joined by Justice OWEN, dissenting.
To achieve what it considers to be a just result in this case — that the Kirby Company pay for a sexual assault committed by its independent contractor’s independent contractor — the Court faces three obstacles. First, Kirby must somehow be found to have controlled its distributors’ operations in a way that led to the assault, even though it contracted with them that it would “exercise no control” over their selection of dealers. Second, it must have been foreseeable to Kirby that a distributor might not check a dealer applicant’s background if not required to do so and might mistakenly hire a person with a history of sexual misconduct who might assault a customer. The problem here is that in over eighty years of doing business, Kirby has had only one other dealer who sexually assaulted a customer, even though currently some 12,000 Kirby dealers make 1.5 million in-home demonstrations annually. While a risk may be improbable and still be foreseeable, just eight years ago in Greater Houston Transportation Co. v. Phillips,1 an opinion also authored by Justice GoNzalez, the Court held as a matter of law that a Houston taxicab company whose drivers had had about 1,000 accidents annually during the twenty years it had done business could not reasonably foresee that if it did not forbid its drivers from carrying guns, they would do so, illegally, and would shoot other drivers in altercations following accidents. Phillips poses this question to today’s Court: why is the risk that a vacuum cleaner salesman will turn out to be a sexual predator more foreseeable than the risk of cab driver “road rage” when it is at least a thousand times more likely that a Yellow Cab driver will shoot someone in an accident in Houston than it is that a Kirby vacuum cleaner salesman will assault a customer anywhere in the world? Third, the result in this case must not seriously affect the wide range of direct sales and service businesses from Tupperware to television cable companies that employ independent contractors, something the Court has absolutely no desire to do.
The Court’s solution is to limit its decision, as much as possible and well beyond what general principles will allow, to companies that require their products to be sold exclusively in customers’ homes. A company that only allows its products to be sold in homes is unaffected, even if the risk to customers is the same. Today’s “vacuum cleaner rule”, carefully tailored and trimmed, is to apply in all cases exactly like this one, of which there appear to be none. In all other cases, the “taxicab rule” continues to apply, absent other sympathetic circumstances. Employing its chancery jurisdiction, the Court achieves a good result in this one case without adversely affecting the direct sales industry, the employment of independent contractors, or, it is hoped, anyone else at all. Today’s decision is, to borrow Justice Roberts’ metaphor, “a restricted railroad ticket, good for this day and train only.”2
Both parties, on the other hand and to their credit, insist that this case is not unique and that it should be decided based on a neutral application of settled legal principles. I agree, and in my view, these principles require a different decision. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
I
Kristi Read suffered a terrible injury: she was sexually assaulted in the living room of her home by Mickey Carter, who was there ostensibly to demonstrate Kirby vacuum cleaners, which he sold. Carter was an independent contractor selected to be a Kirby “dealer” by Leonard Sena, a Kirby “distributor” who was himself an *739independent contractor. The Kirby Company employed Sena. In addition to the criminal penalties already imposed on Carter, he is liable to Read under the civil law for her damages. But Read has sought compensation instead from Kirby.
