OPINION
{1} Pursuant to NMSA 1978, § 34-5-14(B)(4) (1972), on certiorari from the Court of Appeals, we consider: 1) whether the operation of a wave pool is an inherently dangerous activity, and 2) whether plaintiffs may maintain an action against a non-possessory landlord under a negligent entrustment theory of liability. We affirm the Court of Appeals’ holding that the operation of wave pools is not an inherently dangerous activity. However, we reverse the Court of Appeals to the extent that we hold that negligent entrustment of real property by a non-possessory landlord is not a cause of action recognized under New Mexico law.
I.
{2} This action grows out of a near-drowning incident at the Beach Waterpark (“the Beach”) in Albuquerque on June 21, 1993. The Beach is a water park that features various water attractions including a 700,000 gallon wave pool with mechanically-operated hydraulic machines simulating ocean-type waves of varying intensities.
{3} After Erisa Mortgage Company (“Erisa”) acquired the Beach through a loan foreclosure it sought to find a lessee to manage and operate the property. Jay-Bi Property Management Inc. (“Jay-Bi”) and its owner, Jay Bomaster, initially rejected Erisa’s lease offer for the Beach citing inadequate financial resources. Later, after meeting with Erisa’s agents, Jay-Bi and Erisa entered into a lease agreement in April 1991. Clause III of the lease agreement granted Erisa a percentage of Jay-Bi’s gross receipts. Erisa also reserved rights to repair and inspect the Beach and to approve such activities by Jay-Bi. Jay-Bi employed Ellis and Associates as its water safety consultants but in June 1993, a short time before the near-drowning incident, Bomaster fired Ellis and Associates claiming that the costs for their services were unreasonable.
{4} The drowning incident occurred one half-hour after the Beach opened on June 21, 1993. Lifeguards found nine-year old Victor Baldizan floating face down near the bottom of the wave pool without a pulse. Medical personnel resuscitated Victor and transported him to the hospital. According to witness testimony, approximately three minutes had elapsed before lifeguards found Victor. He was not revived for several minutes after lifeguards found him.
{5} Christine Gabaldon (“Gabaldon”) filed a personal injury action against Jay-Bi and other parties on behalf of her son, Victor, claiming that he had suffered permanent brain injuries due to oxygen deprivation. Gabaldon later joined Erisa as a party and in her second amended complaint claimed that the operation of a wave pool is an inherently dangerous activity and that Erisa breached its duty to select a competent lessee by negligently entrusting the Beach to Jay-Bi. Erisa moved for dismissal, or in the alternative, for summary judgment, arguing that a wave pool is not inherently dangerous and that Gabaldon failed to state a claim upon which relief may be granted. The district court granted Erisa’s motion for summary judgment and dismissed each cause of action against Erisa with prejudice. Gabaldon appealed.
{6} The Court of Appeals affirmed the district court’s dismissal of Gabaldon’s claim that wave pools were inherently dangerous but reversed the dismissal of the negligent entrustment claim, holding that it was a proper theory under which to seek relief and that questions of fact existed which precluded summary judgment. See Gabaldon v. Erisa Mortgage Co.,
II.
{7} Determining whether an activity is inherently dangerous is a question of law.
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See Saiz v. Belen Sch. Dist.,
{8} In this case, the Court of Appeals correctly stated that, “[g]iven the public policy implications of a determination of inherently dangerous activities] ... an independent review of the record is ... appropriate in this case.” See Gabaldon,
{9} In reviewing the district court’s award of summary judgment, “we must determine whether the moving party has demonstrated that there are no genuine issues of material fact and is therefore entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Gonzales v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
III.
