Plaintiffs, Lee Dykema and Linda Dykema, appeal as of right from the trial court’s order granting defendants’ motion for summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8). We affirm.
In July 1988, defendant Gus Macker Enterprises, Inc., organized and conducted the Gus Macker basketball tournament. Defendants Prime-bank Financial Corporation and Reebok International, Ltd., were official sponsors and advertisers of the basketball tournament. The tournament was held outdoors on the public streets of Belding, Michigan. Spectators were charged no admission fee and were free to move about and watch the various basketball games in progress. On July 10, 1988, Lee Dykema attended the tournament as a nonpaying spectator. (Because Linda Dykema’s claim is derivative, we hereafter use plaintiff in the singular to refer to Lee Dykema.) At approximately 4:30 p.m., a thunderstorm struck the area. During the storm, the winds were blowing in excess of forty miles an hour. Plaintiff, while *8 running for shelter, was struck by a falling tree limb and paralyzed.
Plaintiff argues that because of the special relationship that existed between Gus Macker Enterprises, Inc. (hereafter defendant), the organizer of the outdoor basketball tournament, and himself, a spectator at the tournament, defendant was under a duty to warn plaintiff of the approaching thunderstorm. We acknowledge that this is an issue of first impression in Michigan, and hold that defendant was under no duty to warn plaintiff of the approaching thunderstorm.
In order to assert negligence, a plaintiff must establish the existence of a duty owed by the defendant to the plaintiff.
Douglas v Elba, Inc,
In order to determine whether a "special relationship” giving rise to a legal duty to act does exist in a particular case, this Court has held that it is necessary to
balance the societal interests involved, the severity of the risk, the burden upon the defendant, the likelihood of occurrence, and the relationship between the parties. . . . Other factors which may give rise to a duty include the foreseeability of the [harm], the defendant’s ability to comply with the proposed duty, the victim’s inability to protect himself from the [harm], the costs of providing protection, and whether the plaintiff had bestowed some economic benefit on the defendant. [Roberts v Pinkins,171 Mich App 648 , 652-653;430 NW2d 808 (1988).]
If a trial court determines that, as a matter of law, the defendant owed no duty to the plaintiff, summary disposition is properly granted in the defendant’s favor under MCR 2.116(C)(8). Roberts, supra at 652.
Our review of the record indicates that no special relationship existed between plaintiff and de
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fendant. Contrary to plaintiff’s argument, plaintiff and defendant were not engaged in a business invitee-invitor relationship at the time of plaintiff’s accident. Plaintiff was not on the land where the basketball tournament was being held in connection "with business dealings” of defendant.
Preston v Sleziak,
Even if plaintiff had succeeded in establishing that a special relationship existed between himself and defendant, we are unable to find precedent for imposing a duty upon an organizer of an outdoor event such as this basketball tournament to warn a spectator of approaching severe weather. As we previously indicated, such a duty has not been
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recognized in Michigan, and, apparently, no other jurisdiction has constructed one. In fact, the Tennessee Supreme Court has recently held that a state-owned golf course does not owe, as part of its duty of reasonable care, a duty to warn its patrons of the dangers of lightning. In
Hames v Tennessee,
We also think the risks and dangers associated with playing golf in a lightning storm are rather obvious to most adults. ... It is reasonable to infer that a reasonably prudent adult can recognize the approach of a severe thunderstorm and know that it is time to pack up the clubs and leave before the storm begins to wreak havoc.
We agree with the Hames court that the approach Of a thunderstorm is readily apparent to reasonably prudent people, and that therefore, it is one’s own responsibility to protect himself from the weather. We believe it would be unreasonable to impose a duty on the organizer of an outdoor event to warn a spectator of a condition that the spectator is fully able to observe and react to on his own. As the Hames court indicated, "[n]o warning device could be louder or be more accurate than thunder.” Id. at 43.
In light of our disposition of this issue, we need not reach the other issue raised by plaintiff on appeal.
Affirmed.
