Opinion
An errant shot by a golfer ricocheted off a wooden yardage marker, injuring a companion golfer. We conclude the injured golfer’s personal injury action against the golf course for negligent design and placement of the yardage marker is barred by the primary assumption of the risk doctrine. We hold golf is an active sport, errant shots are an inherent risk of golf, yardage markers are an integral part of the sport, and the golf course as recreation provider did not increase the risk of injury by its design and placement of the yardage marker. We grant the golf course’s petition for writ of mandate directing respondent court to grant its motion for summary judgment.
Facts and Procedural Background
On November 22, 1997, plaintiff and real party in interest Albert Becker was playing golf with his companion, Stan Christopherson, at defendant and petitioner American Golf Corporation’s Lakewood Country Club and Tennis Center (golf course). Both players teed off the 13th tee and then rode in a golf cart down the fairway to a point where Christopherson’s golf ball was located in the rough on the left side of the fairway, approximately 210 yards from the hole. A removable wooden yardage marker, indicating the center of the green was 200 yards distant, was located 5 to 15 yards down the fairway *34 and 5 to 10 yards left of Christopherson’s ball. The yardage marker was not in Christopherson’s line of play. Becker remained seated in the golf cart, parked to the right and 10 yards behind Christopherson’s ball. Christopherson hooked the ball to the left; the ball ricocheted off the yardage marker, striking Becker in the eye.
The 13th hole runs due east and is 402 yards long with a slight dogleg to the right, approximately 200 yards from the tee. There are trees on both sides of the fairway. A sand bunker is located on the northern edge of the dogleg and small trees are located on the southern edge of the dogleg. The 200-yard marker is located in the rough, 4Vi feet south of the sand bunker and l5Vi feet north of the fairway.
Of the 18 holes at golf course, 14 (the par four and five holes) have three pairs of yardage markers, located in the rough at 100, 150, and 200 yards from the center of the green on each side of the fairway. The yardage markers are wooden posts painted red, white, or blue, depending on the distance. Each marker is approximately 3Vt by 45/s by 26 inches, is placed in a plastic sleeve embedded in the ground, and protrudes approximately 20 inches vertically from the ground. The yardage markers are designed and located to be visible to golfers. If it obstructs the line of play, a yardage marker may be removed from its sleeve.
Golfers drive initially from the tee; the first drive is for maximum distance. The second and subsequent drives require the gauging of distances. Distance determines club selection and strength of the swing. Visible yardage markers are placed on both sides of the fairway so golfers can determine the distance to the center of the green. Most golf courses provide yardage markers at intervals. Yardage markers may be concrete plaques, plants, stones, logs, posts, or signs. Posts and signs may be wood, wire, rubber, or plastic.
Golf course uses this same yardage marker system at other golf courses it owns in the Lakewood/Long Beach area. This yardage marker system is used at 20 to 25 percent of golf courses in the country. Golf courses are designed with both fixed and removable obstacles, to make play interesting and challenging. Fixed obstacles include trees, lakes, ponds, benches, bridges, sand bunkers, sand traps, and rocks. Prior to Becker’s injury, no one had reported an injury from a ball ricocheting off a yardage marker or any other obstacle on this golf course.
Becker sued golf course. Golf course moved for summary judgment based on the doctrine of primary assumption of the risk. Its motion was supported *35 by the declaration of its director of maintenance and the deposition testimony of Becker and Christopherson. Becker opposed the motion, arguing the doctrine was inapplicable because, although the risk of being hit by an errant ball is inherent in the sport of golf, golf course increased the risk of injury by using wooden yardage markers and locating them near the fairway. Becker’s opposition was supported by the declaration of an accident reconstruction expert who opined that the yardage marker in question was dangerous or defective because of its rigid and hard construction and its location near the fairway. He asserted that because of the design of the 13th hole, a golfer was likely to aim the tee shot in the direction of the 200-yard marker, thus making the marker a likely site for a ricochet shot.
The trial court denied the motion. Golf course filed this timely petition for writ of mandate.
Discussion
Standard of Review
“ ‘A defendant is entitled to summary judgment if the record establishes as a matter of law that none of the plaintiff’s asserted causes of action can prevail.’
(Molko
v.
Holy Spirit Assn.
