MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
This аction arises out of an injury suffered by the plaintiff, Andrea Paige Carter Cohen, when she jumped off a natural rock formation in the Atlantic Ocean known as Elephant Rock during a visit to the Elephant Rock Beach Club (the “Beach Club”) in Westport, Massachusetts, on July 6, 2009. The plaintiff seeks damages for the alleged negligence of the Beach Club. Before me is the Beach Club’s motion for- summary judgment and the plaintiffs motion to strike the supplemental report of the Beach Club’s expert, on which the Beach Club relies in support of its summary judgment motion. For the reasons set forth below, after denying the motion to strike, I will deny the motion for summary judgment.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Factual Background
1. The Property
The defendant, Elephant Rock Beach Club, Inc., operates a private beach club in Westport, Massachusetts accessible to members and their paid guests. The Beach Club leases the land on which it sits from Westport Harbor Improvement Cor
The beach is along a body of water known as Westport Harbor, which leads to the Atlantic Ocean near the opening to Buzzards Bay. The water sheet itself is not part of WHIC’s property and therefore not part of the lease. As a consequence, the Beach Club has no right to restrict access to the water, and individuals who are not members or guests of the club can and do arrive by boat and swim in the water adjacent to the Beach Club without accessing the beach itself.
Approximately 250 feet off the shore of the beach (measured at low tide) is Elephant Rock (the “rock”), a natural rock formation. According to Beach Club’s expert, the rock is not located on the land owned by WHIC and leased by the Beach Club; rather, title is vested with the Commonwealth of Massachusetts because portions of the rock are beyond the mean low tide, not to mention the lowest predicted yearly tide level (the “extreme low tide” line). The rock is also located beyond the buoys at the end of safety ropes the Beach Club has installed. Individuals who are not members or guests of the Beach Club arriving by boat can and do access the rock.
The stated purpose of the Beach Club is “[t]o establish and maintain places for social meetings, encouraging athletic exercises, yachting, swimming and healthful recreation,” and to “promot[e] the civic improvement of that part of the Town of Westport.”
In addition, guests commonly swim to, around and jump off the rock. Depending on the tide level, the drop from the top of the rock to the water is between eight and twelve feet. Although the rock has different elevations, guests typically jump from the highest part. In order to clear the submerged portion of the rock, a jumper must get a running start, plant her foot in the right location, and jump out.
2. Safety Precautions
The parties agree that the Beach Club employed four practices that can fairly be characterized as safety precautions related to swimming, including swimming near the rock: safety ropes, a flag system, lifeguards, and signage.
a. Safety Ropes. The Beach Club maintains three safety ropes that are fifty to eighty yards apart in the water (east, middle, and west). Each rope is approximately seventy yards long with a buoy at the end to hold it in place. There is no single safety rope stretching entirely east to west at the buoys. The rock is located approximately twenty to twenty-five feet beyond (i.e., further from the shore than) the buoys at the end of the safety ropes.
The Beach Club appears to contend that the safety ropes are not in place to limit the swimming area for guests, that guests commonly swim past the safety ropes and are not prevented from doing so by the lifeguards.
b. Flag System. The Beach Club also operates a flag system signaling water safety and swimming conditions. A green flag signals good swimming due to relatively calm water, low waves, and high visibility. A yellow flag advises caution due to rough surf, fog, undertow or subsurface changes resulting from sand shift following rip currents. The plaintiff asserts that a yellow flag also means that lifeguards will restrict guests’ use of the water (e.g., by limiting accеss to a certain distance); by contrast, the Beach Club contends that it could not restrain anyone from- swimming but can merely advise caution. A black flag signals high surf or rip currents. The plaintiff asserts that a black flag means that swimming around and using the rock was prohibited; the Beach Club contends that the black flag alerts swimmers that the conditions for swimming to the rock are unsafe and that doing so is at one’s own risk.
c. Lifeguards. When a black flag is raised, lifeguards have whistled in swimmers who were on or near the rock. When a green flag is raised, at least one lifeguard would not whistle in guests who swam to and jumped off the rock.
d. Signage. The Beach Club asserts that a sign • accompanying the black flag, “rock closed,” is merely shorthand for the true meaning of the flag: that swimming to or around the rock would be dangerous and unadvised. It appears that the black flag serves as a warning, but that the club could not prohibit anyone from swimming out to the rock.
In addition, the Beach Club has three signs located in different parts of the property stating that use of the rock is at one’s own risk, that children under the age of eight are not allowed on the rock, and that children eight to.nine yеars old must be accompanied by an adult.
