OPINION
This appeal arises from a negligence action brought by appellant, whose child was injured when an empty bookcase fell onto him during a visit with his mother to respondents’ home. The district court granted summary judgment dismissing appellant’s complaint, concluding as a matter of law that respondents did not have a duty to protect appellant’s child from the danger posed by the bookcase. We affirm.
FACTS
David Gerald Warren Foss was injured during a visit with his mother, Peggy Foss, to the home of family friends, respondents Jeremy and Stephanie Kincade. David, then three years old, was playing on the main floor of the Kincades’ home while Peggy Foss and Stephanie Kincade talked in the kitchen. The two women heard a crash coming from a first-floor bedroom *914 and discovered David under a fallen bookcase. The parties believe that David was climbing on the bookcase when it fell onto him.
David Charles Foss (Foss) asserted a negligence claim against the Kincades on behalf of himself and his son David. Foss alleged that the Kincades were negligent both in failing to secure the bookcase and in failing to warn David of the danger posed by the bookcase. The Kincades moved for summary judgment, arguing that they owed no duty to protect David, who was under the supervision of his mother at the time. The district court granted the motion, and this appeal follows.
ISSUE
Did the district court err by concluding that the homeowners owed no duty as a matter of law to protect a three-year-old child visitor under his mother’s supervision?
ANALYSIS
I.
This court reviews de novo a district court’s decision on a motion for summary judgment.
See Gagliardi v. Ortho-Midwest, Inc.,
“Any legal analysis of an action brought against a landowner alleging negligence must begin with an inquiry into whether the landowner owed the entrant a duty.”
Id.
(citing
Baber v. Dill,
Because David is a child, Foss asserts that the determination of duty in this case should be governed by the standard applied to child trespassers under Restatement (Second) of Torts § 339 (1965), which requires landowners to anticipate and protect against dangers that, although obvious to adults, may not be recognized and heeded by children. Our supreme court has applied the Restatement standard to all child entrants, regardless of their status as trespassers, licenses, or invitees.
See Meagher v. Hirt,
Here, David visited the Kineades’ home in the company of and under the supervision of his mother, who concedes that a three-year-old child must be watched constantly. At three years of age, David could not be expected to enter the Kin-cades’ home on his own, nor was he of an age “to be allowed at large.” See id. Under these circumstances, we conclude that the Restatement standard for the duty owed to child trespassers does not apply.
In 1972, the Minnesota Supreme Court eliminated the categorical distinctions between duties owed to invitees and licensees, and held that landowners’ liability to persons injured on their premises should be determined under “ordinary standards of negligence.”
See Peterson v. Balach,
In determining whether the Kineades owed a duty to David in this case, we begin with several basic negligence principles. First, a negligence claim may be premised on either a person’s acts or failure to act.
See
Restatement (Second) Torts § 284. But negligence arises from a person’s failure to act only when that person owes a duty to the injured party.
Id.
There is generally no duty to act for the protection of others.
Id.
§ 314. Such a duty may be found to exist, however, based on the relationship between the parties and the foreseeability of harm.
See Erickson v. Curtis Inv. Co.,
The relationship between the parties here — landowner and social guest — is not disputed, 2 but the parties do dispute the foreseeability of the incident that caused David’s injuries. Foss argues that it was entirely foreseeable that a three-year-old boy, curious by nature, would attempt to climb on an empty bookcase. The Kin-cades reply that, while it may have been conceivable that a child would climb the bookcase, it was not foreseeable in the legal sense of that word.
The concept of foreseeability has been a challenging one for both courts and litigants.
See
W. Jonathan Cardi,
Purging Foreseeability, The New Vision of Judicial Power in the Proposed Restatement (Third) of Torts,
58 Vand. L.Rev. 739, 744 (2005) (characterizing the concept as “among the most confounding in the common law”).
3
Literally construed, to fore
*916
see is to know beforehand.
See The American Heritage Dictionary
689 (4th ed.2000). But in jurisprudence, the concept of foreseeability is not strictly literal, but rather encompasses policy considerations as well.
