OPINION
When hitting a golf ball, does a golfer owe any duty to persons living in residences immediately adjacent to the golf course? If so, is that duty breached when the golfer unintentionally hits a ball that veers off the course, strikes a resident on her own property, and injures her? This appeal from a summary judgment requires us to tee off on these questions for the first time in Rhode Island. 1
Ever since Mark Twain quipped that golf was nothing more than “a good walk spoiled,” 2 the game of golf has continued to excite flamboyant commentary concerning those who ply its greensward. The famed American curmudgeon, H.L. Mencken, once chipped in that if he had his way, “no man guilty of golf would be eligible to any office of trust or profit under the United States.” 3 A different but equally difficult lie has been played by humorist A.P. Herbert, who took this shot: “the game of golf may well be included in that category of intolerable provocations which may legally excuse or mitigate behavior not otherwise excusable.” 4
In assaying the governing standards applicable to this dispute, we shall try to drive a middle course down a legal fairway strewn with hazards, bunkers, and other assorted obstacles — especially to those who venture off aimlessly into the rough. Although we acknowledge that “a golfer ordinarily may not be held liable to individuals located entirely outsidе of the boundaries of the golf course who happen to be hit by a stray, mishit ball,”
Rinaldo v. McGovern,
Facts 6
In 1990 Hennessey lived in a condominium right next to the Louisquisset Golf Club, a North Providence golf course. According to Hennessey, “[a]s sоon as they started golfing the first time,” her condominium was hit by golf balls. Her home nestled in the crook of a dogleg golf hole that swerved slightly to the left from the tee on the eleventh hole. So close was Hennessey’s property to the course that her back yard began approximately fourteen feet from the edge of the out-of-bounds marker about half-way down the fairway. 7
*694 After returning home from church one Sunday morning in mid-September, Hennes-sey paused to dally over some flowers in her front-yard garden. Her Sunday morning reverie amidst the summer flora, however, was rudely interrupted when Pyne’s eleventh-hole-tee shot “veered slightly left” and without warning carеened into the side of her head, thereby injuring her.
Pyne, the golf course’s assistant pro, was well aware not only of the condominiums’ presence but also of the propensity for the club’s golfers to strafe them with misfired golf shots. 8 As for the extent and frequency of this enfilade, Hennessey testified at her deposition that for approximately five years, during the heaviest part of the playing season, her condominium was hit “about 10 times a day[; sjometimes twice by the same person, especially if they were rounding 18 holes.” She also answered interrogatories by noting that she had to install Plexiglas in various windows of her home because of the frequency with which golf balls had pelted the exterior and broken the glass. Moreover, Pyne was also aware of Hennessey’s apparently vocal presence at or near the course, characterizing her as “a chronic nuisance to golfers here at Louisquisset.” Although Hennessey testified at her deposition that she did not see Pyne’s ball coming because trees hid the eleventh-hole tee from her front-yard vista, it is unclear from the record whether on this particular morning Pyne actually saw, or could have seen, Hen-nessey from where he addressed the ball on the tee. Finally, there is nothing in the record to indicate whether Pyne shouted “fore” or attempted to give any warning either before or after he saw his tee shot heading off the course and toward Hennes-sey’s condominium.
To obtain redress for her injuries, Hennes-sey filed a civil action in Superior Court against Pyne, the Louisquisset Country Club Condominium Association (association), and its executive board (board). 9 She alleged that Pyne was “guilty of nuisance and negligent and reckless misconduct” as well as “assault and battery.” Pyne answered by admitting that although he struck the golf ball, he had no knowledge about whether it hit Hennessey. In his report to the association and its board, he states that “[i]t is apparent to me that the ball struck the side of the [condominium] unit” and that it was “questionable — if not impossible” that the ball hit anyone in the front yard. He also affirmatively alleged that Hennessey had assumed the risk of injury. After the parties engaged in some discovery, Pyne filed a motion for summary judgment on the grounds that “[t]here is no evidence establishing any negligence on [his] part.” 10
A Superior Court motion justice concluded that as a golfer engaging in a lawful and intended use of a golf course, Pyne owed no duty to Hennessey and that therefore summary judgment should enter against her on her negligence cause of action. 11 The motion *695 justice therefore granted Pyne summary judgment “relative to all counts that were brought” against him, and Hennessey appealed. 12 For the reasоns set forth below, we affirm the judgment as it relates to the nuisance and assault and battery claims but reverse as it relates to the negligence claim.
