OPINION
William Geiersbach was injured during a Tri-State University ("Tri-State") baseball team drill organized by head coach Dave Wagner and led by assistant coach Josh Wagner. 1 Geiersbach brought suit against Tri-State, Dave, Josh, and teammate Robert Frieje. Frieje filed a Motion for Summary Judgment and Tri-State, Dave and Josh filed a joint Motion for Summary Judgment. Following a hearing, the trial court granted the motions and Geiersbach now appeals. We affirm.
Issue
Geiersbach raises three issues for our review which we consolidate and restate as whether the trial court properly granted the motions for summary judgment.
Facts and Procedural History
Geiersbach was a student at Tri-State and a member of the university's baseball team. Dave was the head coach of the team. Although not employed by the university, Dave's son, Josh, was a volunteer assistant for Dave.
On February 5, 2000, the baseball team was practicing inside the university's gymnasium. During one of the infield drills, Dave positioned the players to resemble their positions. The pitcher and Josh each had a ball. The pitcher would deliver his *116 ball to the catcher. When the catcher received the ball, he was supposed to discard it. At the same time, Josh, standing in the batter's box, would introduce his ball into play by hitting it in whatever direction he chose.
In this instance, Dave positioned runners at first and third base, but Josh was actually conducting the drill. The pitcher delivered his ball to Frieje, the catcher. Frieje believed that it was a "throw through" situation where he was to throw to second base to cut off a potential steal. At the same time, Josh rolled his hit down the third base line. Second baseman Gei-ersbach moved to cover second base, keeping his attention on the third baseman fielding the ball Josh had put into play. Geiersbach was prepared to receive the throw from the third baseman to render a "force out" at second base. He was struck in the left eye by the baseball thrown by Friee. He suffered severe and permanent damage to his eye.
Geiersbach brought suit against TriState, Dave, Josh, and Frieje, alleging negligence and breach of duty. Frieje filed an answer and a Motion for Summary Judgment. Tri-State, Dave, and Josh also filed a Motion for Summary Judgment. Following a hearing, the trial court granted Frieje's and Tri-State, Dave, and Josh's Motions for Summary Judgment. This appeal ensued.
Discussion and Decision
I. Standard of Review
Summary judgment is appropriate only if there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Ind. Trial Rule 56(C). When determining the propriety of summary judgment, we use the same standard as the trial court. Caito Foods v. Keyes,
II. Standard of Care
Geiersbach contends that the trial court erred in granting the motions for summary judgment. He argues that a genuine issue of material fact exists as to whether any of the parties breached a duty owed to him.
Geiersbach directs our attention to Beckett v. Clinton Prairie Sch. Corp.
Geiersbach concedes that this rationale does not readily transfer to the university setting. He admits that courts have been reluctant to characterize the basic student-college relationship as "special" so as to invoke a duty on behalf of the college. See, e.g., Bradshaw v. Rawlings,
One such decision is Kleinknecht v. Gettysburg College,
More recently, in Davidson v. Univ. of N. Carolina at Chapel Hill,
Geiersbach concedes that no Indiana court has had occasion to rule in cases involving the duty of colleges and universities to their student-athletes. However, he cites Knapp v. Northwestern Univ.,
Additionally, Geiersbach directs our attention to Clark v. Wiegand,
We disagree with Gefersbach that the reasonable care standard should apply to the university and its student-athletes as it relates to inherent dangers. The reasonable care standard was developed to guide people in their day to day lives. Seq, e.g., Ross v. Lowe,
In respect to what dangers are inherent in a sport, we believe that the existing caselaw is instructive. For example, in Kleinknecht, the parents brought suit against the college for failure to provide medical staff at practice. The lack of medical staff is not an inherent danger of playing lacrosse, so the court properly allowed the suit to continue on a breach of duty claim. Similarly, in King v. Univ. of Indianapolis,
Likewise, in Clark, had the judo student merely been injured in the class, there may have been no liability on the part of the classmate or the instructor. However, because the instructor failed to act when informed of the risk, the conduct of the instructor could reasonably be found sufficiently reckless as to deny the defendants' motion for judgment on the evidence and therefore, the student could present her case to a jury even though being injured during a judo class may have been an inherent risk. Clark,
In Mark v. Moser,
More recently, in Gyuriak v. Millice, TIS N.E.2d 391 (Ind.Ct.App.2002), trams. denied, Millice hit an errant golf ball, striking Gyuriak who was playing on a different hole. Gyuriak filed a complaint against Millice, alleging negligence and recklessness. The trial court granted Mil-lice's motion for summary judgment and Gyuriak appealed. Gyuriak argued that Mark should be overturned because it was inconsistent with the 1985 Indiana Comparative Fault Act. This court rejected his argument, noting that only secondary assumption of risk had been incorporated into the Act's definition of "fault":
This is because the primary assumption of risk occurs when an individual, by voluntarily engaging in an activity, consents to those risks that are inherent in and arise by virtue of the nature of the activity itself. In such cases, the participant is owed no duty with regard to such inherent and ordinary risks.