See Black’s Law Dictionary
676 (8th ed.1999) (defining foreseeability as “the quality of being
reasonably
anticipatable” (emphasis added)). Thus, our supreme court has held that a duty will not lie when the connection between the damage-causing event and the alleged negligent act is “too remote to impose liability as a matter of public policy.”
Germann v. F.L. Smithe Mach. Co.,
“When the issue of foreseeability is clear, the courts, as a matter of law, should decide it.”
Whiteford,
The presence of David’s mother is central to our determination. Minnesota caselaw recognizes that the primary responsibility for the protection of a child rests with the child’s parents. For instance, in
Sirek,
the Minnesota Supreme Court explained that “[w]hen small children are being watched by their parents, or entrusted persons in supervision, landowners may be relieved of a duty to warn them of or remove dangerous instrumentality[sic][,] the danger from which is apparent.”
This court’s decisions likewise have recognized the paramount duty of parents to protect their children. In holding that a child’s uncle did not have a duty to protect her from abuse by her father, we explained that “[t]he responsibility for supervision of [a] child may be relinquished or obtained only upon the mutual consent, expressed or implied, by the one legally charged with the care of the child and by the one assuming the responsibility.”
See Sunnarborg v. Howard,
*917 A host or hostess can not be required to follow from room to room an active two year old — brought by his parents — protecting him from his indiscretions and the innumerable obvious though dangerous conditions that exist in every home.
Laser,
Our determination here also takes into account the fact that David was injured while visiting a private residence. The incident at issue took place in the Kin-cades’ home, which a child could not reasonably be expected to enter on his own. This is not a case involving “child invitees or licensees who wandered away from their parents in business places where their
unsupervised
presence could reasonably be anticipated.”
Sirek,
Finally, we note that the object causing injury in this case was a common household object — something that one might expect to find in any home. Foss argues that the bookcase posed a particular hazard because it was empty and not secured to the wall. Little imagination is required, however, to construct a list of many other potentially hazardous items present in most, if not all, homes. Imposing duties on homeowners to protect child visitors of all ages and personalities from these hazards would be tantamount to mandating childproofing requirements for private residences. Cf
. Sirek,
Considering the circumstances as a whole, we conclude that the risk of harm to David was “too remote to impose liability as a matter of public policy.”
Germann,
*918 II.
Foss asserts that summary judgment should have been denied because of the Kincades’ spoliation of evidence. More than a year before this litigation was initiated, the Kincades disposed of the bookcase that fell on David. Foss asserts that he was prejudiced by not being able to examine the bookcase; that he is entitled to an inference that the bookcase had hardware affixed to it for wall mounting; and that such an inference would preclude the entry of summary judgment. We disagree.
Initially, we note that, although it was briefed and argued below, the spoliation issue was not resolved by the district court. When a spoliation issue is raised, “the trial court is not only empowered, but is obligated to determine the consequences of the evidentiary loss.”
Patton v. Newmar Corp.,
We discern no prejudice that would justify the sanction that Foss seeks here.
See Wajda v. Kingsbury,
DECISION
Under the reasonable-care standard, the duty owed by a landowner must be determined based on the particular circumstances of each case.
Balach,
Affirmed.
Notes
. We are aware that the supreme court's holding in
Sirek
was also influenced by the limited statutory immunity afforded to state agencies for injuries sustained in state parks under Minn.Stat. § 3.736, subd. 3(h) (1992).
See Sirek,
. Minnesota courts have most frequently addressed the existence of a duty to protect in the context of so-called "special relationships,” which arise when a person “accepts responsibility to protect another, although there was no initial duty.”
Lundman v. McKown,
.The proposed Restatement (Third) of Torts takes the position that foreseeability should not play a role in duty determinations, arguing that the reasons for a no-duty determina *916 tion should be "articulated directly without obscuring references to foreseeability.” Restatement (Third) of Torts § 7 cmt. j (Proposed Final Draft No. 1). This portion of the Third Restatement has neither been published by the American Law Institute nor adopted by our supreme court, and, thus, we do not apply it here.