It perhaps goes without saying that a determination whether Kirby is liable for Read’s injury must be guided not by a goal of affording Read compensation, as desirable as that may be, but by generally applied principles of legal responsibility, basic among which is that individuals should be responsible for their own actions and should not be liable for others’ independent misconduct. From this fundamental precept it follows that a person who employs an independent contractor must use reasonable care to select someone competent to do the work assigned3— that decision is the employer’s — but is not ordinarily hable for the independent contractor’s wrongful injury to another in the course of the assigned work.4 If, however, the contractor is not truly independent, but rather the employer retains control over some aspect of the contractor’s activities, then the employer may be liable in certain circumstances for its exercise of that control — its own conduct. We have adopted the statement of this “retained control” rule from the Restatement (Second) of Torts as follows:
One who entrusts work to an independent contractor, but who retains the control of any part of the work, is subject to liability for physical harm to others for whose safety the employer owes a duty to exercise reasonable care, which is caused by his failure to exercise his control with reasonable care.5
The basic notion of individual responsibility also dictates that “[a]s a rule, ‘a person has no legal duty to protect another from the criminal acts of a third person.’ ”6 Nevertheless, a person should not foster criminal conduct and thus may be hable for negligently creating a situation that affords another an opportunity to commit a crime if at the time the person “ ‘realized or should have realized the likelihood that such a situation might be created, and that a third person might avail himself of the opportunity to commit such a ... crime.’ ”7 A person may be hable even if the situation he creates does not make criminal conduct probable, but the frequency of such conduct is a factor to be considered in determining whether it was foreseeable.8
No one questions that under these rules, Sena is liable to Read for fading to use reasonable care in selecting Carter as a competent dealer, as the jury found. Sena’s apphcation form required Carter to hst employment references, which Carter did, and inquired whether the apphcant *740had ever been convicted of a crime, to which Carter truthfully answered no. Sena did not check Carter’s references, an omission for which he may be faulted because had he done so, he probably would have learned that although Carter sometimes got high marks on job performance, he had repeatedly been accused of sexually harassing fellow employees and others, and had pleaded guilty to a charge of indecency with a child, for which he received deferred adjudication.
If Sena were incompetent to act as a distributor, Kirby would be liable to Read if its failure to exercise reasonable care in selecting Sena proximately caused her injury. But Sena was not incompetent. In more than twenty years as a distributor, recruiting and training dozens of dealers who altogether had made something like 100,000 in-home demonstrations, Sena had never before had a complaint of dealer misconduct. His mistake in selecting Carter does not prove Sena incompetent. Read does not claim, nor could she do so successfully, that Kirby is liable to her for selecting Sena as a distributor.
Rather, Read claims that Kirby was negligent in not requiring its distributors to investigate potential dealers’ criminal backgrounds. Read and Kirby take polar positions on how the relevant legal principles already stated apply to this claim, but they agree on one very important matter of process: the decision should turn on the neutral application of general rules and not on particularized corollaries adapted to the facts of this one case. Kirby argues that no special duty should be imposed on it, and Read strenuously insists that none is needed. To fashion a rule for the particular circumstances of this ease, Read argues, would be an illegitimate exercise of appellate jurisdiction: “A fact-specific conclusion that a defendant did not have a ‘duty under the particular circumstances of an individual case would really just be a finding that, given the facts, the defendant acted reasonably” — a decision for the fact finder, not an appellate court. Likewise, a fact-specific conclusion that a defendant did have a duty under the particular circumstances of an individual case would be no more than a finding that the defendant had acted unreasonably. In other words, a legal duty cannot legitimately be defined or applied to treat specific situations differently without a general, neutral reason for doing so. As Professor Wechsler once explained, “the main constituent of the judicial process is precisely that it must be genuinely principled, resting with respect to every step that is involved in reaching judgment on analysis and reasons quite transcending the immediate result that is achieved.”9
Read and Kirby also agree that a decision for Read based on general principles will necessarily affect others in the direct sales industry as well as all who employ independent contractors. At oral argument Read’s counsel acknowledged that, for example, the real estate sales industry would be impacted by this case, especially since realtors are often in people’s homes. In amicus curiae briefs, newspapers who use independent contractors as distributors, apartment owners who use independent contractors as property managers, and others have warned of the potentially pervasive effects of a ruling in this case on many other activities. Products commonly sold in homes include cosmetics and personal articles (Avon and Mary Kay), home and kitchen wares (Amway and Tupperware), insurance, and encyclopedias.