Id. at 394 (citations omitted). This court stated that, when a person sustains an injury as a result of risks inherent in sporting activities in which the person voluntarily engages, there is no occasion to invoke comparative fault principles because there has been no breach of duty of care and accordingly no conduct that would warrant the imposition of this liability. Id. at 394-95. Because Millice did not owe Gyuriak a duty with respect to the risks inherent in the activity of golf, this court affirmed the trial court's grant of Millice's summary judgment motion and our supreme court denied transfer.
The caselaw creates a clear distinction between dangers which are inherent in the activity and those which are not. However, it is important to note that, while we are adopting the standard of care used in the above cases, we believe that Mark and, to the extent that it followed Mark, Gyur-iak used misleading language. Rather than employing the misleading language of "incurred risk" and "assumption of risk," we prefer to resolve the issues in this case by merely determining whether the risks were inherent in the sport. While this is a minor tweaking of the language-as seen above, secondary assumption of risk concerns situations where a person voluntarily engages in an activity-it avoids the confusion which followed Heck v. Robey,
Consequently, the complete defense of "incurred risk" no longer exists; it is subsumed by the concept of fault in our comparative fault scheme. As a component of fault, it is subject to the [Comparative Fault] Act's apportionment scheme that reduces or eliminates the plaintiff's recovery depending on the degree of the plaintiff's fault.
Id. at 504-05. This language has caused confusion as to what extent incurred risk was actually subsumed by comparative fault. In Mark, this court stated that only secondary assumption of risk had been subsumed. However, the dissent in Gyur-iak argued that all assumption of risk had been subsumed:
In sum, this court has attempted to carve out an incurred risk exception from the Indiana Comparative Fault Act before by making an exception for the incurred risk relating to the profession one chooses. See Heck, 630 N.BE.2d at 1366. The Indiana Supreme Court reversed our decision and stated that incurred risk as a complete defense no longer exists after the enactment of the Act.
*120
Gyuriak,
Much has been made by the parties in this case as to whether the coaches should be considered co-participants in the sporting event. Josh, in particular, relies on language from Mark. The Mark court held that a participant does not have a duty to fellow participants to refrain from conduct which is inherent and foreseeable in the play of the game even though such conduct may be negligent and may result in injury absent evidence that the other participant either intentionally caused injury or engaged in conduct so reckless as to be totally outside the range of ordinary activity involved in the sport.
The decision in Mark was written specifically to address the question of whether a co-participant is lable for an accidental injury during a sporting event. We expand the language in Mark today to include all participants in the sporting event. By participant, we mean any person who is part of the sporting event or practice involved. This would include players, coaches, and players who are sitting on the bench during play. Thus, in the present case, Geiersbach, Frieje, Dave, and Josh are all considered participants.
Those participating in the event or practice should be precluded from recovering for injuries received resulting from dangers or conduct inherent in the game unless they prove that the conduct was reckless or the injury was intentional. This falls in line with the reasoning behind Mark and Gyuriak where co-participants were injured. Such a danger is inherent in the game and the participant should not be able to recover from the player, team, or stadium without proving recklessness or that the injury was somehow intentional.
