant Ridge’s security service, PACWEST Security Services. 1 After excluding from his analysis those prior incidents involving attacks by acquaintances, Professor Katz found 10 incidents he viewed as being “particularly significant warning signs,” of which three involved “prior violent incidents.” All of the incidents involved a sudden attack without warning, late at night, by a stranger on someone who was on the ungated portion of the premises.

The first example of a violent incident occurred just under two years before Tan’s attack and involved an assault with a deadly weapon. A guard, who was patrolling on his bicycle around 1:30 a.m., saw someone standing by the maintenance garage. The guard approached the subject and asked him what he was doing. The subject replied he was waiting for a friend. When the guard asked for identification, the subject retrieved an unknown object from his pocket and swung it at the guard. The guard raised his arm in self-protection and received a one and one-half inch slash on his forearm.

The second example occurred about a year before plaintiff’s attack and before the existing gates at the back of the entrance road were installed. The assailants carjacked a car in Santa Monica with what the victim perceived to be a gun. Finding Pheasant Ridge “a good place to rob somebody” because there was no gate to impede their escape, as they told police later, the assailants came onto the property and robbed a tenant at his parking spot. The assailants committed the robbery by blocking the tenant’s car, smashing him on the head, and demanding his valuables. They took the tenant’s cell phone and other property.

The third violent incident occurred at 3:55 a.m., nine months before the attack on plaintiff. The incident was “also a violent attack, apparently, by strangers in late nighttime in a parking lot,” and may have actually been in the leasing office lot. The assailant suddenly and viciously attacked the tenant in the face causing profuse bleeding. Although the victim did not mention a weapon, the police classified the attack under Penal Code section 245, an assault with a deadly weapon or force likely to produce great bodily injury.

*1093

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Wang v. Peletta
California Court of Appeal, 2025
Weisbord v. Turtle Beach Corporation CA4/1
California Court of Appeal, 2023
Franco v. Security Industry Specialists CA2/3
California Court of Appeal, 2021
Gardner v. Calstar Air Medical Services CA1/2
California Court of Appeal, 2020
Andrade v. Guys & Dolls CA2/4
California Court of Appeal, 2013

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 Cal. App. 4th 1087, 88 Cal. Rptr. 3d 754, 2009 Cal. App. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tan-v-arnel-management-co-calctapp-2009.