To compensate Read without subjecting all these various enterprises to increased liability — although Read argues that they are already subject to such liability — the Court concludes that Kirby is different from other employers of independent contractors because it does not merely allow its distributors to conduct in-home dem*741onstrations, it contractually requires them to do so. While Kirby’s in-home demonstration requirement is some exercise of control over its distributors, it is not, as I will endeavor to explain, the kind of control over the details of its distributors’ operations that should make Kirby liable for their dealer selections while leaving other employers of independent contractors free of responsibility for similar employment decisions. This is especially true when Read concedes, and the Court tacitly recognizes, that Kirby could not practically monitor or otherwise exercise any meaningful control over dealer selection. Furthermore, no evidence suggests that Kirby’s in-home sales requirement has significantly increased the risk of sexual assaults on its customers, nor has the Court even attempted to explain why it is foreseeable, as a matter of law, that door-to-door salesmen will sexually assault their customers but unforeseeable, again as a matter of law, that armed cab drivers will assault other drivers in an accident. Without a principled basis for distinguishing Kirby’s operation from others, the Court’s decision amounts to no more than an order that Kirby pay Read for her damages.
II
To apply the “retained control” rule to the case before us, three questions must be answered: first, did Kirby retain control of Sena’s work so as to be responsible for his dealers’ torts? second, did Kirby owe Read a duty to exercise reasonable care to prevent her from being injured by Carter’s criminal conduct? and third, was Read’s injury caused by Kirby’s failure to exercise its retained control with reasonable care? I address each in turn.
A
Kirby does not select dealers itself, and as a practical matter it could not do so without fundamentally altering the nature of its business. About 700 Kirby distributors employ some 12,000 dealers recruited from more than 50,000 annual applicants. Kirby’s distributors, who are like Sena independent contractors, select the dealers. Kirby’s contract with Sena plainly provided that Kirby “shall exercise no control over the selection of ... Dealers”. Kirby had nothing to do with selecting Carter as a dealer. Practically and contractually, that was entirely Sena’s responsibility.
Read argues, however, and the Court concludes that Kirby should have exercised some control over dealer selection because it required its products to be sold through in-home demonstrations. This requirement is too general to constitute a retention of control for liability purposes. For an employer to be liable for an independent contractor’s actions, the employer must have retained not merely a “general right of control over operations” but control of “‘the details of the work to be performed’ ”.10 An independent contractor ceases to be independent only when and to the extent that his employer assumes control for the details of the work.
The employer must control not merely the end sought to be accomplished, but also the means and details of its accomplishment as well. Examples of the type of control normally exercised by an employer include when and where to begin and stop work, the regularity of hours, the amount of time spent on particular aspects of the work, the tools and appliances used to perform the work, and the physical method or manner of accomplishing the end result.11
Kirby exercised no such control over its distributors. With respect to dealer selection, it contractually eschewed any right of such control. Kirby’s contractual requirement that its products be sold through in-home demonstrations merely defined the *742nature of the work assigned to its distributors. Kirby did not control how its distributors went about that work. Kirby was entitled to choose the basic distribution system for its products without thereby incurring liability for the manner in which its distributors carried out the details of the work.
An employer is not liable for an. independent contractor’s misconduct merely because the employer knows of risk inherent in the assigned work. In Golden Spread Council, Inc. v. Akins12 this Court held that Boy_ Scouts of America had no duty to monitor its local councils’ selection of troop leaders,13 even though BSA and its councils well knew that troop leaders were placed in a position to abuse the boys in their charge and tried to minimize the risk by maintaining a list of persons believed to be undesirable for those positions. BSA did not, of course, contractually require its local councils to mandate that troop leaders actually interact with boy scouts, but it had no need to do so; one cannot do the job of a troop leader without meeting with the boys. BSA was not responsible for the selection of an abusive troop leader merely because it set up the organization that allowed that risk to exist.
I cannot discern a principled reason for excusing BSA from any responsibility for sexual assaults by persons selected by its independent volunteer councils and not excusing Kirby from the same responsibility for its independent contractors’ independent contractors. Each created an organization in which the risk of misconduct inhered. The Court imposed no duty on BSA, and none should be imposed on Kirby.
