*10 Opinion
In this personal injury action, plaintiff Patrick Connelly (Connelly) sued defendant Mammoth Mountain Ski Area (Mammoth) after colliding with a ski lift tower. In granting summary judgment for Mammoth, the trial court rejected Connelly’s claim that Mammoth improperly padded the tower; instead, the court found the collision with the tower to be an obvious, avoidable and inherent risk for which Mammoth owed no duty under the primary assumption of risk doctrine defined in
Knight
v.
Jewett
(1992)
Discussion
1. Standard of Review
A motion for summary judgment “shall be granted if all the papers submitted show that there is no triable issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (c).) An appellate court determines on its own whether these criteria have been met.
(Jambazian
v.
Borden
(1994)
2. Background and Analysis
On March 5, 1989, Connelly, who considered himself an advanced or expert skier at the time, collided with a ski lift tower on the Stump Alley Run at Mammoth, a run designated as “more difficult” (advanced intermediate). Connelly sustained serious injury. The accident occurred when one of Connelly’s ski bindings released, causing Connelly to lose his ski, fall on his stomach, and slide downhill into the tower.
At the site of Connelly’s collision, the Stump Alley Run is fairly wide and bisected by the ski lift. The tower into which Connelly collided was visible to approaching skiers for approximately 200 yards. On the day of the accident, the weather was sunny and the snow conditions were groomed and hardpacked. In his deposition, Connelly stated there was nothing dangerous or unusual that caused him to lose control and fall or that caused him to collide with the lift tower.
*11 On the day of the accident, Connelly had skied at least one prior run down Stump Alley. In his skiing career, Connelly had skied past the fateful tower between 50 and 100 times.
In his complaint, Connelly sued Mammoth for premises liability and general negligence. Both theories were based on the following allegation of negligence: “Plaintiff [Connelly] lost control . . . and struck one of the metal towers and as a result, suffered serious injury because the metal tower was not properly padded.” In his summary judgment papers, Connelly elaborated on this point. The padding on the tower that Connelly struck was not at snow level and was inadequate in any event to cushion the blow and prevent his injuries.
Mammoth moved successfully for summary judgment, contending that ski lift tower collisions are an inherent risk of skiing and that Mammoth owed no duty to protect Connelly from this inherent risk. A duty to use due care is one of the elements of a negligence cause of action; if there is no such duty, there is no negligence action. (See
Wattenbarger
v.
Cincinnati Reds, Inc.
(1994)
Mammoth’s position is grounded in the doctrine of primary assumption of risk as defined in
Knight
v.
Jewett, supra,
“Secondary assumption of risk [arises] where a defendant breaches a duty of care owed to the plaintiff but the plaintiff nevertheless knowingly encounters the risk created by the breach. Secondary assumption of risk is not a bar to recovery, but requires the application of comparative fault principles.
(Knight,
at pp. 314-315.)”
(Wattenbarger
v.
Cincinnati Reds, Inc., supra,
Primary assumption of risk arises where a plaintiff voluntarily participates in an activity or sport involving certain inherent risks; primary assumption of risk does bar recovery because no duty of care is owed as to such risks.
(Knight
v.
Jewett, supra,
3 Cal.4th at pp. 314-316;
Wattenbarger
v.
Cincinnati Reds, Inc., supra,
Snow skiing is a sport that involves certain inherent risks. This court has listed those risks on a couple of occasions. “ ‘ “Each person who participates in the sport of [snow] skiing accepts the dangers that inhere in that sport insofar as the dangers are obvious and necessary. Those dangers include, but are not limited to, injuries which can result from variations in terrain; surface or subsurface snow or ice conditions; bare spots; rocks, trees and other forms of natural growth or debris;
collisions with ski lift towers and their components,
with other skiers, or with properly marked or plainly visible snow-making or snow-grooming equipment.
(Danieley
v.
Goldmine Ski Associates, Inc.
(1990)
Connelly collided with a ski lift tower while skiing. This risk, as noted, is inherent in the sport. Consequently, the trial court properly ruled in Mammoth’s favor on this point, concluding that Mammoth, under the doctrine of primary assumption of risk, owed no duty to protect Connelly against this inherent risk.
Additionally, Connelly argued that Mammoth breached a different duty, the duty not to increase the inherent risks of skiing; Mammoth breached this duty, Connelly asserted, by failing to maintain adequate padding on the lift towers at snow level. This argument is in line with Knight’s observation that “[although defendants generally have no legal duty to eliminate (or protect a plaintiff against) risks inherent in the sport itself, it is well established that defendants generally do have a duty to use due care not to increase the risks to a participant over and above those inherent in the sport.” (Knight v. Jewett, supra, 3 Cal.4th at pp. 315-316.)
There was no evidence, however, that Mammoth increased the inherent risk of colliding with a ski lift tower while skiing. For example, there was no evidence that Mammoth did or failed to do anything that caused Connelly to collide with the tower. Nor are we aware of any relevant legal authority in *13 California, and we have not been directed to any, requiring a ski area operator to pad its ski lift towers. It would be anomalous to hold an operator who padded its towers—as Mammoth did here—more liable than an operator who failed to do so.
Two out-of-state decisions have considered and rejected arguments similar or analogous to the one Connelly advances about padding. We find these decisions persuasive. In
Leopold
v.
Okemo Mountain, Inc.
(D.Vt. 1976)
An analogous argument met an analogous fate in
Verro
v.
New York Racing Ass’n., Inc.
(1989)
On the day of Connelly’s accident, the ski lift tower that he struck could be seen by approaching skiers for about 200 yards. The tower was situated in a fairly wide part of the ski run. The weather was clear and the ski conditions were normal. Connelly had previously skied past the tower at least once on the day of the accident, and several dozen times in his skiing career. As *14 noted, Connelly has not alleged that Mammoth did or failed to do anything that caused him to collide with the tower. Connelly’s binding gave way, as well as his ski, and his slide to the tower began. This was simply a very unfortunate accident. But the law is clear in California under the facts presented in this case: colliding with a ski lift tower while skiing is an inherent risk within the doctrine of primary assumption of risk, and Mammoth owed no duty to Connelly to protect him from this inherent risk. Furthermore, there is no evidence that Mammoth increased this inherent risk. Consequently, Mammoth has shown that Connelly cannot establish the duty element of his negligence and negligence-based premises liability causes of action; therefore, as the trial court concluded, Mammoth is entitled to summary judgment.
The judgment is affirmed.
Raye, J., and Morrison, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied December 13, 1995.
Notes
Danieley
noted this Michigan statute was based on the common law and
Danieley
regarded it “as persuasive authority for what the common law in this subject-matter area should be in California.”
(Danieley
v.
Goldmine Ski Associates, Inc., supra,