3. The Plaintiffs Visit
On July 6, 2009, the plaintiff, a thirty-nine year old woman, went to the Beach Club as a guest of a member. She had never been to the Beach Club or jumped off the rock before. She says that she did not see any signage at the club that day.
On the day of her visit, the green flag was raised, and there were six lifeguards on duty. While she sat on the beach, the plaintiff watched many others go -back and forth to, and jump from, the rock. Eventually, the plaintiff decided that she wanted to go to the rock, and did so by walking from the beach to the water and swimming to the rock. The plaintiff states that at the highest point of the rock, she could see the water below but not through it, and could not determine the conditions below the surface. After watching adults and children take a running start and jump off the highest part, the plaintiff waited her turn in line and did the same. The parties agree that at the time the plaintiff jumped, she did not think that jumping from the rock was dangerous.
The plaintiff alleges that after she jumped, her foot smashed into a portion of the rock below the surface of the water.
B. Procedural History
The plaintiff filed the underlying complaint on June 26, 2012, alleging negligence based on premises liability and a duty to warn. The Beach Club filed a motion for summary judgment on September 30, 2014. In response to my inquiry, on October 15, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts filed a notice of appearance as an interested party. After docketing a letter explaining why it has no legal responsibility in the matter and was choosing not to be a party to this case, the Commonwealth appeared at the hearing on summary judgment only as an observer.
II. PLAINTIFF’S MOTION TO STRIKE THE SUPPLEMENTAL EXPERT REPORT
A. Background
I set a fact discovery completion deadline of October 1, 2013, an expert disclosure deadline for the plaintiffs of November 1, and the same for the Beach Club of December 2. Under the initial discovery deadlines, expert depositions were to be completed by February 3, 2014. In May, 2014, the parties let the schedule slide. They informed me by way of a joint status report that the Beach Club had not yet disclosed its experts, but that it had agreed to provide these disclosures by July 1, a deadline I later entered as an order at a June status conference. The parties also agreed that expert depositions would be completed on or before August 15, 2014.
On July 1, the Beach Club provided an expert disclosure for Donald Medeiros. That disclosure contained Medeiros’s opinion that title to the rock is vested with the Commonwealth because the rock is located in an area below the low tide mark. Although plaintiff’s counsel noticed the deposition of Medeiros, she decided not to pursue this deposition and alerted defense counsel of that decision on July 24.
' On August 12, the Beach Club’s counsel provided the plaintiff with a supplemental expert report, dated July 22, 2014. This report contained Medeiros’s opinion that title to the rock was vested with the Commonwealth because the rock is located in an area below the level of the lowest predicted yearly tide, also known as the “extreme low tide” line. This opinion was based on observations Medeiros made on July 12 at the Beach Club and additional background informаtion provided along with the report. On August 12, the date on which the plaintiff received the supplemental report and three days before the parties’ • agreed upon expert deposition deadline, the plaintiff filed a motion to strike the supplemental report. The Beach Club opposes the motion to strike, noting that the plaintiff did not contact defense counsel or attempt to resolve the issue before filing the motion, contrary to the requirements of Local Rules 7.1(a)(2) and 37.1(a).
B. Legal Standard
Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(a)(2) requires that a written expert report be submitted in a timely manner in accordance with the discovery schedule set by the court. Under Fed.R.Civ.P. 37(c)(1), failure to comply with the disclosure requirements of Rule 26(a) can result in a sanction'—-a prohibition on the use of testimony stemming from an untimely expert disclosure, for example—“unless the failure was substantially justified or is harmless.” See Gay v. Stonebridge Life Ins. Co.,
C. Analysis
The plaintiff seeks to strike Medeiros’s supplemental expert report because it was not provided by the expert disclosure deadline. She contends that the preparation of the supplemental report and the delay in service of the supplement on the plaintiff until three days before the deposition deadline was intentional; that the untimely disclosure was not substantially justified, as there were opportunities for extreme low tide observations prior to July 12; and that it is not harmless, because she would be highly prejudiced by the use of the supplemental information at trial without having had the opportunity to have Medeiros’s opinions reviewed by her own expert or to depose Medeiros.
The Beach Club asserts that the delayed supplemental disclosure was substantially justified and indeed required by Fed. R.Civ.P. 26(e) (requiring party to supplement expert report where party “learns that in some material respect the disclosure ... is incomplete”), because Medeiros became aware of precedent suggesting that the extreme low tide mark might denote the property boundary only after he completed his initial report. Because the first extreme low tide date following this discovery was July 12, the Beach Club contends that the delay was justified.