B
As already noted, Kirby owed Read a duty of reasonable care to prevent a dealer from sexually assaulting her only if it realized or should have realized the likelihood that it had created a situation in which such a tragedy might occur.14 The Court simply assumes that in-house sales create an increased risk of sexual assault.
In Greater Houston Transportation Co. v. Phillips15 we rejected the argument that the Yellow Cab Company in Houston should have known that it was likely a cab driver might carry a handgun with him while driving, get into an altercation with another driver, and shoot him. We explained:
The record shows that Yellow Cab had been operating in the City of Houston for nearly twenty years and, in any given year, it is involved in approximately 1000 traffic accidents. During this period there was only one prior incident involving the use of a weapon and the driver in that case was exonerated of any wrongdoing.... We hold that as a matter of law, under these facts, that the cab company had no duty to warn its cab drivers not to carry guns.16
Kirby has conducted its business for over eighty years, more than four times as long as the Yellow Cab Company in Houston. Its 12,000 dealers make about 1.5 million in-home demonstrations annually, or 1,500 times the number of traffic accidents involving Yellow cabs in Houston. Kirby and the Yellow Cab Company in Houston have had the same number of incidents of criminal conduct: two. For Kirby, one was in North Dakota in 1983,17 and the other in 1993 when Carter assaulted Read. I fail to see how, as a matter of law, it is unforeseeable that a cab driver will shoot another driver but foreseeable that a Kirby vacuum cleaner dealer will sexually, assault a customer. I see no way to recon-*743tile the holding in this case with Phillips. The Court says that Phillips did not involve an issue of retained control, and that is perfectly true, but it did involve an issue of foreseeability, just as the present case does.
More generally, there is no evidence in this record that door-to-door salesmen are more likely to sexually assault their customers than any other salesmen. The Direct Selling Association, as amicus curiae, cites statistics showing that many customers'are acquainted with their direct sellers, either personally or through referrals. Such statistics are not surprising, since one might well surmise that most customers would be far more reluctant to admit, strangers into their homes than they would be to approach strangers in the sales department of a store. But we need not go outside the record. The point is that there is nothing at all in the evidence before us to show whether the risk of sexual assaults in home sales organizations is greater than in other sales contexts.
A third party’s criminal conduct need not be probable before a person may have a duty to protect others from it, but the infrequency of such conduct is a factor that must be considered in determining whether it was foreseeable. Several months ago, in Timberwalk Apartments, Partners, Inc. v. Cam,18 we held in a related context that “[i]n determining whether the occurrence of certain criminal conduct on a landowner’s property should have been foreseen, courts should consider whether any criminal conduct previously occurred on or near the property, how recently it occurred, how often it occurred, how similar the conduct was to the conduct on the property, and what publicity was given the occurrences to indicate that the landowner knew or should have known about them.”19 Two sexual assaults is, of course, two tragedies too many. But the evidence in this record does not show that Kirby should have realized that if it did not require its distributors to cheek dealer applicants’ backgrounds, a sexual assault was a foreseeable consequence.
C
The third question is whether Read’s injury was caused by Kirby’s failure to exercise its retained control with reasonable care. Read argues repeatedly that all Kirby should have done differently was contractually obligate its distributors to conduct criminal background checks of all potential dealers. Read does not even contend that Kirby should monitor or enforce the obligation. Read’s counsel was quite clear on the subject at oral argument:
COURT: So the sole argument that is being made here is the only thing that Kirby should have done, that it did not do, was as a part of its agreement with its distributor, the distributors would do background checks?
COUNSEL: That’s correct. That that be required by the distributor.
COURT: ... But you are not requiring that Kirby do any background checks on the salespeople?
COUNSEL: That’s correct. That’s correct. That would be too burdensome and that would be unreasonable....
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COURT: And so ah they [Kirby] needed to do was add one sentence to that contract?
