Plаintiffs-appellants Integrated Waste Services, Inc. and Bear Development Company, Inc. (collectively “Developers”) appeal from a summary judgment entered April 16, 1996 in favor of defendant-appellee Akzo Nobel Salt, Inc. (“Akzo”) in the United States District Court for the Western District of New York (Larimer, C.J.). The judgment dismissed the Developers’ claims for negligence, strict liability, nuisance, trespass, and gross negligence arising out of the accidental collapse and inundation of Akzo’s salt mine in Retsof, New York. We hold that because Akzo owed no duty of care to the Developers to preserve the underground mining cavities in usable condition, the decision in favor of Akzo on the Developers’ claims for damage to the mine cavities was appropriate. We, however, vacate the portion of the judgment below that dismissed the Developers’ claim for surface subsidence damages resulting from the mine collapse and remand that сlaim for further proceedings.
BACKGROUND
This case involves land in Retsof, New York that was being mined for salt by Akzo.
1
The Developers, hoping to create an incinerator ash repository in the mine shafts made by the salt operation, bought surface property interests in the land housing the mine. The respective rights of the Developers and Akzo were previously determined by this court in
International Salt Co. v. Geostow,
On March 1, 1992, in order to exploit the commercial value of portions of the mine shaft for ash storage before the end of all mining operations, the Developers entered into an agreement with Akzo (“Agreement”). This Agreement gavе Akzo an option to buy the Developers’ reversionary property rights and in exchange obligated Akzo to make royalty payments to the Developers if Akzo pursued the ash storage enterprise. Akzo, however, was not required to do anything if it chose to terminate the Agreement before closing on its purchase of the Developers’ interests. In the interim, and as part of the price of the option, Akzo made mortgage payments on the Developers’ prоperty.
In March 1994, a portion of the mine cavity collapsed. The collapse allegedly occurred as a result of Akzo’s use of a small-pillar mining technique 3 that is claimed to have been ill-suited to this particular mine. 4 Water quickly inundated the mine and rendered it unusable either for mining or storage. Shortly thereafter, in February 1995, Akzo exercised its right to terminate the Agreement. After the accident and the termination, the Developers brought this diversity action against Akzo, stating claims for nеgligence, strict liability, nuisance, trespass, and gross negligence. They sought compensation for damages both to their reversionary interest in the mining cavities and to their surface property.
' The district court first dealt with the reversionary interests. On the negligence-based claims, the court granted Akzo summary judgment, holding that Akzo owed no duty to the Developers to preserve the cavities.
Integrated Waste Servs., Inc. v. Akzo Nobel Salt, Inc.,
With respect to surface damage, the court noted Akzo’s willingness to pay substantiated claims but still gave summary judgment to Akzo because the Developers had failed to come forward with specific evidence of such surface damage. Id. at 1046.
The Developers challenge the determinations of the district court that Akzo owed no duty to preserve the cavities for the Developers; that Akzo was not strictly liable for engaging in an ultrahazardous mining activity; that the Developers could not prove damages to their subterranean interests with reasonable certainty; and that the Developers presented no evidence of surface damage. On appeal, the Developers apparently abandon all of their other claims (e.g. trespass and nuisance).
DISCUSSION
We review a grant of summary judgment
de novo,
taking the evidence in the light most favorable to the party opposing it.
Rodriguez v. City of New York,
I. Akzo’s Liability for Damage to the Mine Cavity
Like the district court, we view duty as the central and dispositive issue in assessing the Developers’ suit for damages to the mine cavities. The Developers acknowledge that Akzo has no duty to preserve the cavities under the language of the original mineral conveyances. But they invite us to imply a term to this effect in the granting deeds. Alternatively, they urge us to create a new common law duty of care that would require mineral licensees to preserve such cavities. We read the original conveyances of salt to Akzo’s predecessors as placing the risk of mine shaft déstruetion on the surface land owners. Furthermore, we have no reason to believe that the New York Court of Appeals would imply a cavity preservation term in the original deeds or would create such a duty at common law. 5 Because we hold that Akzo operated under no duty to preserve usable mine cavities for the Developers, Akzo cannot be held liable for damages to the cavities, whether such damages are sought under theories of negligence or of strict liability.