As a preliminary observation,-1 note, as more fully developed in the next section, that the opinion provided in the supplemental report does not appear to be of any consequence to the outcome of this case. In Spillane v. Adams,
Given the state of the law, Medeiros’s initial expert report, which appears to describe the mean low tide mark as the boundary measure, would be sufficient to
III. THE BEACH CLUB’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
The plaintiffs complaint essentially pleads two theories of negligence: that the Beach Club breached a duty of care to maintain the rock, as its premises, in a reasonably safe condition, and that the Beach Club breached a duty to warn the plaintiff of known hazards involving the rock. The Beach Club contends in its motion for summary judgment that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts supporting either of these claims, and that even if she can, the Massachusetts recreational use statute, G.L. c. 21, § 17C, protects the Beach Club from liability.
A. Standard of Review
The purpose of summary judgment practice is “to pierce the pleadings and to assess the proof in order to see whether there is a genuine need for trial.” Garside v. Osco Drug, Inc.,
A “genuine” dispute is one that, based on the supporting evidence, “a reasonable jury could resolve ... in favor of the non-moving party,” and a “material” fact is one that has “the potential to affect the outcome of the suit under the applicable law.” Sanchez v. Alvarado,
If the moving party satisfies the burden of showing, based on evidentiary material, that there is no genuine issue of material fact, the burden shifts to the nonmoving party to demonstrate by reference to specific provable facts “that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.” Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
B. Duty of Care
1. Legal Standard
A negligence claim requires proof that the defendant owed a legal duty to the plaintiff, that the defendant breached this duty, and that the breach was the proximate cause of the plaintiffs injury. Jupin v. Kask,
It is well-recognized that “an owner or possessor of land” owes “to all lawful visitors” a duty of reasonable care that “includes an obligation to maintain the premises in reasonably safe condition and to warn visitors of any unreasonable dangers of which the landowner is aware or reasonably should be aware.” Davis,
Where a plaintiff claims injury from a dangerous condition, premises liability “depends upon [the defendant’s] ‘control of the offending instrumentality, either through ownership or otherwise.’ ” Marsden v. Eastern Gas & Fuel Assocs.,
The parties offer differing interpretations of what constitutes “control.” The Beach Club asserts that a legal right to control the premises, such as through ownership, a lease or contract, or successful adverse possession, is required for the duty to attach. The plaintiff, in contrast, asserts that the exercise of control over the premises in question, whether pursuant to a legal right or not, determines whether a duty arises. The crux of the dispute, then, is whether in these circumstances, a commercial tenant can be sаid to control adjacent premises for which the tenant’s property serves as a portal such that some duty of care to lawful visitors arises.
An express right to control the premises, conferred through • the mechanisms of ownership, leasehold, contract or adverse possession, clearly gives rise to a duty of care. See, e.g., Humphrey v. Byron,
Various compendia of nationwide case law reflect a common understanding that control of adjacent property, even absent a legal right, can in some circumstances confer a duty of care, as the plaintiff suggests. See, e.g., 62 Am.Jur.2d Premises Liability § 12 (2014) (property possessor can assume a duty of care as to adjacent property where property possessor has agreed to make safe a dangеrous condition, has created a dangerous condition even if not in control of the premises, or has assumed actual control over a portion of the adjacent property despite lacking a legal right to control, or where there is an obscured danger on appurtenant land that is near a place where guests enter and exit the possessor’s property); 65A C.J.S. Negligence §§ 410, 684 (2014) (reciting same scenarios). The Restatement (Third) of Torts defines a possessor of land as one “who occupies the land and controls it” and indicates that actual control of the property is the key inquiry. Restatement (Third) of Torts § 49, cmt. a, reporters’ note to cmt. a (2012). Such control may be exercised by one who does not have legal title. Id. § 49, cmt. c. Where the touchstone of the attachment of a duty of care is control, see Marsden,
It appears that Massachusetts has adopted this understanding, at least to some extent. The Massachusetts Appeals Court has recognized that “in some situatiоns a landowner’s duty to exercise reasonable care does not terminate abruptly at the borders of his property but may extend to include a duty to take safety measures related to known dangers on adjacent property.” Gage v. City of Westfield,
2'. Analysis
I turn now to the factual record, considered in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, to assess whether it could support a conclusion by a reasonable fact finder that the Beach Club exercised control in such a way that it owed some duty to visitors as to the rock.