COUNSEL: That’s all they needed to do. They could xerox the copy and type it at the bottom.
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COURT: ... Don’t they [Kirby] have an obligation to follow up?
COUNSEL: There is no suggestion in either [the North Dakota Supreme *744Court’s opinion in McLean v. Kirby Co.20 or the court of appeals’ opinion in this case] that there was any continuing duty to monitor. And we would not so argue.
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COURT: ... [Wouldn’t they [Kirby] have some obligation to monitor and follow up to insure that their dealers are doing background checks?
COUNSEL: I think their duty would be very narrow. I think they could write a contract that said, “As a part of our agreement, you, distributor, are required to conduct a background check. Failure to conduct that background check, like the failure to conduct the sales in the way we deem appropriate
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COURT: But you would have to monitor to know that there was a failure. That’s my question.
COUNSEL: I don’t think there’s a duty to monitor, is my answer....
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COURT: ... You say the only duty was, put a requirement in the contract that the distributor had a duty to do a background check.
COUNSEL: To actually do the check. Yes, Your Honor.
COURT: And that it did not — that Kirby did not — have the duty to monitor that for enforcement, but to enforce it if knowledge of the breach came to its attention.
COUNSEL: That’s correct.
If Kirby’s only duty was to add one sentence to its distributor agreements requiring them to check the backgrounds of potential dealers, without conducting any checks itself or monitoring the distributors operations for compliance, I fail to see how the breach of so ineffectual a duty could possibly have ■ resulted in Read’s injury. Moreover, under settled law, Kirby’s distributors already had a duty imposed by law to use reasonable care in selecting dealers.21 A contractual requirement would add nothing.
Recognizing the plain flaws in Read’s position, the Court does not endorse it, writing only that Kirby had a duty to “act reasonably” — whatever that means.22 But if the Court intended to impose a duty greater than Read argued for, surely it would say so. If Kirby has a duty not only to require its distributors to make background checks of dealer applicants but to monitor and enforce that requirement, then its suggestion that Kirby has met its legal obligations by putting warnings in its distributor training manuals23 is grossly misleading.
Ill
Today’s decision is, I believe, aberrational and therefore not of much concern. The Court tries as much as it can to prevent its decision from impacting the multitude of businesses similar to Kirby’s. A decision aimed at a result may not be consequential, but result-directed decision-making is more serious. A Court that departs from settled principles in one case may do so in another. To return to Justice Roberts’ analogy, no appellate court decision should turn out to be “a restricted railroad ticket, good for this day and train only”; certainly, no decision should be designed with such restrictions.
Under settled law, Read can obtain compensation for her injury from Carter and Sena only. Because the Court reaches a contrary result, I respectfully dissent.
Justice ABBOTT,joined by Justice OWEN, dissenting.
Kirby retained control over where the work was to be performed, not over who *745was to perform that work. Failure to require background checks of potential dealers relates to who is a dealer, not where the dealer works. As a result, the requisite relation between the control retained and the alleged injury is missing. Because the Court holds to the contrary, I dissent.
I agree with the Court’s analysis of Re-dinger v. Living, Inc., 689 S.W.2d 415, 418 (Tex.1985), that “a general contractor, like Kirby, has a duty to exercise reasonably the control it retains over the independent contractor’s work.” 990 S.W.2d at 735. I also agree with the Court’s synopsis of Exxon Corp. v. Tidwell, 867 S.W.2d 19, 23 (Tex.1993), that in determining whether a duty exists in a retained-control case, the “focus is on whether [the] retained control was specifically related to [the] alleged injury.” 990 S.W.2d at 736. I disagree with the Court’s application of this law to the relevant facts of this case.
As noted, Kirby’s Distributor Agreement and Independent Dealer Agreement collectively require dealers to sell vacuum cleaners in the homes of potential customers. Kirby’s contract with its distributors also provides that Kirby “shall exercise no control over the selection of ... Dealers. The full cost and responsibility for recruiting, hiring, firing, terminating and compensating independent contractors and employees of Distributor shall be borne by Distributor.”
