DOYLE, Presiding Judge.
We granted this application for interlocutory appeal from the trial court's order denying a motion for summary judgment filed by the Bethany Group, LLC, in an action alleging claims for premises liability and private nuisance filed by Janice C. Grobman, individually and as personal representative of her late husband's estate, after her husband, Dean Grobman, was found shot to death in his taxi cab at an apartment complex operated by Bethany. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
So viewed, the evidence presented established that in the late-night hours of November 8, 2007, Mr. Grobman was dispatched to pick up a passenger at the Alden Ridge apartment complex, which was owned and operated by Bethany. The potential passenger identified himself to the dispatcher at Mr. Grobman's employer, Decatur's Best Taxi Service, as "Jamal," and the caller's number was eventually traced by police to a disposable cell-phone. At approximately 1:50 a.m. on November 9, a DeKalb County police officer responded to an emergency call at Alden Ridge and found Mr. Grobman slumped over the steering wheel of his taxi with a gunshot wound to the head. Police never determined "Jamal's" actual identity, and because his identity remains a mystery, it is unknown whether "Jamal" was a resident of Alden Ridge, the guest of a resident, or a trespasser.
Approximately two years prior to Mr. Grobman's murder, Bethany had hired a security company to surveil the complex. Willie Manson, the owner of the security company, deposed that his company initially provided four security officers for twenty-four hour coverage at the complex. When his company was terminated in February of 2007, they were providing only two security officers, five days a week, for four to five hours per shift. Manson was told by the on-site managers that Bethany's upper management believed the security services were too costly. Manson also deposed that during his company's employment, he was aware of at least two robberies of taxi drivers and two or three robberies of pizza delivery drivers, which robberies occurred during the hours his company was off-duty.
The Appellee also presented evidence that Bethany was aware of other incidents of crime at Alden Ridge, including (1) robberies of persons lured to the premises in response to fake online advertisements; (2) robberies of customers lured onto the property by prostitutes; (3) three or four incidents of trespassers using vacant apartments to lure people for robbery; (4) gang violence; and (5) threats directed at the Manson's employees and Alden Ridge's own courtesy officer. Eight days prior to Mr. Grobman's murder,
After a hearing on Bethany's motion for summary judgment, the trial court issued an order denying the motion, finding that genuine issues of material fact existed.
1. Premises Liability. (a) Bethany first argues that the trial court erred by denying its motion for summary judgment because Mr. Grobman was a licensee on the premises, and the record does not establish sufficient facts for a jury to find that any failure on the part of Bethany to provide security or keep the premises safe was wilful or wanton. We disagree.
In this case, the facts presented at summary judgment render it impossible to determine whether Mr. Grobman was called to the premises by a resident of the complex, thereby having a business relationship with an occupier of the land, or whether another individual with no relationship to Bethany lured him to the complex.
That is because
"The standard of `wilful or wanton' imports deliberate acts or omissions, or such conduct that discloses an inference of conscious indifference to consequences."
The record establishes that Bethany had knowledge that taxi drivers were regularly called to the premises to transport tenants or guests of tenants, and therefore, Bethany reasonably should have anticipated Mr. Grobman's presence on the property. In support of the propositions that Mr. Grobman was a licensee and that it breached no duty owed to him, Bethany cites to Spear v. Calhoun
Thus, a question of fact exists as to whether Bethany breached a duty to protect Mr. Grobman from the peril.
(b) Bethany also argues that the trial court erred by denying its motion for summary judgment because any breach on its part was not the proximate cause of Mr. Grobman's death — because the assailant's act in this case was an intervening cause of Grobman's death.
"Generally, the independent, intervening criminal act of a third party ... will be treated as the supervening proximate cause of such injury ... unless such intervening criminal act was a reasonably foreseeable consequence of defendants' negligent act or omission."
Viewing the evidence of Bethany's knowledge of the previous armed robberies and the testimony of Manson that such incidents increased after Bethany reduced its security, and making all reasonable inferences in the nonmovant's favor, a triable issue remains as to whether Bethany's failure to retain security on the premises or take other precautions was the proximate cause of Mr. Grobman's death.
2. Nuisance. Bethany contends that the trial court erred by denying its motion for summary judgment as to the nuisance claim because there is no evidence that it created or maintained a regularly repeated act or condition at the complex that led to Mr. Grobman's death.
"To be liable under a nuisance theory under the facts of this case, [Bethany] must have created or maintained a continuous or regularly repeated act or condition on the property, which caused [Mr. Grobman's] injury."
Judgment affirmed.
ELLINGTON, C.J., and MILLER, J., concur.