Analysis
I
Nuisance
Hennessey argues that a valid claim for nuisance exists against Pyne because he caused his golf ball to invade her protected-property interest in the private use and enjoyment of her land. However, “[ujnder Rhode Island law it is well settled that a cause of action for a private nuisance [that is, a conflict between neighboring contemporaneous land uses] ‘arises from
the unreasonable use of one’s property
that materially interferes with a
neighbor’s
physical comfort or * * * use of * * * real estate.’ ”
Hydro-Manufacturing, Inc. v. Kayser-Roth Corp.,
II
Assault and Battery
Hennessey also asserted a claim of assault and battery against Pyne. In her briefs submitted to this court, however, she claimed error only in regard to the battery count. We thus consider any claim of error about the entry of summary judgment on the assault claim as waived. Sup.Ct. R. 16(a). However, even were it not so, her assault appeal would have been unavailing.
As we recently confirmed, “Assault and battery are separate acts, usually arising from the same transaction, each having inde
*696
pendent significance.”
Picard v. Barry Pontiac-Buick, Inc.,
Battery, on the other hand, is
“an act that was intended to cause, and in fact did cause, ‘an offensive contact with or uneonsented touching of or trauma upon the body of another, thereby generally resulting in the consummation of the assault. * * * An intent to injure plaintiff, however, is unnecessary in a situation in which a defendant willfully sets in motion a force that in its ordinary course causes the injury.”’ Id.
Hennessey argues that “Pyne intentionally hit the golf ball. The bаll in turn struck [Hennessey]. Thus, [Pyne’s] actions constituted a battery.” We disagree. First, the record does not suggest that Pyne intended to cause “an offensive contact with or uncon-sented touching of or trauma upon” Hennes-sey or any other person. There is simply no evidence to suggest that Pyne harbored any such intention. Second, although it is indisputable that Pyne’s teeing off on the ball willfully set in motion a force, that force did not “in its ordinary course” cause Hennessey injury. Indeed, if the force (that is, the ball) had traveled “in its ordinary course” — at least after having been struck by the golf club’s assistant pro — we can safely presume that it would have ordinarily headed for the fairway rather than for Hennessey’s head.
Thus summary judgment was properly entered dismissing plaintiffs intentional tort and nuisance claims.
Ill
Loss of Consortium
As noted above, Hennessey’s husband alleged in the complaint a claim for loss of consortium against Pyne. At the hearing on the summary-judgment motion, Pyne’s counsel noted that “the basis for this motion was a complete summary judgment motion based on the facts of this case.” Moreover, the motion justice granted summary judgment “relative to all counts that were brought against” Pyne. Thus summary judgment was granted against Hennessey’s husband on his loss-of-consortium claim.
See, e.g., Bushman v. Halm,
Because “a claim for loss of consortium is a separate and distinct cause of action,”
Normandin v. Levine,
Notwithstanding the foregoing, Hennessey claims in her briefs, which refer variously to “plaintiff-appellant” and “plaintiffs/appellants,” that “[s]ummary judgment was clearly inappropriate,” not distinguishing amongst claims or parties and perhaps intending to include
sub silentio
her husband’s loss-of-consortium claim against Pyne within the sweep of her broad attack on the motion justice’s ruling. Apparently Hennessey re
*697
lies upon the inextricable link of her husband’s loss-of-consortium claim to her own tort claims as support for her implicit request that summary judgment be reversed not just for her claims but also for that of her husband.
See Soares v. Ann & Hope of Rhode Island, Inc.,
IV
Negligence
Finally, Hennessey asserted that she was “injured as a result of the negligent, willful, wanton and reckless conduct of * * * Pyne.” Such a claim could encompass three discrete theories: (1) that Pyne had hit his eleventh-hole tee shot in a negligent manner, (2) that he had failed to give an adequate warning before teeing off, and/or (3) that he had faded to give an adequate warning after having struck the ball and observed where it was going.
See Ludwikoski v. Kurotsu,
The motion justice determined that “in this set of circumstances” Pyne owed no duty to Hennessey and thus granted his motion for summary judgment. However, we believe a golfer does owe a duty of care to persons living in residences immediately adjacent to the golf course who are known by the golfer to be within the normal range of striking distance for the golf shot he or she is playing. Moreover, our review of the record reveals questions of material fact concerning whether that duty was breached and, if so, whether Pyne’s breach was the proximate cause of Hennessey’s injuries. Thus, we reverse the grant of summary judgment in regard to the negligence claim and remand for trial on this cause of action.
“[T]he determination of whether a duty exists is a legal issue for the court to decide.”
Kenney Manufacturing Co. v. Starkweather & Shepley, Inc.,
The general rule in this type of case is that “the mere fact that a person is struck by a golf ball driven by a person playing the game of golf does not constitute proof of negligence on the part of the golfer who hit the ball, and that a golfer is only required to exercise reasonable care for the safety of persons reasonably within the range of danger of being struck by the ball.”
