Charlie Brown and his parents appeal from a judgment for Arizona Public Service Company (APS) on the Browns’ “attractive nuisance” claim. They allege that Charlie suffered an electric shock and severe injury from an APS high-tension electric pole that was easy to climb. We conclude that in granting APS’s motion for summary judgment, the trial court relied on an obsolete formulation of the doctrine of attractive nuisance. Thе dispositive question on appeal is whether the attractive nuisance doctrine includes a requirement that the injured child be “attracted” by the object that caused his injury.
FACTS
At the time of his injury, Charlie Brown was a 16-year-old high school student. On February 10, 1987, he was visiting at the home of a friend in west Sedona. He had visited there many times before. On this occasion he and his friend were planning a Civil War reenactment.
While outside, Charlie and his friend hеard a cat meowing as if in trouble. They spotted the cat at the top of a utility pole in a neighbor’s yard. The utility pole was a 35 foot transformer pole owned, operated and maintained by APS with a single phase 7200 volt primary conductor. A secondary conduit was attached to the pole along with cable television facilities and telephone equipment. Also attached to the pole was а vertical pipe held by iron supports approximately six inches out from the wooden pole.
Charlie’s friend attempted to climb the pole first but left to change his shoes for *5 better traction. Before his friend came back, Charlie decided that he could get the cat down. Charlie testified in his deposition:
Q. What was it that attracted you to this particular pole? In other words, why did you climb this pole as oppоsed to the next pole down or a pole three blocks away?
A. For one thing, the cat was on it, and for another, I never really seen a pole so easy to climb.
Q. If it had not been for the cat, would you have still climbed that pole on the date of the accident?
A. No.
Q. The fact that the pole had a metal pipe running along side of it that made it easy to climb had nothing to do with what attracted you to that pole; isn’t that true?
A. No, it didn’t attract me. It was just the cat.
Q. The metal pole with the pipe simply provided an easy means for you to climb up to the cat; isn’t that true?
A. Yes.
In a later affidavit, Charlie stated:
5. I decided I wanted to climb the pole because I thought it would be fun to get up and look around and I have always liked to climb things. I thought I could have fun by climbing the pole and at the same time do a good deed by getting the cat down.
8. I would not have attempted to climb the pole if it was difficult to climb because it was not my cat and I did not know whose cat it was. It was so easy to climb the pole that I wanted to climb it before Brett [Charlie’s friend] got back and did it himself.
9. It appeared to me that the pipe was set out from the pole to make it easy to climb and there was no sign or fence or anything to warn me that there was any danger to me if I climb the pole____
Charlie climbed the pole. When he got to the top brаcket that held the iron pipe to the wooden pole, he stood on it for a time with his back to the pole to admire the scenery. From that position, the cat was still above his head. With his hands and chest against the pole, he started after the cat. At that point he received an electric shock and fell, sustaining injuries.
PROCEDURE IN THE TRIAL COURT
APS filed a motion for summary judgment arguing that as a matter of law under
Salt River Valley Water Users’ Association v. Compton,
Plaintiffs’ complaint unequivocally establishes that it was the cat, rather than the pole, that attracted him. Furthermore, Plaintiff proved by his own positive testimony that it was not the pole, but the cat on top of the pole, which was the temptation to which he yielded, and that the pole was merely a convenient means of access to the real temptation.
(Emphasis in original.)
In their response to the motion for summary judgment, the Browns accepted Compton as the governing authority and argued that the motiоn should be denied because of a material dispute over whether rescuing the cat was Charlie’s only purpose in climbing the pole. The trial court granted APS’s motion for summary judgment without specifying reasons.
THE PARTIES’ CONTENTIONS ON APPEAL
The Browns contend the judgment must be reversed because
MacNeil v. Perkins,
APS contends that the Browns are precluded from arguing for the first time on appeal that Charlie need not have been attracted by the nuisance. APS acknowledges that MacNeil held that the attractive nuisance doctrine did not require proof that the dangerous instrumentality attracted the child onto the property. APS contends, however, that even under MacNeil the artificial condition must still have been what ultimately lured the child to the danger that caused his injury. APS additionally urges that the record establishes no triable factual issue concerning what induced Charlie to climb the pole. Finally, it argues that Webster v. Culbertson does not justify reversing the judgment to allow the Browns to raise a theory of liability they failed to assert before.
EFFECT OF BOTH SIDES’ NEGLECT TO BRING MacNEIL V. PERKINS TO THE TRIAL COURT’S ATTENTION
Generally, a party may not advance a new theory on appeal to securе a reversal of the trial court’s judgment.
See Jennings v. Roberts Scott & Co., Inc.
Normally, an appealing party may not urge as grounds for reversal a theory which he failed to present below. In re Geis’Estate,132 Ariz. 350 ,645 P.2d 1264 (App.1982).
However, this rule is procedural and not jurisdictional.