{10} Gabaldon claims that the operation of a wave pool is an inherently dangerous activity and that as landlord and owner of the Beach, Erisa had a nondelegable duty to ensure the safety of its wave pool patrons. The crux of Gabaldon’s argument is that wave pools are inherently dangerous if adequate safety precautions are not taken. In support of this contention, Gabaldon points to the following facts as evidence that Jay-Bi failed to take the precautions necessary to prevent the wave pool from increasing the risk of harm to Beach patrons: 1) Jay-Bi fired the Beach water safety consultant, Ellis and Associates, in June 1993; 2) after firing Ellis and Associates, Jay-Bi failed to spend money on independent training and water safety auditing despite a critical safety audit that cited a lack of concern for water safety; 3) Jay-Bi required its lifeguards to pay for their own continuing education training; and 4) there was an overall lack of concern for aquatic safety matters at the Beach.
{11} Gabaldon’s analysis of the “inherent danger” posed by wave pools includes an affidavit of Thomas Ebro, plaintiffs expert in the area of water safety and aquatic risk management, and two excerpts from articles by Jeff Ellis of Ellis and Associates, which was employed by the Beach as an independent trainer, consultant, and auditor. Ebro’s affidavit comparing the risks of swimming pools and wave pools states:
Because of either oscillating or sweeping waves inside the expansive basin and coupled with typically heavy congestion of bathers floating on a carpet of tubes, a wave pool is considerably more difficult to safeguard than a swimming pool. Water movements and undertows are very tiring for swimmers and can cause disorientation and slips and falls. Collisions are another cause of injuries unique to wave pools— body to body, body to basin and body to wave. With congestion of floating tubes/ rafts and swimmers intermingled, the lifeguards’ line of sight is often impaired. Wave pools, comparatively, pose an increased risk of aquatic injury, including potential for drowning, over swimming pools.
Ellis’ National Aquatics Journal article stated that the characteristics of wave pools, as opposed to swimming pools, demanded different “training regimens and standards of lifeguard performance.” Ellis states that lifeguards execute far more wave pool rescues than lifeguards at swimming pools and should therefore receive extensive training in victim recognition. He adds that failed water safety audits may also result in park closure. The adoption of these safety standards and precautions, Ellis states, result in only one drowning death per 3.7 million visits as compared to one drowning for every 280,-000 visits to a swimming pool.
{12} We agree with the Court of Appeals’ conclusion that “while wave pools present different risks from those found in ordinary swimming pools, the risks do not meet the Saiz test” to determine whether an activity is inherently dangerous. Gabaldon,
{13} Saiz stated that when determining whether an activity is inherently dangerous, the Court must consider whether “work is inherently or intrinsically dangerous because the commission of the work ... is likely to cause harm if a reasonable precaution against the peculiar risk or special danger is not taken.” Id. at 396,
{14} The first prong “addresses the relative rarity of the activity and the concomitant lack of contact or experience with the activity and its dangers by the general public.” Enriquez,
{15} In Saiz, the Court stated that the high voltage electrical supply line in an area of public accommodation created a peculiar risk of physical harm. Describing the properties of . the danger, the Court stated, “[i]t would seem beyond dispute that electricity has certain well-known inherent dangers. It gives no warning of its presence, and if amperage and voltage are sufficiently high, its discovery can be attended by fatal consequenees [and we] do not regard possible exposure to [high-voltage currents] ... a matter of routine human activity.” Saiz,
{16} Applying this prong to the facts of this case, we cannot conclude that wave pools are so unusual as to create a peculiar risk, of harm. Indeed, Gabaldon’s own experts indicate that across the United States, wave pool parks receive between 125,000 and 800,000 visitors per year. Assuming the accuracy of these numbers, they do not indicate a lack of public contact or experience with the wave pools. See id. ¶ 93. Gabaldon attempts to argue that because the wave park is in New Mexico, an arid state, that visitors would be less likely to appreciate the dangers of waves and massive water parks. We find this argument unpersuasive because it is unsupported by any evidence in the record. In addition, wave pools, like swimming pools, offer warning of the dangers associated with their use — unlike high voltage electricity. Drowning as a result of pool or wave pool use, despite the presence of lifeguards, is a widely understood risk as with most recreational water activities. Accordingly, we cannot conclude that wave pools create hazards “distinctly different from hazards to which persons commonly are subjected.... ” Saiz,
