1.Appellants Valentine and Debbie Espinoza appeal a summary judgment entered in favor of the Town of Taos. We review pursuant to SCRA 1986, 12-102(A) (RepLPamp. 1992) (providing Supreme Court jurisdiction in cases sounding in contract), to determine two issues: (1) Whether the Tort Claims Aсt, NMSA 1978, §§ 41-4-1 to -27 (Repl.Pamp. 1989 & Cum.Supp.1995), waives sovereign immunity when a child is injured on a playground during a summer day camp conducted by a municipality, and (2) whether the Town of Taos’s summer day camp application may form the basis of a contract remedy for failurе to supervise a minor child in the Town’s care. We affirm.
I
2. Appellants • enrolled their five-year-old son, Valentine Espinoza, Jr. (Val), and his sister in the Town of Taos’s summer day camp program. The Town of Taos actively encouraged Appellant Debbie Esрinoza to enroll Val in the program. Because Appellant was concerned about the safety of her two children, she investigated the program. She was told that six camp employees would supervise the children, that the program directоr would be available for direct supervision, and that the on-site supervisor, Sally Martinez, would physically be present with Val to ensure his safety. Appellant paid $40.00 for each child to attend the summer day camp program. The operation of the рrogram called for an active on-site supervisor and three additional employees when the activities of the program were held at Kit Carson State Park. At the time Val was injured, neither on-site supervisor Martinez nor any other person performing her function was present. Furthermore, there were only two employees with the children at the park.
3. On August 4, 1989, summer day camp had ended for the day and the children were gathered at the playground waiting for their parents to pick them up. The two employees present with the children were inattentive. Val followed other children up a slide rather than using the steps and was injured when he fell from the top as he attempted to turn around. Appellant Valentine Espinoza arrived immediately after the aсcident and took his son to the hospital. Gail Martinez told
II
4. The district court еntered summary judgment in favor of the Town of Taos on December 5, 1994. The court found that Section 41-4-6 of the Tort Claims Act does not waive sovereign immunity for the Town of Taos’s failure to exercise ordinary care in the supervision of children who participated in its summer day camp program. The court rejected Appellants’ contention that the absence of adequate supervision was a dangerous “condition” of the playground for which sovereign immunity had been waived. The court also found that although the application constituted a contract, Appellants could not sue on a breach of contract theory because the parties specifically agreed to exclude any provision for recovery of damagеs for any injuries sustained by participants. This appeal followed.
III
5. Appellants contend that the court improperly entered summary judgment. Summary judgment is inappropriate when resolution of a factual dispute is required to determine a legal questiоn before the Court. However, when “there are no genuine issues of material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law” we will uphold the entry of summary judgment. Roth v. Thompson,
6. Appellants assert that Section 41-4-6 waives sovereign immunity because “[t]he absence of adequate supervision of children using recreational equipment on property owned and operated by the government has been found to be an unsafe, dangerous or defective condition for which sovereign immunity has beеn waived.” Appellants primarily rely on Seal v. Carlsbad Independent School District,
7. Appellants argue that supervision had always been provided and was expressly promised in the present case, just as lifeguards had always been provided for the aquatic camps in Seal. Appellants allege that the injury occurred as a result of the negligence of the Town of Taos in permitting the day camp to operate with inadequate staffing and that liability is predicated on “traditional tort concepts of duty and the reasonably prudеnt person’s standard of care in the performance of that duty,” Bober v. New Mexico State Fair,
8. Appellee responds that a claim of negligent supervision fits squarely within Pemberton v. Cordova,
9.The Court of Appeals in Pemberton found no waiver of sovereign immunity under the Tort Claims Act for the alleged negligent supervision of a child injured while on schoоl grounds by another student. Id. at 478,
10. We expanded the definition of “building” under Section 41 — 4-6 in Bober,
11. Castillo also involved negligent failure to provide safe common areas.
12. In Archibeque, we distinguished between negligent conduct by public employees in maintaining and operating physical premises owned by the government and negligent performance of administrative functions. Id. at 619,
13. The Court of Appeals, in Callaway, held that the New Mexico Department of Corrections “knew or should have known that roaming gang members with a known propensity for violеnce had access to potential weapons in the recreation area, that such gang members created a dangerous condition on the premises of the penitentiary, and that the danger to other inmates was foreseeable.” Callaway,
14. All eases cited by Appellants concern negligent conduct that itself created unsafe conditions for the general public. In the case at bаr, the negligent conduct itself did not create the unsafe conditions. The playground was a safe area for children. There were no gangs threatening the children, no free-roaming dogs, no influx of traffic, no improperly maintained equipment. The playgrоund is distinct from, for example, the swimming pool at issue in Seal. There, the unsafe condition of the premises was a swimming pool without the superintending lifeguard protection required by statute. Here, the playground itself, particularly the slide, was not a condition rеquiring supervision. Rather, it was the day-camp undertaking and not the condition of the premises that gave rise to duty. The Legislature has expressly stated that because of the broad range of the government’s activities, it “should not have the duty to do everything that might be done” for the benefit of the public. Section 41-4-2(A). Even if the Town of Taos arguably had a duty in this case, there can be no liability for any breach of that duty because immunity has not been waived. Martinez v. Kaune,
IV
15. We find Appellants’ breach of contract clаim to be meritless. The Town of Taos did not undertake a contractual obligation for liability in the event of injury to a child attending its summer day camp. At most, the terms of the application merely ensured that space would be provided in the day camp program for children who registered and paid the applicable fee. The application makes no mention of ensuring the safety of the children enrolled and expressly states that the Town will not do so. See NMSA 1978, § 37-1-23 (actions against governmental entities must be based on valid written contract). We will not read into a contract conditions not intended by the parties. See Gallup Elec. Light Co. v. Pacific Improvement Co.,
V
16. In conclusion, we find no waiver of sovereign immunity for negligent supervision of children at a playground. We also find no contractual agreement to ensure the safety of the children participating in the summer day camp program. We therefore affirm.
17. IT IS SO ORDERED.
