Plaintiff appeals as of right from the trial court’s order granting defendant’s motion for summary judgment, GCR 1963, 117.2(1). We reverse and remand for trial.
On January 5, 1979, at approximately 1:30 a.m., an intruder entered the Peyton Place Bar carrying a rifle and announced a robbery. The man yelled for everyone to get onto the floor. Plaintiff’s decedent refused to cooperate, swore at the robber, and directed an obscene gesture in his direction. The robber fired at the decedent at point-blank range, fatally striking him in the chest.
Plaintiff filed a two-count complaint against defendant, alleging dramshop violations and premises liability. The dramshop count was settled, leaving only the premises liability count, which the trial court dismissed by means of the order underlying this appeal. In granting summary judgment, the court reasoned that defendant could not be liable because she had no duty to prevent the killing of the plaintiff’s decedent. The court characterized the killing as wholly unforeseeable.
We believe that defendant did in fact owe a duty of care to plaintiff’s decedent, and that the trial court’s reasoning as to this issue was erroneous. A business invitor such as defendant owes a duty to invitees to maintain premises in a reasonably safe *279condition, exercising due care to prevent situations which it knows or should know might result in injury, Manuel v Weitzman, 386 Mich 157, 163; 191 NW2d 474 (1971). This Court has recently discussed the extent to which a business invitor’s duty of care requires it to protect its invitees from the intentional act of an assailant. See Earle v Colonial Theatre Co, 82 Mich App 54; 266 NW2d 466 (1978), lv den 403 Mich 816 (1978). In Earle, this Court found liability for injuries sustained when the plaintiff was assaulted on defendant’s premises. Similarly, in Samson v Saginaw Professional Building, Inc, 393 Mich 393; 224 NW2d 843 (1975), the Supreme Court held that a landlord owes an affirmative duty to protect tenants from foreseeable assaults by users of the premises. The Court stated that the duty to guard another against the criminal acts of third parties can arise when there is a "special relationship” between the party owing the duty and the one to be protected. 393 Mich 406, fn 1. As noted in Earle, supra, the relationship between a business invitor and its invitee is sufficiently "special” to give rise to the duty, see 2 Restatement Torts, 2d, § 314A(3).
A motion for summary judgment based upon GCR 1963, 117.2(1) tests only the legal sufficiency of the complaint, not whether such claims can be factually supported at trial. Crowther v Ross Chemical & Manufacturing Co, 42 Mich App 426, 431; 202 NW2d 577 (1972). In the present case, plaintiff made the following allegations:
"15. That at all times relevant herein, defendant retailer was engaged in the business of furnishing and selling intoxicating liquor to its customer business invitees on the above described premises.
"16. That it thereupon became, and was, the duty of defendant retailer, by its agents and employees on its *280behalf, to exercise all due care and diligence for the safety of persons lawfully on said premises, including plaintiffs deceased spouse.
"17. That on or about January 6, 1979, at approximately 1:30 a.m., as a direct and proximate result of defendant retailer’s misfeasance and its failure to keep the premises of the Peyton Place Bar safe and secure in an effort to protect its customer invitees, robbers entered the premises, robbed the establishment of its cash, and shot and killed Robert Dale Askew, plaintiff’s deceased spouse.
"18. That defendant retailer then and there negligently violated its duty to plaintiff’s deceased spouse by failing to protect the deceased, a customer of the Peyton Place Bar, from bodily harm.
"19. That defendant retailer was also negligent in its failure to take the necessary precaution to protect its patrons from bodily harm.”
Note that plaintiff has specifically pleaded the foreseeability of the assault. We believe that the foregoing allegations have, at the very least, raised a jury question as to whether the risk of an assault such as that involved here was foreseeable to defendant. Whether criminal activity has previously taken place on the premises is but one factor in the determination of whether an assault was foreseeable. Also significant are whether the premises as a whole were located within a high crime area and whether the owner of the premises was aware of criminal activity in the vicinity. We conclude that material issues of fact exist as to the issue of foreseeability. The matter should be decided by the finders of fact. Samson, supra, pp 404-407.
Finally, we reject defendant’s alternative argument, that summary judgment was proper because, as a matter of law, her conduct could not have been a proximate cause of the decedent’s *281death. The question of proximate cause is also reserved in the first instance for the finders of fact, Kurczewski v State Highway Comm, 112 Mich App 544, 552; 316 NW2d 484 (1982).
Reversed and remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.