South Tucson v. Board of Supervisors,
Id.
Under the unique circumstances of this case, the issue the Browns now raise concerning the doctrine of attractive nuisance should be considered on appeal because to hold otherwise would defeat rather than promote the “attainment of justice.”
Hawkins,
We therefore decline to follow the policy that limits raising new issues on appeal. We cannot affirm a clearly incorrect ruling by applying an outmoded formulation of attractive nuisance contrary to case law which both sides failed to argue in thе trial court.
Hawkins,
“ATTRACTION” TO THE “NUISANCE”
[2] Ordinarily, a possessor of land is not liable to trespassers for physical harm caused by failure to exercise reasonable care to make the land reasonably safe.
Bamhizer v. Paradise Valley Unified School District,
Our supreme court’s pr^-Restatement decision in Compton was an early application of the attractive nuisance doctrine. Its facts are similar to those here. The plaintiff, a 13-year-old boy, climbed a high-tension electric pole that was constructed like a ladder to see a bird’s nest at the top. He suffered an electric shock and was injured when he fell to the ground.
In the trial court, Compton recovered judgment against the Salt River Valley Water Users’ Association, the owner of the pole. On appeal, the supreme court reversed the judgment and remanded for entry of judgment for the defendant. The court recognized that under the existing knowledge in the electrical industry, a high-tension electric pole was effectively an “unguarded ladder” which could subject its owner to liability under attractive nuisance if easily and usually accessible to children. But the court сontinued:
... there is practical unanimity ... that no matter how attractive an object may be, unless it was the attraction of that particular object which lured the child to its injury, the doctrine can have no application, and even though an attractive nuisance may exist on the premises of the landowner, if the real lure was not such nuisance, but something else, there can be no recovery in case of injury. [Citations omitted.]
In this case the сomplaint alleges positively, fully and without equivocation that plaintiff went to the place where he was injured, not by reason of the attractiveness of the pole, but because of the bird’s nest which was built on top of the pole. The evidence of plaintiff himself was conclusive that his sole and only purpose was to examine said bird’s nest and perhaps rob it.
On motion for rehearing, the court reaffirmed its deсision by a vote of two to one. The majority stated:
[T]he essential elements [of the doctrine of attractive nuisance] are unmistakable if it is to be applied, (a) The defendant must have tempted the child to come on his property; and (b) he must have yielded to that temptation.
[U]nless the child goes on the property by reason of the temptation of the very instrumentality which is held to be the attractive nuisance, he cannot recоver.
*8 Two years after Compton, The American Law Institute began a trend that led to the scrapping of the “attraction” requirement in Arizona and most other jurisdictions.
In 1934 the Restatement of Torts, in what has proved to be one of its most effective single sections, threw its support behind the special duty rules for child trespassers. It discarded the idea of allurement to trespass, and defined the “attractive nuisance” rule in general negligence terms. Section 339, as modified in the Second Restatement, has been cited so frequently, and has received such general acceptance on the part of the courts, that it has become the new point of departure.
W. Prosser and W. Keaton, The Law of Torts § 59, at 42 (1984). Section 339 of the Restatement of Torts recasts the “attractive nuisance” doctrine as follows:
A possessor of land is subject to liability for bodily harm to young children trespassing thereon caused by a structure or other artificial condition which he maintains upon the land, if
(a) the place where the condition is maintained is one upon which the possessor knows or should know that such children are likely to trespass and
(b) the condition is one of which the possessor knows or should know and which he realizes or should realize as involving an unreasonable risk of death or serious bodily harm to such children and
(c) the children because of their youth do not discover the condition or realize the risk involved in intermeddling in it or in coming within the area made dangerous by it, and
(d) the utility to the possessor of maintaining the condition is slight as compared to the risk to young children involved therein.
(Emphasis added.) The emphasized portions of § 339 make it clear that “attraction” or “allurement” to the dangerous condition that causes the injury is not a prerequisite to liability.
A year after its publication, Arizona adopted § 339 as a “rule of general application.”
Buckeye Irrigation Co. v. Askren,
The “attraction” rule suffered a mortal wound in
MacNeil v. Perkins,
In MacNeil, the supreme court rejected the argument that Compton precluded application of the attractive nuisance doctrine:
Defendants emphasize that the third rule mentioned in the Compton case [40 Ariz. 282 ,11 P.2d 839 ] on rehearing excludes this case from the attractive nuisance doctrine:
In reviewing the cases in jurisdictions which have adopted the attractive nuisance doctrine, it is apparent that the courts have not construed the above rule as have defendants. An examination of the cases cited in the Compton case un *9 der the third rule mentioned do not sustain defendants’ contention.
None of the above cases hold [sic] that the instrumentality cаlled for the application of the attractive nuisance doctrine and consequently are [sic] not legitimate authority to support this rule.
