This criminal case involved the violent assault of the plaintiff by an intruder into her apartment, the intruder having made a duplicate key to the apartment after being furnished the original key by the landlord for the purpose of repairs being made in the apartment. A New York Family Lawyer said that, having been found negligent by the jury for its conduct and ineffective security, the landlord sought to apportion the total fault between itself and the non-defendant intentional tortfeasor, the man who committed the violent assault. In the case before this court, suit was brought against the County of Nassau alleging negligence on the part of its Police Department arising from the following facts.
Plaintiff and her husband had an ongoing marital dispute. He had in the recent past thrown a substance in plaintiff’s eyes, temporarily blinding her, stolen her car and threatened to kill her. A New York Custody Lawyer said that, plaintiff obtained a Temporary Order of Protection against her husband from the Family Court Queens County. The order was renewed by that court and was in effect on the night of the incident which gave rise to the suit against the County. The Family Court had also issued a warrant for the husband’s arrest.
A Queens Family Lawyer said that, on that night plaintiff had attended night classes at LaGuardia Community College in Long Island City. At about 10:00 P.M., she entered her car and shortly after she started to move, her husband, who had hidden himself in the car, (apparently having a set of keys to gain entrance) jumped into the front passenger seat, showed his wife a knife and told her to drive home in Far Rockaway.