The Beach Club contends, and the plaintiff does not deny, that there are no facts indicating that the Beach Club has a legal right to control the rock. The Beach Club’s expert has indicated thаt the rock sits beyond the recognized boundary line of the mean low tide mark and therefore is not part of the Beach Club’s lease. See Spillane,
In support of her argument, the plaintiff relies primarily on O’Brien v. Peterson,
A more recent case, Davis v. Westwood Group,
The Davis court did determine that the defendant had voluntarily assumed “a duty to exercise due care in carrying out the particular task, that of hiring police officers to direct pedestrians across [the highway].” Id. at 571. Implicitly concluding that the defendant had not breached this duty as to the plaintiff, however, the court directed entry of a judgment in favor of the defendant. Id. at 572.
Davis suggests that a legal right to control is necessary in order for the law to impose a duty to maintain the premises in a reasonably safe manner. Otherwise, property possessors would be placed in the difficult position of being expected to alter property which they have no right to alter (and which, in the case of Davis, the Commonwealth had an affirmative duty to maintain). However, Davis does not preclude the imposition of some independent duty where the defendant voluntarily assumes the duty, exercises some amount of control over the adjacent property, or has some awareness of dangers on the adjacent property. See Gage,
Here, there are facts supporting the conclusion that the Beach Club voluntarily assumеd some precautionary duties as to the rock, including hiring lifeguards whose responsibilities may have extended to the area surrounding the rock, implementing roping and a flag system indicating when it was unsafe (and perhaps, conversely, safe) to use the rock, and posting warning signage regarding use of the rock. In Davis, the court recognized that the defendant had voluntarily assumed a duty of care in hiring police officers—in other words, it had voluntarily assumed a duty of taking a specific precaution regarding visitors’ use of adjacent property where the defendant recognized some danger. So too did the Beach Club undertake some precautions to ensure the safety of its visitors when they used the rock on the adjacent premises.
Even absent the voluntary assumption of a duty to keep guests safe in using the rock, the facts supporting the Beach Club’s exercise of some actual control over the rock, and the Beach Club’s knowledge that the rock posed some potential danger suggest that the Beach Club could be found to owe a duty of care as to the rock.
As a matter of law, however, this duty cannot include a duty to repair, to maintain, or to remedy dangerous conditions, see Davis,
C. Duty to Warn
1. Legal Standard
Where a property possessor has a duty to warn, that duty applies to “any unreasonable dangers of which the landowner is aware or reasonably should be aware.” Davis,
This “open and obvious” exception to the duty to warn is based on “the assumption that the warning provided by the open and obvious nature of the danger is by itself sufficient to relieve the property owner of its duty to protect visitors from dangerous conditions on thе property.” Papadopoulos v. Target Corp.,
2. Analysis
The parties do not dispute that the plaintiff, following the lead of other guests of the Beach Club, jumped off a natural rock formation into the ocean where the depth of the water and what was below the water’s surface were not visible. Rather, they dispute whether this activity constituted an open and obvious danger under the circumstances.
The Beach Club contends that this activity is analogous to dangers that Massachusetts courts have previously recognized as being open and obvious. See O’Sullivan,
'The plaintiff contends that the danger posed by jumping off the rock was not open and obvious because the sоurce of the danger lurked below the surface. She asserts that the rocks below the surface of the water could not be seen by guests, and that the lifeguards knew that one needed a running start when jumping off the rock to clear these hidden below-surface rocks.
The specific facts which the plaintiff references raise a jury question regarding her contention that the danger was not open and obvious. Although the Beach Club asks me to hold as a matter of law that jumping from the rock posed such a danger, this determination in these circumstances requires findings of fact regarding what a reasonable person of ordinary intelligence in the plaintiffs position would have considered to pose an obvious danger. See O’Sullivan,
Some facts, of course, will be of minimal import in the objective analysis that the inquiry requires. For example, that the plaintiff or the lifeguards may have witnessed others successfully perform the maneuver does not necessarily save a danger from classification as open and obvious. See O’Sullivan,
The plaintiffs assertion that my opinion in Godsoe v. Maple Park Properties, Inc., Civ. No. 06-10405,
However, Godsoe does reflect an important general principle: a defendant may not maintain its property “in an unreasonably unsafe condition as long as the unsafe condition is open and obvious.” Id. at *5 (citation omitted). That principle has been applied more recently by the Supreme Judicial Court in Papadopoulos and Dos Santos, which concluded that a property owner has a. duty to remedy an open аnd obvious danger that poses a foreseeable-risk of injury to a lawful visitor. See Dos Santos,
In Dos Santos, the Supreme Judicial Court noted that where a defendant creates a dangerous situation, such as by “set[ting] up [a] trampoline next to [a swimming] pool with the specific intent to enable the type of use that resulted in the plaintiffs injury,” and where the defendant “knew that the trampoline and pool were in fact being used in this manner and that this use was dangerous,” the defendant would be able to anticipate the risk of injury, despite the open and obvious nature of the danger, and therefore had a duty to remedy the danger. Id. at 1195-96.