In
Downs v. Sulfur Springs Etc.,
The case of
Marino v. Valenti,
“Defendants also suggest that even if the shack was an ‘attractive nuisance’ there can be no recovery because it was a dynamite cap within the shack, not the shack, which caused the injury. That is not the law, whether we look upon the caps as an attraction within an attraction or as a concealed highly dangerous condition, a ‘trap, ’ on the premises. We consider that this is more appropriately viewed as a prima facie case of liability measured by the tests indicated in § 339 of the Restatement of the Law of Torts, which our review of the case law convinces us, expresses the California rule concerning injuries to trespassing children.” (Emphasis supplied.)
APS now argues that after
MacNeil,
for liability to attach, “the defendant must still create a dangerous artificial condition which attracts the child once the child is on the property.”
MacNeil, Marino v. Valenti
and § 339 of the
Restatement of Torts
require the contrary.
2
The pertinent subsections of
Restatement
§ 339, which
Mac-Neil
quoted with approval,
id.
APS’s interpretation of
MacNeil
is inconsistent with the Arizona courts’ post-Afac-
Neil
adoption of § 339 of the
Restatement (Second) of Torts.
3
See Spur Feeding Co.
*10
v. Fernandez,
The rule stated in this Section is not limited to cases in which the trespassing child has intermeddled with anything on the land. It applies although the child has not in any way interfered with anything on the land, and never discovers the particular сondition which injures him.
Comment k states:
A condition may be peculiarly dangerous to children because of their tendency to intermeddle with things which are notoriously attractive to them ... but this is not the only childish characteristic which may make a condition, which involves no serious risk to an adult, highly dangerous to children. Children are notoriously inattentive to their surroundings, and this characteristic may make it unlikely that children will discover a condition which would be obvious to an adult (see Illustration 3). The lack of experience and judgment normal to young children may prevent them from realizing that a condition observed by them is dangerous or, although they realize that it is dangerous, may prevent them from appreciating the full extent of the risk.
Illustration 3 states:
The A Manufacturing Company maintains a high-tension electric wire from its power house to its factory. This wire is permitted to become uninsulated and to sag from the pole so that it comes into close proximity to magnolia trees, which are close to the highway at a point where there is no fence. B, a young child, climbs the tree to pick the blossoms and comes into contact with the wire which, in his eagerness to get the flowers, he does not observe. The A Company is liable to B.
Though it predates
MacNeil
and § 339,
Johns v. Fort Worth Power & Light Co.,
We do not think plaintiffs’ right to recover is precluded by the fact that the evidenсe shows that the special purpose which induced the boy to climb the tower was to extricate his kite.
The tower was not only peculiarly attractive to boys of immature age because of its construction, but we think the fact steps were placed thereon, so that boys could easily and conveniently climb it, made it more attractive, and we think that, under all the circumstances, the defendant should have аnticipated that some boy would have climbed it, either for the purpose of extricating a kite, or for some other youthful purpose.
We conclude that, under the modern view prevailing in Arizona and elsewhere, the doctrine of attractive nuisance does not require that the child be attracted by the same artificial condition that ultimately injures him. The trial court therefore erred as a matter of law in granting summary judgment for APS.
Because of this analysis, we do not discuss whether the record demonstrates the existence of a triable factual issue concerning whether it was the cat or the pole that induced Charlie to climb.
See
footnote 4,
supra,
and accompanying text; Further, because the factual record presented to the trial court was assembled primarily with reference to that narrow issue, we do not attempt to determine whether any of the criteria for liability actually contained in § 339 are met.
See generally Barnhizer v. Paradise Valley Unified School District,
Because of our disposition of this appeal, we need not determine whether the supreme court’s issuance of
Webster v. Culbertson,
Accordingly, the trial court’s summary judgment is reversed and remanded fоr proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Other courts have followed
Compton
when presented with similar facts at various times.
See Bums v. City of Chicago,
. We recognize that the MacNeil court also stated in dictum:
Dynamite caps are one of the items recognized as attractive to children under the attractive nuisance doctrine. No other conclusion can be reached from the evidence than the dynamite caps afforded the temptation, and yielding to that temptation they took the caps. Therefore, we have the element of temptation, the yielding to the temptation, аnd in addition, there existed the trespass.
. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 339 states: A possеssor of land is subject to liability for physical harm to children trespassing thereon caused by an artificial condition upon the land' if
(a) the place where the condition exists is one upon which the possessor knows or has reason to know that children are likely to trespass, and
(b) the condition is one which the possessor knows or has reason to know and which he realizes or should realize will involve an unreasonable risk of death or serious bodily harm to such children, and
(c) the children because of their youth do not discover the condition or realize the risk involved in intermeddling with it or in coming within the area made dangerous by it, and
(d) the utility to the possessor of maintaining the condition and the burden of eliminating the danger are slight as compared with the risk to children involved, and
*10 (e) the possessor fails to exercise reasonable care to eliminate the danger or otherwise to protect the children.
