*1081 Opinion
In this сase we conclude that Civil Code section 1668, considered together with the statutory framework in applicable provisions of the Health and Safety Code, precludes operation of the waiver and release clause in a health club membership agreement.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL SUMMARY
In January 2001, appellant Reoven Capri joined the Woodland Hills branch of the L.A. Fitness health club (the club), which is owned by respondent L.A. Fitness International, LLC (L.A. Fitness). He signed a membership agreement, which contained the following release and waiver of liability:
“RELEASE AND WAIVER OF LIABILITY AND INDEMNITY. You hereby acknowledge and agree that Member’s use of L.A. Fitness’ facilities, services, equipment or premises, involves risks of injury to persons and property, including those described below, and Member assumes full responsibility for such risks. In consideration of being permitted to enter any facility of L.A. Fitness (a ‘Club’) for any purpose including, but not limited to, observation, use of facilities, services or equipment, or participation in any way, Member agrees to the following: Member hereby releases and holds L.A. Fitness, its directors, officers, employees, and agents harmless from all liability to Member and Member’s personal representatives, assigns, heirs, and next of kin for any loss or damage, and waives any claim or demands therefor, on account of injury to Member’s person, or property, including injury leading to the death of Member, whether caused by the active or passive negligence of L.A. Fitness or otherwise, while Member is in, upon, or about L.A. Fitness premises or using any L.A. Fitness facilities, services or equipment. Member also hereby agrees to indemnify L.A. Fitness from any loss, liability, damage or cost L.A. Fitness may incur due to the presence of Member in, upon or about the L.A. Fitness premises or in any way observing or using any facilities or equipment of L.A. Fitness, whether caused by the negligence of Member or otherwise. You represent (a) that Member is in good physical condition and has no disability, illness, or other condition that could prevent Member from exercising without injury or impairment of health, and (b) that Member has consulted a physician concerning an exercise program that will not risk injury to Member or impairment of Member’s health. Such risk of injury includes (but is not limited to): injuries arising from use by Member or others of exercise equipment and machines; injuries arising from participation by Member or others in supervised or unsupervised activities or programs at a Club; injuries and medical disorders arising from exercising at a Club such as heart attacks, strokes, heat stress, sprains, broken bones, and tom muscles and ligaments, *1082 among others; and accidental injuries occurring anywhere in Club dressing rooms, showers and other facilities. Member further expressly agrees that the foregoing release, waiver and agreement is intended to be as broad and inclusive as is permitted by the law of the State of California and that if any portion thereof is held invalid, it is agreed that the balance shall, notwithstanding, continue in full force and effect. Mеmber has read this release and waiver of liability and indemnity clause, and agrees that no oral representations, statements or inducement apart from the foregoing written agreement have been made.”
After joining the club, Mr. Capri used the treadmill and outdoor swimming pool two to three times a week. On November 7, 2002, as he was walking to the pool, Mr. Capri slipped and fell on the pool deck. The following day, he returned to the club and discovered an accumulation of algae around the drain on the pool deck, in the area where he fell.
Mr. Capri brought this personal injury action against L.A. Fitness, alleging causes of action for negligence and negligence per se. L.A. Fitness moved for summary judgment on several theories: that the claim was barred by plaintiff’s execution of the release and waiver; that plaintiff assumed the risk of injury while using the premises; and that plaintiff was unable to establish the existence of a dangerous condition or that L.A. Fitness had notice of the condition. Mr. Capri opposed the motion, asserting that his action was premised on L.A. Fitness’s violations of provisions of the Health and Safety Code and the Los Angeles County Code requiring proper maintenance of swimming pools. He argued that under Civil Code section 1668 (hereafter section 1668) it is against public policy to exempt a party from liability based on a violation of law, and thus his waiver and release could not be enforced to exempt L.A. Fitness from responsibility for his injuries.
The trial court granted the motion, based on the waiver and release. Judgment was entered in favor of L.A. Fitness, and Mr. Capri appeals. We reverse the judgment.
DISCUSSION
I
We review the trial court’s grant of summary judgment de novo to determine whether triable issues of material fact exist.
(Saelzler v. Advanced Group 400
(2001)
Appellant’s first cause of action was for ordinary negligence. In his second cause of action, labeled “Negligence Per Se,” appellant alleged that L.A. Fitness “allowed mildew and other such growth and dеbris to accumulate in the area around the swimming pool located within the Premises. As a result, Defendants, and each of them, were in violation of a statute, ordinance or regulation, including but not limited to State and County Health and Safety Code sections, and were negligent per se pursuant to the aforesaid Code sections.” Based on this allegation, appellant argued that the waiver and release is invalid under section 1668 because it seeks to relieve respоndent of its responsibility for violation of law.
