Opinion
December 2, 1997
Appeal from the Supreme Court, New York County (Beverly Cohen, J.).
Plaintiff was assaulted and robbed in an incident that commenced in a common corridor and concluded in an empty office of a commercial building, and seeks to recover against the building's owners and management and the security guard company they hired for failure to provide adequate security. The action was dismissed by the motion court for plaintiff's failure to come forward with any proof as to how the assailant gained access to the premises. This was error. Plaintiff's evidence that the building owners and managing agent received numerous complaints from tenants about criminal activity in the building and, in turn, warned tenants about such activity, that building entrances were left unattended during business hours, that visitors were not screened upon entering the building, and that, in the opinion of a security expert, the assault was the result of inadequate security measures, sufficed to raise triable issues as to whether the security measures taken by defendant landlord or its managing agent were reasonable under the circumstances, and, if not, whether defendants' failure to provide reasonable security was a proximate cause of the assault ( see, Freno v. Sutton, 160 A.D.2d 597; Rudel v. National Jewelry Exch. Co., 213 A.D.2d 301). However, the action was properly dismissed as against the security guard company, since it did not assume a special duty of care to plaintiff and its contract with the management company did not make plaintiff a third-party beneficiary ( Rudel v. National Jewelry Exch. Co., supra.).
Concur — Rosenberger, J. P., Ellerin, Nardelli, Williams and Andrias, JJ.