III. Frieje's Motion for Summary Judgment
Frieje relies on Mark for his defense. In Mark, this court stated that when the Indiana legislature eliminated the common law contributory negligence principles in favor of the Act, it failed to account for situations where parties are unable to protect themselves. The court held that, because it is the job of the judiciary to fill the voids in the law, participants are barred as a matter of law from recovering against co-participants for injuries sustained as a result of inherent or foreseeable dangers of the sport. Mark,
[V Jjoluntary participants in sports activities assume the inherent and foreseeable dangers of the activity and cannot recover for injury unless it can be established that the other participant either intentionally caused injury or engaged in conduct so reckless as to be totally outside the range of ordinary activity involved in the sport. The plaintiff's assumption of risk is primary in nature inasmuch as it flows from the legal relationship of the parties, is evaluated according to an objective standard rather than a subjective standard, and acts to bar recovery. Thus, it is a question of law for the determination of the court, whether the injury-causing event was an inherent or reasonably foreseeable part of the game, such that the plaintiff is considered to have assumed the risk. If the court determines that the plaintiff did assume the risk, then the plaintiff's cause fails. *121 If, on the other hand, the court determines that plaintiff did not assume the risk, then the cause proceeds to a jury to determine, as a question of fact, whether the co-participant intentionally or recklessly caused the injury.
Id. at 420 (internal footnote omitted).
More recently, in Gyuriak, this court had an opportunity to revisit the question of negligence in sports injuries. We stated that, when a person sustains an injury as a result of risks inherent in sporting activities in which the person voluntarily engages, there is no occasion to invoke comparative fault principles because there has been no breach of duty of care and accordingly no conduct that would warrant the imposition of liability. Gyuriak,
We agree with the decision of Mark and Gyurialk and merely change the wording to reflect the discussion above in Section II. We believe that any participant in a sporting event or practice may not recover from any other participant without proving that the injury was caused by malicious or reckless behavior or that the injury was intentional. Geifersbach presented no evidence that Frieje acted recklessly or mali-clously or caused Geiersbach's injury intentionally. In Geiersbach's deposition, he stated that he did not believe that Frieje acted intentionally:
Q: Okay. You testified that you don't believe that Bobby Frieje intentionally threw the ball to hit you in the face; is that the case?
A: Yes.
Q: Okay. You believe that he just made a mistake in the drill; is that correct?
A: Yes.
Appellant's Appendix at 123. Without evidence that Frieje acted intentionally, mali-clously, or recklessly, we hold that the trial court correctly granted Frieje's Motion for Summary Judgment.
IV. Dave, Josh, and Tri-State's Motion for Summary Judgment
A. ' The Coaches
Josh directs our attention to West v. Sundown Little League of Stockton, Inc., 96 Cal.App.Ath 351,
This seems to be merely another way of stating the standard of care we have adopted above in Section II. Because sports involve certain inherent dangers, a participant cannot recover without offering proof of reckless or malicious behavior or intentional injury. Certainly here, Gelers-bach has not proven, or even attempted to *122 prove, that Dave or Josh, both participants in the case at bar, intended to injure him or that the behavior was malicious. So, the question becomes whether the practice involved reckless behavior.
Geiersbach contends that the coaches were reckless because the chosen practice drill could potentially put two balls into play. However, this seems to contradict Geiersbach's admission that the injury was accidental. Although two balls were being used, this was a drill which the team had used before and which was not uncommon in baseball practices. Being hit by a ball during a practice (or during a game) is an inherent danger in baseball and we do not believe that Geiersbach has proven that the coaches acted recklessly.
Alternatively, Geiersbach contends that the question of the duty of care should be one for the jury and not a proper question for a summary judgment motion. Although the question of whether a defendant has breached a duty of care is generally a question of fact for the jury, the existence of a duty is generally a question of law for the court to determine. Webb v. Jarvis,
B. The University
In Mark, this court stated:
Specifically, application of a negligence standard is justified where a student athlete sues a school or its representatives because there is a well-established duty on the part of such institutions and their personnel to exercise ordinary and reasonable care for the safety of those under their authority.
Mark,
Conclusion
A participant in a sporting event or practice cannot recover against another participant absent proof of intentional injury or malicious or reckless behavior. Gei-ersbach failed to designate any evidence showing such conduct. Therefore, the trial court properly granted the motions for summary judgment. The trial court's decision is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Notes
. We heard oral argument on this case on March 3, 2004, at Ivy Tech State College in Lafayette. We thank the attorneys for their capable advocacy and Ivy Tech for their gracious reception.
. Provided, of course, that the injury is not intentional or the result of reckless or malicious behavior.
