This appeal arises from a directed verdict granted Defendants David and Ginger Smith (Smiths) in a personal injury case involving one count of premises liability based on an artificial condition of land and one count of negligent supervision. Plaintiff Amanda Cook (Cook) is a sixteen-year-old girl who was invited to the Smiths’ farm for a party with their daughter, Sarah Smith, and several other members of her high school volleyball team. When a guest began to drive the Smiths’ All-Terrain Vehicle (ATV) without permission, Cook climbed aboard. An accident resulted, allegedly because of faulty brakes on the ATV, and Cook was seriously injured. Neither of the Smiths was home at the time of the accident.
*551 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On August 27,1994, the Smiths hosted a party and bonfire at their farm in Calla-way County for twenty-five to thirty-five members of Sarah’s high school volleyball team. Among those invited was Cook. No adults were present at the time the party began, around 5 p.m. Ginger Smith arrived about three hours later; David Smith was out of town. At the time of the accident only the Smiths’ children were home: Sarah, age sixteen, and Justin, age fourteen.
The Smiths kept a three-wheel ATV on their property, which Justin used that evening to haul supplies to a pasture for the bonfire. Justin testified that the rear brake on the ATV was “faulty.” He said that though the ATV would stop after about five feet when the front brake was applied, the rear brake would not stop the vehicle until about twenty feet.
When Justin left the ATV running that evening to tend to the bonfire, a guest, Laura Farris (Farris), began driving the ATV. Farris had never before driven an ATV and did not know that the brakes were faulty. She drove the ATV around the pasture and returned to the site of bonfire. Plaintiff Cook then climbed aboard as a passenger, and the two of them drove away from the bonfire and toward the Smiths’ house. There was disputed testimony as to whether Farris had Sarah’s permission to drive the ATV. Ginger Smith testified that had she been there, she would not have permitted any of the girls to ride the ATV. Justin testified that he waved his hands and yelled to Farris and Cook to return the ATV, but to no avail.
On a path to the house, Farris and Cook encountered Sarah, who was driving a tractor-type vehicle. To avoid hitting Sarah, Farris turned the vehicle but headed toward a creek. As the two approached the creek, Farris turned the steering wheel all the way to the left and applied the brakes, but the ATV continued to go straight, went over the embankment and dropped six or seven feet into the dry creek bed. Cook sustained numerous injuries, including seven broken ribs, a collapsed lung, torn cartilage in her chest, severe bruises, a concussion, a gash on the head, and a permanently enlarged right breast. She continues to suffer from pain in her ribs and from back spasms.
Cook sued on two theories: premises liability and negligent supervision. With regard to the premises liability claim, Cook argued that the ATV was a defective artificial condition of land and thus the Smiths breached their duty to either warn her or make the ATV safe. As to the negligent supervision claim, Cook argues that the Smiths breached their duty of ordinary care by fading to provide adult supervision to the teenage group.
At the close of Plaintiff Cook’s evidence, the trial court granted the Smiths’ motion for a directed verdict only as to the premises liability claim on the basis that the ATV was not a condition of the land. At the close of all of the evidence, the trial court granted a directed verdict to the Smiths on the negligent supervision claim on the basis that Cook failed to make a submissible claim. On appeal Cook contests both rulings.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
In reviewing a directed verdict granted for a defendant, an appellate court views the evidence and permissible inferences most favorably to the plaintiff, disregards contrary evidence and inferences, and determines whether the plaintiff made a submissible case.
Thong v. My River Harbour, Inc.
I. Premises Liability
Plaintiff Cook argues in her first point that the trial court erred in granting the directed verdict as to premises liability. In this point, two questions arise: the legal status of Cook, and the duty owed to her with respect to the land.
In Missouri, the duty owed to a plaintiff in a premises liability action generally depends upon the status of the plaintiff at the time of the injury.
Cochran v. Burger King Corp.,
The parties argue a great deal in their briefs about the legal status of Plaintiff Cook. Cook contends that she was an invitee; the Smiths contend that she was a licensee. In
Carter v. Kinney,
the Supreme Court of Missouri clarified Missouri’s distinction between the two and stated that “social guests are but a subclass of licensees.”
The facts indicate that Plaintiff Cook, along with several others, was invited to the Smiths’ home to unite their daughter’s volleyball team. The court finds no “material benefit motive” in such a purpose. Id. Moreover, the guests at the party were an ascertainable group: twenty-five to thirty-five members of a high school athletic team. As such, this court finds that the invitation was neither to “the public generally [nor] to some undefined portion of the public” so as to render the guests invitees. Id.
The next question for the court is what duty the Smiths owed Cook as a licensee. Missouri follows the Restatement, Law of Torts, First § 342 (1934).
Gray v. Russell,
A possessor of land is subject to liability for bodily injury caused to gratuitous licensees by a natural or artificial condition thereon if, but only if, he
(a) knows of the condition and realizes that it involves an unreasonable risk to them and has reason to believe that they will not discover the condition or realize the risk, and
(b) invites or permits them to enter or remain upon the land, without exercising reasonable care (i) to make the condition reasonably safe, or (ii) to warn them of the condition and the risk involved therein.
The pivotal issue in this point is whether an ATV is an artificial condition of land. Cook argues that the only requirement for a condition to be artificial is that it be on (“thereon”) the land. She relies heavily on
Wiegers by Evans v. Fitzpatrick,
Conditions of land generally are in the nature of “hidden dangers, traps, snares, pitfalls, and the like.”
Jones v. National Supermarkets, Inc.
II. Negligent Supervision
Plaintiff Cook argues in her second point that the trial court erred in granting a directed verdict in favor of the Smiths on their count for negligent supervision.
Negligent supervision is a variant of the common law tort of negligence.
G.E.T. ex rel. T.T. v. Barron,
Missouri courts have held that the duty to supervise is narrow, requiring “the existence of a relationship between the plaintiff and defendant that the law recognizes as the basis of a duty of care.”
Hill ex rel. Hill v. Herbert Hoover Boys Club,
The parties primarily rely on the
Be-quette
and
Hill
cases in arguing whether a duty arose. In
Bequette,
a mother authorized her son to invite twenty friends to celebrate his sixteenth birthday, and he gave her a guest list.
*554
In
Hill,
the plaintiff was a fourteen-year-old baseball player in a league of youths age sixteen years old or under.
This court finds that the Smiths accepted the custody and control of Cook as a minor child, establishing and creating a duty to her of ordinary care. Cook was not an uninvited partygoer, as in
Bequette.
Breach of the duty of ordinary care “involves whether a reasonable person could have foreseen that the injuries of the type suffered would likely occur under the circumstances.”
Rogger v. Voyles,
The Rogger facts are similar to the instant case. Had the Smiths been present at the party, supervised Farris as she drove the vehicle or prevented her or any of the guests from doing so, it is conceivable that Cook would not have sustained the injuries she did. Having established sufficient evidence to support a duty to supervise Cook and a responsibility of ordinary care, the issues of causation and breach of duty by the Smiths made a submissible jury issue. Under the applicable scope of review where a directed verdict has been granted, there was sufficient evidence for a jury to have decided whether there was a breach of duty. The court reverses and remands on the issue of negligent supervision.
The judgment as to premises liability is affirmed. The judgment as to negligent supervision is reversed and remanded for a new trial.
All concur.
Notes
.
See, e.g., Carter v. Kinney,
. The Smiths also rely on
Smith v. Gregg,
Neither party cited a similar case,
Thwing v. Reeder,