Ms. Read claims that her injury is related to the selection of Carter as a dealer without a background check. This injury is specifically related to the control that Kirby abrogated — control over the selection of dealers. In essence, the Court rewrites Kirby’s Distributor Agreement and Independent Dealer Agreement to require Kirby to assume control over dealer selection. Because the injury is not related to the control retained by Kirby, the Tidwell test is not met and Kirby owed no duty to Ms. Read under the circumstances of this case,
. 801 S.W.2d 523, 526-527 (Tex.1990).
. Smith v. Allwright, 321 U.S. 649, 669, 64 S.Ct. 757, 88 L.Ed. 987 (1944) (Roberts, J., dissenting) (quoted in Dow Chem. Co. v. Alfa-ro, 786 S.W.2d 674, 709 (Tex.1990) (Phillips, C.J., dissenting)).
. Moore v. Roberts, 93 S.W.2d 236, 238-239 (Tex.Civ.App.—Texarkana 1936, writ ref’d). See King v. Associates Commercial Corp., 744 S.W.2d 209, 213 (Tex.App.—Texarkana 1987, writ denied) (citing Jones v. Southwestern Newspapers Corp., 694 S.W.2d 455, 458 (Tex. App.—Amarillo 1985, no writ)); Ross v. Texas One Partnership, 796 S.W.2d 206, 216 (Tex. App.—Dallas 1990), writ denied, 806 S.W.2d 222 (Tex. 1991) (per curiam). See also Restatement (Second) of Torts § 411 (1965).
. Exxon Corp. v. Quinn, 726 S.W.2d 17, 19 (Tex.1987); Redinger v. Living, Inc., 689 S.W.2d 415, 418 (Tex.1985); Abalos v. Oil Dev. Co., 544 S.W.2d 627, 631 (Tex. 1976); Woodard v. Southwest States, Inc., 384 S.W.2d 674, 675 (Tex.1964). See also Restatement (Second) of Torts § 409 (1965).
. Redinger v. Living, Inc., 689 S.W.2d 415, 418 (Tex.1985) (quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts § 414 (1965)).
. Timberwalk Apts., Partners, Inc. v. Cain, 972 S.W.2d 749, 756 (Tex.1998); Walker v. Harris, 924 S.W.2d 375, 377 (Tex.1996); Centeq Realty, Inc. v. Siegler, 899 S.W.2d 195, 197 (Tex. 1995); Lefmark Management Co. v. Old, 946 S.W.2d 52, 53 (Tex. 1997). See also Restatement (Second) of Torts § 315 (1965).
. Nixon v. Mr. Property Management Co., 690 S.W.2d 546, 550 (Tex.1985) (quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts § 448 (1965)).
. See Timberwalk Apts., 972 S.W.2d at 757-758.
. Herbert Wechsler, Toward Neutral Principles of Constitutional Law, 73 Harv. L.Rev. 1, 15 (1959).
. Exxon Coip. v. Tidwell, 867 S.W.2d 19, 23 (Tex. 1993). See also Exxon Corp. v. Quinn, 726 S.W.2d 17, 20 (Tex. 1987).
. Thompson v. Travelers Indem. Co., 789 S.W.2d 277 (Tex. 1990) (citations omitted).
. 926 S.W.2d 287, 290 (Tex. 1996).
. Id. at 290.
. See note 7, supra.
. 801 S.W.2d 523 (Tex. 1990).
. Id. at 526-527.
. McLean v. Kirby Co., 490 N.W.2d 229 (N.D.1992).
. 972 S.W.2d 749 (Tex. 1998).
. Id. at 757.
. 490 N.W.2d 229 (N.D.l 992).
. See note 3, supra.
. Ante at 736.
. Ante at 736 n. 1.