Relying on
Tunkl v. Regents of University of California
(1963)
In
Tunkl,
the Supreme Court determined the validity of a release signed by a patient as part of a hospital admission form. The court noted the troubled history of section 1668: “Although . . . the decisions uniformly uphold its prohibitory impact in one circumstance, the courts’ interpretations of it have been diverse. Some of the cases have applied the statute strictly, invalidating any contract for exemption from liability for negligence. . . . The recent case of
Mills
v.
Ruppert
(1959)
*1084
The court in
Tunkl
was concerned with the validity of an exculpatory clause to avoid responsibility for ordinary negligence. In such a case,
Tunkl
invalidates any exculpatory provision affecting the public interest.
(Tunkl, supra,
We turn to appellant’s complaint. His first cause of action alleges ordinary negligence. Under
Tunkl,
the exculpatory clause is invalid only if the contract affects the public interest. The cases consistently have held that “[e]xculpatory agreements in the recreational sports context do not implicate the public interest and therefore are not void as against рublic policy.”
(Benedek
v.
PLC Santa Monica
(2002)
The second cause of action alleges in substance that appellant’s accident was caused by violation of Health and Safety Code sections 116040 and 116043. 2 Section 116040 provides: “Every person operating or maintaining a public swimming pool must do so in a sanitary, healthful and safe manner.” *1085 Section 116043 provides: “Evеry public swimming pool, including swimming pool structure, appurtenances, operation, source of water supply, amount and quality of water recirculated and in the pool, method of water purification, lifesaving apparatus, measures to insure safety of bathers, and measures to insure personal cleanliness of bathers shall be such that the public swimming pool is at all times sanitary, healthful and safe.” 3
Unlike the broad statement of negligence expressed in Civil Code section 1714, 4 these statutes are part of a detailed regulatory scheme which includes construction standards, safety standards, and sanitation requirements for public swimming pools. (Art. 5, div. 104, pt. 10, ch. 5, § 116025 et seq.) In addition to setting out standards for swimming pool sanitation and safety, the article in which these statutes are contained provides for inspection by public health officers (§ 116055); declares that any public swimming pool which is constructed, operated or maintained contrary to the provisions of the article is a public nuisance, subject to abatement (§§ 116060, 116063); and perhaps most importantly, it criminalizes any violation. Section 116065 provides: “Every person who violates any provision of this article, building standards published in the State Building Standards Code relating to swimming pools, or the rules and regulations adopted pursuant to the provisions of this article, is guilty of a misdemeanor, punishable by a fine of not less than fifty dollars ($50) nor more than one thousand dollars ($1,000), or by imprisonment for not more than six mоnths, or both.”
Appellant has alleged that respondent violated sections 116040 and 116043 of this article, and that this violation of law was the cause of his slip and fall. As such, it falls squarely within the explicit prohibition in section 1668 against contractual exculpation for a “violation of law” and is invalid. The trial court erred in finding this cause of action was barred by the release and waiver.
We find support for this conclusion in
Hanna
v.
Lederman
(1963)
A similar result was reached more recently in
Health Net, supra,
The exculpatory clause in Health Net provided: “ ‘If it is necessary to interpret this Contract, all applicable laws may be used as aids in interpreting the Contract. However, the parties agree that any such applicable laws shall not be interpreted to create contractual obligations upon DHS or Contractor [(Health Net)], unless such applicable laws are expressly incorporatеd into this Contract in some section other than this Section 3.1, Interpretation of Contract. Except for Section 3.19, Sanctions and Section 3.20, Liquidated Damages Provision, the parties agree that any remedies for DHS’[s] or Contractor’s non-compliance with laws not expressly incorporated into this Contract, or any covenants implied to be part of this Contract, shall not include money damages, but may include equitable remedies such as injunctive relief or specific рerformance.’ ” (Health Net, supra, 113 Cal.App.4th at pp. 228-229, italics omitted.) The agreement did not contain any reference to the Wb,,.re and Institutions Code, or the related regulations.