{17} Under the second prong, we must analyze the expected probability of harm associated with the activity. Enriquez, 1998-NMCA — 157, ¶ 95,
{18} Gabaldon claims that statistically, wave pools are much more dangerous than ordinary swimming pools. According to Ellis, while there are typically ten life guard rescues per year at swimming pool, a wave pool may have as many as 700 per season. It appears however, that Gabaldon’s expert’s statistics also support the conclusion that wave pools are actually relatively safe. These statistics indicate that ordinary swimming pools average one drowning per 280,000 visits while wave pools only average one drowning per 3.7 million visits. Assuming the accuracy of Ellis’ figures, the drowning rate at wave pools is significantly lower than at swimming pools despite hosting seven to twenty-six times the number of swimmers per year. Although we need not wait until a disproportionate amount of accidents occur, before we can label an activity inherently dangerous, Gabaldon’s expert’s statistics, without more, do not implicate wave pools as inherently dangerous. As such, we agree with the district court’s conclusion in its summary judgment order that:
[w]hile a wave pool may not be a swimming pool under the facts as alleged, the wave pool may create a potentially hazardous situation but not an inherently dangerous condition. Causing injury in a wave pool is not relatively certain to occur while lifeguards are provided as a reasonable precaution against the possibility of drowning. The activity of being in the wave pool is itself not highly likely to result in injury if that precaution is not taken.
Although there may be more risks associated with wave pools than swimming pools, we do not find sufficiently great dangers associated with this activity, even in the absence of reasonable precautions, to classify it as inherently dangerous. See also Seal v. Carlsbad Indep. Sch. Dist.,
{19} The third prong requires analysis of the source of the harm, specifically: does the risk of harm flow from the activity itself when carried out in an ordinary expected manner or does the harm result from the negligence of a particular actor? See Enriquez,
{20} The risk of injury in wave pools, although certainly a potential hazard does not appear to have resulted from an inherent danger in the ordinary, expected operation of wave pools. Although Gabaldon’s expert’s conclusions appear to indicate that the risk of harm flows from the use of wave pools, most of Gabaldon’s allegations refer to specific acts or omissions by Jay-Bi and its agents. Accordingly, Gabaldon’s claim that the wave pool was not functioning properly, that the lifeguards were poorly trained, and that the Beach did not have a safety auditing program in place in June 1993, do not by themselves trigger Erisa’s liability.
{21} For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that operation of a wave pool is not an inherently dangerous activity and affirm the Court of Appeals’ ruling on this issue.
IY.
{22} Gabaldon’s second amended complaint asserted that Erisa “had a duty to select a competent, careful lessee or concessionaire to operate the Wave Pool at The Beach as a public amusement” and also “had a duty, to provide in any contract ... that the lessee or concessionaire must take special precautions to protect users of the Wave Pool from the peculiar risk of harm presented.” Gabaldon alleged that Erisa breached its duty by leasing the Beach to Jay-Bi because Bomaster lacked experience operating wave pools, was undercapitalized, under-insured, and did not employ safety consultants at the time of the near-drowning incident. Gabaldon claimed that Bomaster refused to accept Erisa’s initial lease offer because he knew that he lacked sufficient capital, assets, and insurance to safely lease and operate the Beach. Gabaldon also cited Bomaster’s lack of experience, alleging that Bomaster had previously only operated a food stand as a concessionaire and worked at other food service operations in bars and bowling alleys. Finally, Gabaldon stated that Erisa failed to demonstrate any concern about risk management or aquatic safety and, that no professional water safety programs were in place after Bomaster fired Ellis and Associates, the Beach’s safety consultants, in June 1993. These deficiencies, Gabaldon argued, indicate that Erisa “knew or should have known that the peculiar risks and likelihood of injury to users involved in the operation of the Wave Pool at The Beach could reasonably result in a catastrophic injury.”
{23} The Court of Appeals agreed with Gabaldon, reversing the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Erisa, and held that a landlord owes a duty of care in selecting a competent lessee or concessionaire “when the landlord is in effect requiring, or allowing, another to undertake an activity ... for [the] landlord’s economic benefit” and where “the property is designed, intended and required to be used for a particular purpose, and the use has highly dangerous potentialities involving a substantial risk to the general public, and such danger or risk to the public is such that it may be foreseen by the lessor.” Gabaldon,
A.