(1988)
Assumption of the Risk
“As a general rule, persons have a duty to use due care to avoid injury to others, and may be held liable if their careless conduct injures another
*36
person. [Citation.] Thus, for example, a property owner ordinarily is required to use due care to eliminate dangerous conditions on his or her property. [Citation.] In the sports setting, however, conditions or conduct that otherwise might be viewed as dangerous often are an integral part of the sport itself.”
(Knight v. Jewett
(1992)
Under the assumption of the risk doctrine, ordinarily a recreation provider owes no duty to a participant in an active sport to use due care to eliminate risks inherent in the sport. In
Knight v. Jewett, supra,
“Generally, the participation in an active sport is governed by primary assumption of risk, and a defendant owes no duty of care to protect a plaintiff against risks inherent in the sport.”
(Staten v. Superior Court
(1996)
Summary Judgment
“In a given active sport setting, the question whether the defendant owes a duty to the plaintiff ‘is a
legal
question which depends on the nature of the sport or activity in question and on the parties’ general"relationship to the activity, and is an issue to be decided by the court, rather than the jury. [Citation.] Thus, the question of assumption of risk is much more amenable to resolution by summary judgment under a duty analysis . . . .’ [Citation.] Thus, under
Knight
[v.
Jewett, supra,
Golf
Golf is an active sport to which the assumption of the risk doctrine applies.
(Dilger v. Moyles
(1997)
“The duty of a golf course towards a golfer is to provide a reasonably safe golf course. This duty requires the golf course owner ‘to minimize the risks without altering the nature of the sport. [Citations.]’ ”
(Morgan v. Fuji Country USA, Inc., supra,
Yardage Markers
Becker contends triable issues of fact exist as to whether golf course increased the risk to him of being hit by an errant shot! by its design and placement of the yardage marker. He argues that this case falls under the secondary assumption of the risk doctrine and thus he is entitled to a jury trial on the issue of comparative fault. We disagree.
Yardage markers are used at most golf courses to assist golfers in gauging the distance to the green. It is common in the golf industry for hard yardage markers to be utilized. Golf course’s yardage marker system utilizing three visible wooden posts on each side of the fairway is found on 20 to 25 percent of the nation’s golf courses. Thus, yardage markers are an integral part of the sport of golf, and the yardage marker system used at golf course is standard in the industry. Obstacles, both fixed and removable, are also an integral part of the sport of golf. Because errant shots are an inherent risk of golf and errant shots by definition take flight in unintended directions, golf involves the very real possibility that a player will hook or slice a ball, the ball will strike a hard obstacle, and the ball will ricochet forcibly. Of course, the risk of ricochet is dramatically reduced where the obstacle in question is removable at the option of the players, if it is in the line of play and poses a danger.
It is apparent from the foregoing that golf course did not increase the risk that Becker would be struck by an errant shot by the construction or
*39 placement of the 200-yard marker on the 13th fairway. In this case, Becker was injured because Christopherson hooked his shot and struck a removable obstacle, which was not in the line of play and had not been removed. There had been no prior reports of injuries caused by the construction or location of either this particular yardage marker or any of the 84 removable wooden yardage markers located in the rough on both sides of 14 fairways. Thus, this was not an area of great danger or a place where such occurrences could reasonably be expected. Accordingly, golf course had no duty to protect Becker from the inherent risk of being hit by an errant shot, and the primary assumption of the risk doctrine bars Becker’s action.
Plaintiff’s expert’s opinion that this particular yardage marker should have been located farther from the fairway or made of a softer material is not sufficient to create a duty on the part of golf course where none exists. In any event, all of plaintiff’s expert’s objections to the location and construction of the yardage marker are negated by the fact that the markers are indisputably visible to the players and removable at the player’s discretion. It will always be possible for a plaintiff who suffers a sports injury to obtain expert testimony that the injury would not have occurred if the recreation provider had done something differently. Such expert testimony is not sufficient to establish that the recreation provider increased the inherent risks of the sport. Such expert opinion does not create a triable issue of fact on a motion for summary judgmeijt based on the primary assumption of the risk defense.
Disposition
A peremptory writ shall issue directing respondent court to vacate its order of October 25, 1999, denying the motion of American Golf Corporation for summary judgment and enter a new and different order granting the motion. Costs are awarded to petitioner.
Armstrong, J., and Godoy Perez, J., concurred.