On appeal, Health Net, like appellant, claimed the exculpatory clause was invalid under section 1668 to the extent it purported to exculpate the Department from liability for monetary damages caused by statutory
*1087
violations. The Court of Appeal held that the plain language of seсtion 1668 invalidates contract clauses seeking to relieve a party from responsibility for future statutory and regulatory violations, regardless of whether the public interest is affected.
(Health Net, supra,
We conclude that the exculpatory clause in the membership agreement is invalid under section 1668 as to appellant’s second cause of action for negligence per se. Respondent’s summary judgment motion was predicated on this exculpatory clause, and the trial court granted the motion on that basis. This was error.
II
Respondent argues that even if the release and waiver is invalid under section 1668, summary judgment should be affirmed because the membership agreement contained an express assumption of the risk clause, under which appellant expressly assumed the risk of injury while using the club’s facilities. But this portion of the agreement still seeks to exculpate respondent for its violation of the swimming pool safety statutes, and hence is invalid under section 1668. It is this violation of law theory which distinguishes appellant’s case from
Madison
v.
Superior Court
(1988)
Respondent next argues that the action is barred by appellant’s primary assumption of the risk because slipping and falling around a pool is an inherent risk in the activity of swimming. A defendant seeking summary judgment on the basis of primary assumption of the risk must establish “that the defendant owed no legal duty to the plaintiff to prevent the harm оf which the plaintiff complains.”
(Freeman v. Hale
(1994)
In
Knight
v.
Jewett
(1992)
The case before this court is more like the unsafe towrope than the dangerous mogul. There are risks inherent in the sport of swimming, such as drowning, hitting the wall or pool floor, or colliding with another swimmer. But the risk of algae growing on the pool deck causing it to become dangerously. slippery is not inherent in the sport itself, and thus is not a risk assumed by those who utilize the swimming pool so as to relieve the pool owner of the duty to keep the deck clean.
The two cases cited by respondent are distinguishable. In
Kahn v. East Side Union High School Dist.
(2003)
In the second case,
Leon v. Family Fitness Center (#107), Inc.
(1998)
As we have explained, the public policy limitation in section 1668 precludes an express assumption of the risk in our case based on the alleged violation of law. And even if, as the court stated in Leon, a slip in a shower is a known hazard of the usе of a health club, there is at least a triable issue of material fact whether a slip and fall on algae on a pool deck is also a known hazard. Respondent was not entitled to summary judgment based on primary assumption of the risk.
III
In light of our reversal of the judgment on the second cause of action, we need not reach appellant’s alternative argument, that respondent’s actions were willful, and hence fall within the provision of section 1668 invalidating an exculpatory clause where the damage was caused by willful misconduct.
*1090 DISPOSITION
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings on the second cause of action. The parties are to bear their own costs on appeal.
Hastings, J., and Willhite, J., concurred.
Respondent’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied May 17, 2006, S142009. Chin, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
The Tunkl factors for placing particular contracts within the public interest generally concern “а business of a type generally thought suitable for public regulation. The party seeking exculpation is engaged in performing a service of great importance to the public, *1084 which is often a matter of practical necessity for some members of the public. The party holds himself out as willing to perform this service for any member of the public who seeks it, or at least for any member coming within certain established standards. As a result of the essential nature of the service, in the economic setting of the transaction, the party invoking exculpation possesses a decisive advantage of bargaining strength against any member of the public who seeks his services. In exercising a superior bargaining power the party confronts the public with a standardized adhesion contract of exculpation, and makes no provision whereby a purchaser may pay additional reasonable fees and obtain protection against negligencе. Finally, as a result of the transaction, the person or property of the purchaser is placed under the control of the seller, subject to the risk of carelessness by the seller of his agents.” (Tunkl, supra, 60 Cal.2d at pp. 98—101, fns. omitted.)
All further statutory references are to this code unless otherwise indicated.
Appellant also relies on Los Angeles County Code, chapter 7.47.120, subdivision (A), which requires that “[a]ll walls, ceilings, floors, pools, showers, bathtubs, steamrooms, and all other physical facilities for the establishment, shall be in good repair and maintained in a clean and sanitary condition.”
Civil Code section 1714 provides: “Everyone is responsible, not only for the result of his or her willful acts, but also for an injury occasioned to another by his or her want of ordinary care or skill in the management of his or her property or person, except so far as the latter has, willfully or by want of ordinary care, brought the injury upon himself or herself.”
The court also invalidated the exculpatory clause based on an alternative finding that the public interest is affected, within the meaning of Tunkl. (Health Net, supra, 113 Cal.App.4th at pp. 234-235.)