{24} We do not disagree in principle with the establishment of such a new cause of action; however we disagree with the Court of Appeals’ holding on several grounds. First, the holding advances a new theory of tort liability unsupported by legal authority. Second, the Court of Appeals’ opinion urges adoption of a standard that is irreconcilable with its other holding regarding inherently dangerous activities. Finally, we believe that the new cause of action and duty to investigate the ability of a potential lessor to safely operate the leased premises does not offer parties, attorneys, and courts guidance in similar situations.
1.
{25} Prior to the Court of Appeals’ holding, negligent entrustment of leased real property by a non-possessory landlord was not a recognized cause of action under New Mexico law. Furthermore, lessors of real property were under no obligation to investigate a potential tenant’s ability to safely operate leased the premises. Standard negligent entrustment doctrine assigns liability to a defendant if they “permit a third person to use a thing or to engage in an activity which is under the control of the [defendant], if the [defendant] knows or should know that such person intends or is likely to use the thing or to conduct himself in the activity in such a manner as to create an unreasonable risk of harm to others.” Restatement (Second) of Torts § 308 (1965) (hereinafter “Restatement”). Indeed, the Court of Appeals has acknowledged that there are no direct “statutory or regulatory provisions bearing on the issue of a landlord’s obligation when selecting a tenant” and recognizes that in New Mexico, negligent entrustment has been discussed only in the context of chattel entrustment. Gabaldon,
{26} Unable to rely on direct legal authority to support extension of negligent entrustment doctrine to real property leases, the Court of Appeals asserts that “non-possessory landlords occupy a relatively privileged position at common law with regard to liability for injuries suffered on the leased premises” and observes that the modern trend in landlord-tenant liability jurisprudence is to narrow the scope of the landlord’s “traditional immunity.” Id. ¶ 35. This trend, the Court of Appeals reasons, is compatible with the Restatement’s discussion of negligent entrustment. We disagree.
{27} As a matter of course, we emphasize that the Restatement is merely persuasive authority entitled to great weight that is not binding on this Court. See Proctor v. Waxier,
{28} Also, the conclusion that non-possessory landlords occupy a privileged position or enjoy a “traditional immunity” is misplaced. Although exceptions to the general rule that landlords are not liable for injuries suffered on the leased premises exist, the Court of Appeals overlooks the significance of its own observation that the exceptions
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only “concern themselves with the landlord’s liability for acts directly connected with the physical condition of the leased premises, or the lack thereof, to remedy unsafe conditions on the premises after possession passes to the tenant.” Gabaldon,
{29} In further support of their argument that trends in landlord tort liability are narrowing landlords’ privileges and traditional immunities, the Court of Appeals cites to Restatement § 318 (“Duty of Possessor of Land or Chattels to Control Conduct of Licensee”) which stands for the proposition that “a landlord can be required to guard against the acts of others on the property.” Gabaldon,
{30} Thus, the exceptions to the general rule of non-liability and references to Restatement sections outlining the duties of a possessor of property to control the activities of persons using its land provide no basis for the expansion of non-possessory landlords’ duties. The Court of Appeals, referencing the Restatement, asserts that “because liability is based on the failure to act of a third person, [it] is analytically related to the theory of negligent entrustment, which simply requires the defendant to consider the consequences of allowing another person to use its chattels or pursue its activity.” Id. ¶ 38. This assertion cannot satisfactorily explain the imposition of liability on non-possessory landlords in situations not falling within the exceptions carved out in traditional landlord tort liability. Indeed, as Erisa indicates, “the legal position of a non-possessory landlord is not one of immunity or privilege!, it] is simply the same legal position offered by sellers of property. They are simply not, as a matter of law, responsible for what takes place on land they do not possess, and do not have a right to control.”
2.