The court adopted the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 343A & cmt. f (2014), which provides that in cases where “the possessor of land can and should anticipate that the dangerous condition will cause physical harm to the invitee notwithstanding its known or obvious danger ... the possessor is not relieved of the duty of reasonable care which he owes to the invitee for his protection. This duty may require him to warn the invitee, or to take other reasonable steps to protect him, against the known or obvious condition or activity, if the possessor has reason to expеct that the invitee will nevertheless suffer physical harm.” In so doing, the court distinguished OSullivan as a case in which “the only possible theory of liability was a negligent failure to warn,” and “the negation of the duty to warn by operation of the open and obvious danger rule therefore negated any duty of care in that particular case.” Dos Santos,
There is a genuine dispute as to whether the rock here posed a foreseeable risk of physical harm to the Beach Club’s guests, particularly where the Beach Club knew that guests of all ages regularly jumped off the rock and may be said to have known that the rock extended outward below thе water’s surface. Cf. Cracchiolo,
Where, as here, “the only viable theory of negligence” is failure to warn, and not failure to remedy, the question of whether the danger was open and obvious is dispositive. Cf. Matouk v. Marriott Hotel Servs., Inc., Civ. No. 11-12294,
Under the circumstances, the Beach Club may not be held to a duty to remedy dangerous conditions associated with the rock. As in Davis, the Beach Club lacks the legal right to control and make modifications to the adjacent premises where the danger is located. However, although it cannot be held to a duty of care to maintain the premises in a reasonably-safe condition, from which a duty to remedy arises, the Beach Club’s plausible exercise of some control over access to the rock can be said to impose a duty to warn guests of the dangerous condition on the adjacent premises and take additional steps to restrict access to the rock by those using the Beach Club’s own property-.
D. Recreational Use Statute
1. Legal Standard
The Massachusetts recreational use statute, G.L. c. 21, § 17C, “bars a recreational user’s claim for ordinary negligence against a landowner who has opened his land to the public for ‘recreational purposes.’ ” Ali v. City of Boston, 441 Mass. .233,
a. Interest in the Land, When addressing the question of interest in the land under § 17C, the parties are in the awkward position of offering arguments on a factual basis counter to those that they assert on the underlying negligence claims. The Beach Club contends that it has a sufficient interest in the rock if it is deemed to owe a duty as to the rock because the rock is considered part of the leased land. The plaintiff contends that the Beach Club does not have a legal interest in the rock and therefore cannot use this defense.
If the lease between the Beach Club and WHIC' included the rock, or if the Beach Club had some other contractual right to use the rock, that might be sufficient. See G.L. c. 21, § 17C(b) (“‘person’ shall include the person having any interest in the land, [including] his agent, manager or licensee”); Patterson v. Christ Church in Boston,
b. Open to the Public for Recreational Purposes Free of Charge. It is undisputed that the Beach Club and the rock were used for recreational purposes. See Catanzarite v. City of Springfield,
The Supreme Judicial Court recently affirmed that where access to the property is restricted to a subset of the public at the time of the injury, the recreational use statute cannot serve as an affirmative defense. See Wilkins v. City of Haverhill,
Here, there is no dispute that the Beach Club is a private club requiring membership and the payment of a fee for entrance by a guest. The plaintiff was injured at a
The Beach Club attempts to salvage this defense by distinguishing between access to the club and use of the rock. It contends that the fee the plaintiff paid was to access the club and the activities therein, but that use of the rock was available free of charge. As support for this contention, the Beach Club points to testimony from several individuals stating that the rock is accessed and used (for free) by members of the public who approach by boat and do not pay to access the club.
The Beach Club’s maneuvering is unpersuasive. In order to assert this defense with any success, the Beach Club would need to establish that the rock was part of its property interest (a burden which, as I have stated, the Beach Club has eschewed). Were it to establish this prerequisite, it would effectively conceptualize the rock and the club as separate entities: the club as a private facility requiring the payment of a fee, and the rock a free, public facility ancillary to the club. Such a concept distorts the intended purpose of the recreational use statute.