A. Negligence
In order to establish a
prima facie
case of negligence under New York law, a claimant must show: “1) the existence of a duty flowing from defendant to plaintiff; 2) a breach of this duty; 3) a reasonably close causal connection betwеen the contact and the resulting injury; and 4) actual loss, harm or damage.”
Febesh v. Elcejay Inn Corp.,
To establish a duty on the part of Akzo, the Developers argue that their right to surface support, reserved to them by operation of common law,
Marvin v. Brewster Iron Mining Co.,
While preserving and supporting the cavities might well have been an appropriate, or perhaps even the only, means of maintaining surface support, this fact cannot create any rights in the Developers beyond those that they already had. The right to surface support thus cannot give the Developers an interest in the cavities which, under
Westerman v. Pennsylvania Salt Mfg. Co.,
It might be different, of course, if the reversionary rights that the Developers retained had any substance. But the Developers concede that, under the original conveyances, “Akzo was not obligated to pursue any particular mineral technology or timetable for development of the mine.” Appellants’
The parties heatedly dispute whether there are available mining techniques that would be destructive of the mining cavities, as suggested by the district court, or whether such a technique could have been contemplated by the original conveyors. The disрute centers chiefly around whether currently available so-called solution mining techniques, which involve injection of water into the mining cavity, would leave usable cavities. This argument misses the point. It doesn’t matter what solution mining would or would not do to the cavities, for Akzo could have used
any
available mining techniques, like the second mining process discussed in
Westerman,
While Akzo’s lack of duty would seem to dispose of the Developers’ negligence claims, there remains an issue to be discussed. “No duty” is often simply another term for what, traditionally, was called assumption of risk.
See Turcotte v. Fell,
Akzo’s lack of duty to the Developers is, in this case, based on the fact that the Developers’ predecessors, in effect, accepted the risk of destruction of the cavities. Does this mean that section 1411 requires that the damages be split? We think not.
We do not doubt that there are situations in which “no duty” really means assumption of risk and in which, therefore, splitting may be appropriate. But New York courts have not read section 1411 to require cost splitting in all instances. In situations where it seemed equitable and sensible to place the entire risk of a particular activity on one party, New York courts have nоt hesitated to do so. Whatever the merits of such decisions in cases where the intentions of the parties were not clear, there is no doubt that section 1411 in no way precludes parties from expressly agreeing to bear all of a potential loss, thereby negating any duty that would otherwise be owed to them.
We think that the rationale articulated by the New York Court of Appeals in Arbegast and its progeny governs the case before us. The Developers’ acceptance of the risk was express and clear. The district court properly held that the conveyances imposed no cоgnizable duty on Akzo to preserve usable cavities for the Developers. The original conveyors, perhaps because they did not foresee the now-emergent commercial uses of abandoned mine cavities, made no effort to constrain the buyers’ behavior with respect to the cavities. And they clearly did not contemplate any liability for destruction of the cavities. The entire risk of cavity collapse was, therefore, as a matter of contrаct, laid at the feet of the Developers.
Since, moreover, there is no real controversy as to the plaintiffs’ contractual assumption of risk, summary judgment for the defendant was appropriate.