{31} The Court of Appeals’ opinion appears to contain internal inconsistencies that would render its holding that the operation of a wave pool is not an inherently dangerous activity incompatible with its holding that Erisa had a duty to investigate Jay-Bi’s ability to safely operate the leased premises. The opinion unsuccessfully attempts to mesh two standards by using the same language to conclude that wave pools are not inherently dangerous as it does to identify which activities trigger a duty to investigate a potential lessee’s ability to safely operate the leased premises.
{32} The Court of Appeals determined that Erisa had an obligation to exercise reasonable care in the selection of a tenant because “[w]e have already detailed the potential for danger inherent in [the] operation of a wave pool.” Gabaldon,
{33} Thus, on one hand, the Court of Appeals concludes that wave pools are not inherently dangerous because the risk of harm is not probable. However, on the other hand, it concludes that wave pools involve “highly dangerous potentialities involving a substantial danger or risk to the general public” and ignores its earlier holding that wave pools are not inherently dangerous. The two standards are starkly opposed and incompatible.
{34} The Court of Appeals states that this new theory of liability only creates a duty of ordinary care in the selection of tenants. See id. ¶45. However in New Mexico, even in the context of chattel entrustments, ordinary care has not required a duty to investigate. See Spencer v. Gamboa,
3.
{35} A rule such as proposed by the Court of Appeals, seems, at first, a reasonable extension of New Mexico’s tort jurisprudence, general negligence principles, and notions of fairness. As one case has stated, “[t]here is simply no case to be made consistent with reality as to why the law should not provide the public with a remedy against a landlord out of possession and control who rents a powder factory to a known pyromaniae.” Benlehr,
{36} In addition, even had Erisa investigated Jay-Bi, it is still unclear, based upon the Court of Appeals’ opinion, what factors would have qualified Jay-Bi as a “safe” tenant. Would six months of previous water park experience be sufficient? Three years? The record indicates that Bomaster had managed the Beach for at least one season before entering the lease agreement with Jay-Bi. Without specific guidelines, landlords will likely be unable to conform their conduct in a manner that would reasonably assure them that they would be insulated from liability when selecting a tenant.
{37} Furthermore, to accept the Court of Appeals’ holding, would “unwittingly impose unreasonable and uncertain duties.” Robert M. Howard, The Negligent Commercial Transaction Tort: Imposing Common Law Liability on Merchants for Sales and Leases to ‘Defective’ Customers, 1988 Duke L.J. 755, 758. Although not specifically rejecting the extension of negligent entrustment doctrine to leased real property, it is not difficult to apply the reasoning articulated by a Florida District Court of Appeals to the issues raised by the present case: “The imposition of this new duty not to sell would create uncertainty and retard the free flow of commerce [and the] creation of a duty on the part of the seller to guarantee the acts of a buyer,” would effectively require independent investigation to establish each buyer’s fitness to use each product, and would be “manifestly unreasonable.” Vic Potamkin Chevrolet, Inc. v. Horne,
{38} For these reasons, we hold that Gabaldon’s negligent entrustment claim is not a recognized cause of action under New Mexico law, and accordingly, Erisa was entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law.
y.
{39} We affirm the Court of Appeals’ holding that the operation of wave pools is not an inherently dangerous activity; however, we reverse the Court of Appeals to the extent that we hold that negligent entrustment of real property by a non-possessory landlord is not a cause of action recognized under New Mexico law.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Even though determination of whether an activity is inherently dangerous is a question of law, "we recognize that there may be gray areas requiring fact-finding.” Saiz,
. The Court however, found that the school district was immune from liability under the Tort Claims Act. See Saiz,
. These exceptions include, for example, "(1) when the landlord knows of a hidden defect and does not communicate that knowledge to the tenant; (2) when the landlord binds himself by a covenant to repair; (3) when the landlord reserves control of part of the premises for common use by tenants and/or the public; (4) when the injury is to persons off the premises caused by the landlord’s ordinary negligence; and (5) when the land is leased for purposes involving admission of the public.” See Lommori v. Milner Hotels, Inc.,