Ludwikoski,
Next, we consider Hennessey’s negligence claim as it relates to Pyne’s alleged failure to warn adequately. “The gеneral rule is that although a golfer about to hit a shot must, in the exercise of ordinary care, give an adequate and timely warning to those who are unaware of his or her intention to play and who may be endangered by the play, this duty does not extend to those persons who are not in the line of play if danger to them is not to be anticipated.”
Ludwikoski,
We also believe that alter seeing his ball “veer slightly left” toward the looming and known-to-be-occupied condominiums, Pyne may have had a duty to shout a warning. Whether that duty was breached here is a question to be resolved at trial. The possibility that such warning would have been unheard or ineffective or otherwise unavailing is not so clear on this record to warrant an award of summary judgment dismissing such a claim.
Compare Ludmkoski,
y
Assumption of the Risk
Finally, we believe summary judgment should not have been entered in Pyne’s favor on the basis that Hennessey assumed the risk of injury. The doctrine of assumption of the risk is an affirmative defense that “may be invoked * * * by a tort-feasor to escape or to diminish liability” for having created “an unreasonable risk of injury.”
Labrie v. Pace Membership Warehouse, Inc.,
“the doctrine of assumption of risk should not be applied with liberality, if it be applicable at all, where the injury takes place on plaintiff’s own property, which in itself is safe and which is rendered dangerous only by invasion of missiles from adjacent land. Otherwise, the owner of the neighboring property could force the homeowner to remain out of his [or her] yard and his [or her] swimming pool [or garden] during hоurs when it was possible that golfers might hit their shots on to his [or her] property. To a limited extent he [or she] would be a prisoner within his [or her] home.” Curran v. Green Hills Country Club,24 Cal.App.3d 501 ,101 Cal.Rptr. 158 , 160-61 (1972).
In examining the record in the light most favorable to Hennessey, we cannot say that as a matter of law Hennessey voluntari *700 ly assumed the risk of being struck by Pyne’s golf ball. Initially, Hennessey testified that she did not even see Pyne on the tee before or after he hit the ball. Therefore, although she was doubtless aware of the general risk she faced of getting hit by stray golf balls whenever she ventured outside in any playable weather, the record does not permit us to conclude that she was aware of this particular risk at thе time when she was struck. See Curran, 101 CaLRptr. at 160 (“[t]here is no evidence that plaintiff had knowledge and appreciation * * * that there were golfers in the vicinity of his home at the time of the accident”).
Moreover, even if Hennessey at the time of the accident had been aware of Pyne’s presence on the tee, it is entirely possible that her “acceptance of [the] risk is not voluntary [because Pyne’s] tortious conduct * * * left [her] no reasonable alternative course of conduct in order to * * * exercise * * * a right or privilege of which [he] * * * has no right to deprive [her].” Restatement (Second) Torts § 496E(2)(b) (1966); see also William L. Prosser, Handbook of the Law of Torts § 68 at 451 (4th ed.1971) (“[i]n general, the plaintiff is not required to surrender a valuable legal right, such as the use of his [or her] own property as he [or she] sees fit, merely because the defendant’s conduct has threatened him [or her] with harm if the right is exercised”). In other words, by pleading assumption of the risk as a defense, Pyne should not have been allowed via summary judgment to condemn Hennessey, whenever the golf course was playable, to the Hobson’s choice of home confinement in her Plexiglas bunker or of venturing outside subject to being suddenly stoned by a mishit golf ball. To dispose of such an argument on summary judgment would be to “deprive[] [Hennessey of her] freedom of choice, and so [Pyne] cannot be hеard [t]o say that [s]he has voluntarily assumed the risk” as a matter of law. Prosser, Handbook of the Law of Torts § 68 at 451.
Furthermore, Hennessey was neither a participant nor a fellow spectator in the game being played; rather, she merely resided adjacent to the course upon which Pyne’s golf game was in progress.
Compare Kennedy v. Providence Hockey Club, Inc.,
The “alternatives” open to Hennessey— moving away, avoiding all going out of doors during daylight hours when golfers are on the course,
16
or the wearing of some type of protective armor when she ventures forth during playing hours — do not strike us as options that are so reasonable on their face as to convert Hennessey’s alleged assumption of the risk into a summary judgment question.
See
Restatement (Second)
Torts
§ 496E at cmt. c (“[t]he existence of an alternative course of conduct which would avert the harm * * * does not make the plaintiffs choice voluntary, if the alternative
*701
is one which he [or she] cannot reasonably be required to accept”);
cf. Marshall v. Ranne,
In sum, we believe that the question of whether Hennessey voluntarily assumed the risk of injury when she tarried to flower gaze in her own garden upon returning from church on a summer Sunday morning is a factual question to be resolved by the jury, and thus summary judgment should not have been entered against her negligence claim upon this basis.