The cases the Beach Club cites do not support its proposition. In Marcus v. City of Newton,
3. Conclusion
It is clear that the Beach Club does not have the recreational use statute available as an affirmative defense to shield itself from liability at this or any other stage of the proceedings.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, I DENY the motion to strike the supplemental expert report, Dkt. No. 18, and DENY the Beach Club’s motion for summary judgment, Dkt. No. 20.
Notes
. Annual membership fees are $175 per person or $250 per family, and members may bring guests for an additional fee. The term "guests” as well as the term "visitors” will be used at times in this memorandum to describe both members and guests of members who are using the club.
. The Beach Club states that the safety ropes are in place to aid the lifeguards in maintaining the safety of guests while they are in the
. The Beach Club asserts that the specific mechanics of injury are disputed, because the plaintiff has also stated that the injury occurred as a result of her leg becoming stuck between two rocks, as indicated in the emergency room report following her injury.
. The Beach Club's counsel attributes the delay between the July 22 date of the supplemental report and the August 12 date of its service on the plaintiff to "summertime vacations.”
. The Supreme Judicial Court has not taken up the question since Spillane, nor has it cited to the case since its publication. However, in Arno v. Commonwealth,
. Indeed, the Beach Club stated that it would have been amenable to revising the deadlines and or permitting a deposition, had the plaintiff sought to confer with the Beach Club prior to filing the motion to strike. I must also note the irony in the plaintiff’s motion to strike founded on a failure to follow timeliness rules when she herself failed to follow the local rules requiring a moving party to confer before filing such a motion. Irony, however, is not the grounds for my denial of the motion to strike.
. At the hearing in this matter, it appeared that the parties do not, in any event, disрute that title to the rock rests with the Commonwealth and consequently will not be an issue at trial. Under the circumstances, I assume—and the record as a matter of law supports—the proposition for purposes of this motion that the Beach Club does not have title or right in the rock.
. The Beach Club further asserts that it could not have adversely possessed the rock because such adverse possession is specifically prohibited by statute. See G.L. c. 260, § 31. The
. O’Brien has been cited by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court and the Appeals Court only five times since it was handed down in 1952: once for the proposition that a duty might arise in similar circumstances, see Greenslade v. Mohawk Park, Inc.,
. The duty assumed by the Beach Club appears greater than that assumed by the defendant in Davis. In both cases, the defendants knew of and indeed facilitated the use by guests of adjacent property that was owned by the Commonwealth but over which the defendant exercised some limited control. In Davis, the use of the adjacent premises was merely as a thoroughfare from the parking lot to the racetrack. In contrast, in the instant case, the Beach Club itself serves as an access point for guests to use the rock during their visit to the Beach Club. In addition, there are differences in use by the general public that suggest that the extent of the Beach Club's ability to control, and actual control over, the rock exceeded the control exercised in Davis. Here, the use of the rock by guests of the Beach Club is presumably greater than that of members of the general public, since the Beach Club provides a point of access from shore rather than by boat. In contrast, one can imagine a variety of reasons why individuals not attending the racetrack at issue in Davis might nonetheless use or cross the state highway.
. There is a genuine dispute as to whether the lifeguards had an awareness of dangers posed by an extension of the rock below the water’s surface. A reasonable fact’ finder, however, could infer from the Beach Club’s posting of warning signs that the Beach Club perceived some danger in use of the rock for recreation.
. This exercise of control over the rock, among other factual distinctions, differentiates the instant case from Jones v. Halekulani Hotel, Inc.,
. The parties dispute whether the rock angles in a visibly outward direction as it descends to the water’s surface.
. The plaintiff states that she watched both children and adults take a running start and jump off the rock, and that she employed the same technique-in jumping.
. The Beach Club’s expert states that the rock is physically outside of the Beach Club’s leasehold, which the plaintiff does not dispute. Neither party points to a Beach Club property interest in the rock arising through some other arrangement.
. In Wilkins, the court held that a public school that was open one evening solely to parents of enrolled students for the purpose of attending parent-teacher conferences did not qualify for the protection of the recreational use statute, because only a subset of the public was permitted to enter the school at the time. Wilkins v. City of Haverhill,
. Instead, this phrasing was likely meant to introduce the distinctions the court went on to make between Marcus and two earlier cases, Seich v. Canton,
