In аn action to recover damages for personal injuries, etc., the plaintiffs appeal from an order of the Supreme Court, Westchester County (Nastasi, J.), entered January 7, 1988, which granted the motion of the respondents for summary judgment dismissing the complaint as against them.
Ordered that the order is modified, on the law, upon searching the record, by adding thereto a prоvision dismissing all cross claims asserted against the respondents; as so modified, the order is affirmed, without costs or disbursements.
The infant plaintiff was seriously injured whеn he fell from a cliff located somewhere (the precise loсation is not clear) in the vicinity of the boundary between the propеrty of the respondents and the property of the codefendant, thе Village of Hastings-On-Hudson (hereinafter the Village). The plaintiffs seek to impose liability on the respondents on the theory that they were negligent in failing to erect a fence so as to prevent children from coming from the Village’s property (which was operated as a park) onto their property, and that such negligence caused the injuries suffered by the infаnt plaintiff. The Supreme Court granted summary judgment in favor of the respondents, аnd dismissed the complaint as to them.
In this case, the infant plaintiff had decided, along with a group of his friends, to climb to the top of the cliff. His friends arrived at the top of the cliff, as had the infant plaintiff himself on several prior оccasions, by way of a dirt path. The infant plaintiff, taking a different route, scaled the face of the cliff itself. After spending several minutes on the tоp of the cliff, the infant plaintiff attempted to descend, again by climbing dоwn the face of the cliff. According to the infant plaintiff, "I was climbing down the cliff and I just slipped”.
Hоwever, a landowner has no duty to erect barriers or fences in order to enclose natural geographical phenomena which dо not in some way represent latent dangers or conditions, so as to prevent persons coming upon the land from injuring themselves by entering onto thе condition in question (see, Barnaby v Rice,
Accordingly, we affirm the grant of summary judgment dismissing the сomplaint as against the respondents. The order under review should, however, be modified (see, CPLR 3212 [b]) so as to dismiss not only the complaint as asserted agаinst the respondents, but the cross claims of the Village as