See Pereira v. Tellier,
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons Hennessey’s appeal is denied and dismissed in part and sustained in part. The summary judgment appealed from is affirmed to the extent it dismissed Hennessey’s nuisance, assault, and battery claims and her husband’s loss-of-consortium claim, but it is reversed in regard to her negligence claim. The papers of this case shall be remanded to the Superior Court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. We directed both parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not be summarily decided. After hearing the arguments of counsel and reviewing their memo-randa, we perceive no cause and therefore proceed to decide this matter without further briefing or argument.
. Attribution quoted in The Wit & Wisdom of Mark Twain 89 (Alex Ayres, ed.1987).
. H. L. Mencken, "Adventures of a Y.M.C.A. Lad" (1894), in The Vintage Mencken 18, 19 (Alistair Cooke gatherer, 1990).
. A.P. Herbert, Misleading Cases in the Common Law 20 (4th ed.1928).
.
See generally Marr Scaffolding Co., Inc. v. Fairground Forms, Inc.,
. Because this matter is here on Hennessey’s appeal from a summary judgment entered against her the facts are set forth in a light most favorable to Hennessey after all reasonable inferences have been drawn in her favor.
See, e.g., E.W. Audet & Sons, Inc. v. Fireman's Fund Insurance Co.,
. The record is silent concerning certain distances and other facts that might be material to the ultimate resolution of this matter, including how many yards the golf hole was from the tee, how many strokes were par for the hole, the golf club used by Pyne on the tee, and the exact *694 distance of Hennessey's front-yard garden and condominium from the tee.
. In his report of the incident to the association and its board, Pyne noted that “[a]s happened so many times — to so many golfers — the ball hit a condominium."
. Hennessey alleged that the association and its board were "guilty of nuisance and negligent and reckless misconduct.” She also alleged that they constructed and maintained the golf course in a negligent manner, resulting in a nuisance. Hen-nessey’s husband, William, joined in the suit, alleging a loss of consortium. These claims against the association and the board are still pending and are not before us in this appeal.
. The association and its board joined Hennes-sey in filing an objection to Pyne’s motion.
. The motion justice noted that
”[i]n any event, it seems to me that looking at the question of duty and foreseeability in this matter, some of the undisputed facts are, that a plaintiff resides adjacent to the golf course and had prior to the incident giving rise to this litigation, become aware that golf balls were coming into her yard with, ‘an unfortunate frequency,’ I think she said, something like 10 a day. This has been going on for some time and she had, again, prior to this instance or incident, complained to the golf course to do something about this. However, on the day in question, at the time in question, she was obscured from the view of this golfer, perhaps, or the other golfers that passed by this place, by the vegetation, and the golfer couldn’t see her. She couldn't see the golfer.”
“I don’t believe in this set of circumstances, that this golfer owed her a duly. He didn't know she was there, and she was — and voluntarily placed herself into a position that she *695 knew would be a receptacle from time to time for errant golf shots. So, while her claim against the club, meaning thе golf club, may continue * * * there is no duty owed by [Pyne] to her in these circumstances, and there’s nothing on the record to suggest otherwise. He wasn’t being a wise guy, so to speak, aiming shots to see if he could hit someone's roof or anything of that nature. He had no reason to believe that his shot would go the way that it did, and that it would have an impact on this woman.”
. Hennessey argues on appeal that Pyne also committed a trespass by hitting his ball onto her property. Although her counsel mentioned at the hearing below that there was also a trespass count before the court, Hennessey’s complaint does not contain a trespass claim. Perhaps because it was not included in her complaint, the motion justice did not address or dispose of the merits of this unstated claim, nor shall we.
. Although “compliance with a zoning ordinance does not immunize a person from the consequences of * * * making an unreasonable use of * * * land * * * [t]he fact that the disputed activities are permitted by law may have some relevancy on the issue of whether * * * the use being made of the premises is reasonable.”
DeNucci
v.
Pezza,
.
See
Sup.Ct. R. 3(a) (“[failure of an appellant to take any step
other than the * * * payment of a filing fee* * *
does not affect the validity of the appeal”) (emphasis added);
see also Kirby v. Planning Board of Review of Middletown,
. We leave it to the factfinder to determine what those reasonable steps might be. However, they might well include one or more of the following: adjusting the force of his swing, using a different club to strike the ball, and attempting to play the ball to the right of the fairway (and thus away from the condominiums).
. Unfortunately after the incident Hennessey felt compelled to do just that. When questioned at her deposition about what she would do "in regard to [her] fear about going outside with the golf balls,” she replied, "I'll stay inside.”