See Arbegast,
Because we agree that the parties had, by contract, placed all risk of harm to the cavities on the surface land owners, we are confident that New York courts would respect that allocation even under a comparative negligence regime. 7
B. Strict Liability
The Developers also argue that Akzo’s employment of small-pillar mining at the Retsof mine was an ultrahazardous activity for which Akzo should be held strictly liable. The district court, held otherwise. The determinative factor for the district court,
see Integrated Waste,
It follows that our holding that such a consensual arrangement exists in this case precludes the Developers’ strict liability claim as a matter of law. Summary judgment is accordingly affirmed on the Developers’ strict liability claims for damages to the Retsof mine. 8
II. Akzo’s Liability for Surface Damages to Developers’ Property
Akzo, in an affidavit provided to this court, essentially concedes liability for substantiated surface damages resulting from the inundation of the salt mine. Akzo further purports to be paying all such claims. Declaration of Kenneth A. Payment In Support of Mоtion for Summary Judgment Dated July 27, 1995. But Akzo argues that the Developers’ failure to present Akzo with a private claim for surface damages somehow precludes their suit for such damages. There is, however, no requirement that aggrieved parties exhaust available private remedies before going to court. The Developers’ surface damages claims are not therefore barred simply because they did not approach Akzo directly with a demand for such damages.
The district court nonetheless denied recovery since it found that the record before it was devoid of any evidence of surface damages to the Developers’ property. We disagree. Akzo, by challenging the Developers’ proof on the issue of surface damages, did meet its burden of pointing to a gap in plaintiff’s proof on a material issue.
See Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
The Developers have not explicitly directed our attention to any evidence on point. But they nevertheless have created a genuine issue of fact оn the surface damages issue by presenting in the record two reports that describe widespread and ongoing surface subsidence damages as a result of the inundation of the Retsof salt mine. New
CONCLUSION
The summary judgment of the district court is affirmed as to all claims dealing with damage to the mine cavities and is vacated and remanded for trial of the claims arising from surface subsidence.
Notes
. The Developers аnd Akzo are both successors in interest to the original conveyancers of mineral rights. Since they both stand in the shoes of their predecessors, they are, for convenience. occasionally referred to in this opinion as if they were parties to the original deeds.
. Typical of the conveyances is the deed from James W. Wadsworth, Jr. and Alice H. Wads-worth to the Retsof Mining Company, dated August!, 1930, granting
all mines, veins, seams and beds of salt, together with a perpetual and unrestricted right ... to mine and remove the salt herein conveyed by any subterranean process without liability of any kind or form to the owners of the surface, in, upon or under.
. Until shortly before the collapse, the Retsof mine had been worked by use of a large-pillar technique. This left approximately one third of the mine’s salt in support pillars. Small-pillar mining involves the removal of some salt from these support pillars where it appears that the geological features of the mine will nоnetheless provide adequate support.
. Akzo concedes negligence for purposes of its summary judgment motion, while preserving its right to challenge negligence should the case go to trial.
. We note, in passing, that it is the Developers, seeking the creation of a new duty, who have brought this action in the federal courts. We also note that neither party has asked us to certify this, or any other issue, to the New York Court of Appeals.
. See N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 1411 (McKinney 1996) (“Section 1411”), which provides:
In any action to recover damages for personal injury, injury to property, or wrongful death, the culpable conduct attributable to the claimant or to the decedent, including contributory negligence or assumption of risk, shall not bar recovery, but the amount of damages otherwise recoverable shall be diminished in the proportion which the culpable conduct attributable to the claimant or decedent bears to the culpable conduct which caused the dаmages.
. While some commentators regard the conscionability of such agreements as an open question,
see, e.g.,
W. Page Keeton et al., Prosser & Keeton on the Law of Torts § 68, at 482-84 (5th ed.1984) [hereinafter Prosser & Keeton on Torts], the New York Court of Appeals has not found such terms genetically unacceptable. It observed that "when [Section 1411] was enacted, it had long been the law that a contractual limitation of liability for negligence or other fault of a party seeking to be relieved of his ordinary rеsponsibility did not violate public policy.”
Arbegast,
. Our affirmance of summary judgment on the strict liability claim is on grounds different from those specifically relied upon by the district court. We have authority to affirm the district court’s dismissal on any ground supported by the record.
See Shelden v. Barre Belt Granite Employer Union Pension Fund,
