OPINION
The sole issue on this appeal is whether the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in a negligence action in favor of the minor defendant.
This law suit was initiated by the co-conservators of the estate of Dominique M. Brady, a minor, against Hank Dupree, a minor, and several adult defendants 1 for personal injury sustained by Dominique on August 5, 1975. Dominique was injured while playing a game with Hank and several other children which involved “shooting” each other off their feet. Hank Dupree’s deposition account of this game is the only evidence of how the accident occurred. He described the incident as follows:
Q. How were you playing? What kind of games were you playing?
A. Shooting each other off our feet.
Q. How would you do that?
A. Lean back and shoot them off your feet. Lay back on your back and you sat them on your feet and you shoot them. You push them and they go up and over.
Q. Is that how Dominique’s injury occurred?
A. Yes.
Q. Would you explain exactly what happened when he was injured?
A. He was on my feet ready to go. I asked him if he was ready and he says, “yes”. So I shot him up. He went up. He was supposed to — he almost landed on his feet and came down on his arm.
Q. You were laying on your back?
A. Yeah.
Q. And you would then bring your knees in towards your chest?
A. Yeah, and then push.
Q. And then he would get up on your feet?
A. Yes.
Q. And then you would shoot him up in the air and he would be off the ground?
A. Yeah.
Q. And then he would come down and land?
A. Yeah.
At the time of the accident Hank Dupree was ten years of age and Dominique Brady was six and one-half years of age. As a result of the accident Dominique suffered a broken arm.
It is undisputed that at the time this incident occurred Hank, Dominique and several other children were playing approximately ten feet from four adults who were playing cards and drinking beer in an adjacent room. These adults included parents of some of the children who were playing the game. While there is some evidence that one of the adults told the children to play outside, there is no evidence that any of the adults told the children to stop playing that particular game or to warn them as to any danger. It is also undisputed that Dominique Brady’s father, a participant in the card game, did not regard Hank Dupree as a discipline problem but regarded him as “an ordinary kid just like anybody else. • *298 Basically a nice kid.” There was no evidence that Hank Dupree’s participation in the game was substantially different than that of the other children who were involved.
On the basis of this record, the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Hank Dupree and necessarily found that reasonable minds could not find Hank Dupree negligent for his participation in this game. We agree and affirm the judgment.
Negligence is not ordinarily a proper subject for summary adjudication.
Boozer
v.
Arizona Country Club,
In order to prove negligence, plaintiffs must show the existence of a duty owed by the defendant to the plaintiff, a breach of that duty and an injury proximately caused by that breach.
Flowers v. K-Mart Corp.,
Whether a minor owes a duty of reasonable care to another person must be decided not using the “reasonable man” standard, but upon the following special standard for children set forth in the Restatement (Second) of Torts, § 283 A (1965):
If the actor is a child, the standard of conduct to which he must conform to avoid being negligent is that of a reasonable person of like age, intelligence, and experience under like circumstances.
As stated in comment (b) to § 283 A, supra:
A child of tender years is not required to conform to the standard of behavior which is reasonable to expect of an adult. His conduct is to be judged by the standard of behavior to be expected of a child of like age, intelligence and experience.
Accord, Ruiz v. Faulkner,
While the parties agree that this is the appropriate standard, they disagree as to whether the application of this standard was a matter for the jury or the court. Appellant argues that reasonable persons could find that Hank Dupree failed to comply with the applicable standard of care for a ten year old when he “shot” Dominique Brady into the air. Appellees argue that the court could properly conclude on the undisputed facts that Hank Dupree complied with the standard of care appropriate for a ten year old child.
While we have found no Arizona cases directly addressing this issue, we find several cases from other jurisdictions dealing with the standard of conduct required of children participating in childhood games.
In
Briese v. Maechtle,
Can any man truthfully say as he recalls the scene that the ten year old defendant in the present case was doing anything more or less than healthy boys of his age have done from time immemorial and will continue to do as long as the race retains its activity and love of innocent sport? It seems to us that this ques *299 tion can receive but one answer, and that in the negative.
Id. The court thereafter concluded as a matter of law that the defendant was not negligent.
A leading case in the area of liability of children engaged in games is
Hoyt v. Rosenberg,
There is no room here for a reasonable difference of opinion as to what the normal and ordinary boy of that age would have done under the circumstances shown by this record. It cannot be reasonably inferred from the evidence that the appellant on this occasion and under these circumstances did “anything more or less than healthy boys of his age have done from time immemorial and will continue to do so long as a race retains its activity.”
Id.
at 507,
In a more recent case the New York Appellate Court in
Carrillo v. Kreckel,
Applying these principles to the horseshoe throwing involved herein, it is clear that fourteen year old boys will invent and continue to participate in frolics of this nature and will not perceive the dangers which may result. Certainly, infants must abstain from negligent acts and thereby exercise the degree of care to which children of their age, experience, intelligence and ability are capable, [citation omitted] However, unless the frolic chosen is so inherently dangerous that mere participation therein is negligence, the child should only be held liable for an act which was a deviation from the frolic to such an extent that it would put the child on notice that an unreasonable risk of injury was involved to either other participants or spectators.
The above quoted authorities are part of a line of authorities generally holding that
*300
children are not liable for injuries arising from their conduct while participating in children’s games if the games are customarily played by children and are not inherently unreasonably dangerous.
See also Davis v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
We cannot say that the activities engaged in by Hank Dupree and Dominique Brady and the other children were unreasonably dangerous nor that Hank Dupree’s behavior in participating in the game fell below the standard of care required of an ordinary child of like age, intelligence and experience. There is no evidence that the children were directed not to play this particular game because it was dangerous. These facts leave no room for a reasonable difference of opinion as to what the normal ordinary boy of that age would have done under the circumstances. Even when viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to the appellant, we find that the evidence is insufficient to show that the defendant minor Hank Dupree breached any duty of care owed by him to Dominique Brady.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Notes
. Summary judgments were also entered in favor of the other defendants. However, a timely appeal was not taken from these judgments.
. Appellants argue that the cause of the accident in question is not undisputed because Dominique Brady’s father stated that he believed that his son was injured after having been “swung around” by Hank Dupree. However, Mr. Brady testified that he had not in fact seen such event take place but held this opinion on the basis of what his son had stated when he had walked into the room where the adults were playing cards. Dominique Brady was not deposed and there was no admissible testimony other than the testimony of Hank Dupree as to the actual cause of the accident which would raise a factual dispute in this matter.
