Plaintiff-appellants Sean and John McKenna are appealing an adverse summary judgment rendered in favor of defendant-appellees, City of Fort Wayne, Indiana, and City of Fort Wayne Board of Park Commissioners (City). Sean was injured by a falling limb from a tree in municipally-owned Foster Park. The issue raised on appeal by the McKennas presents us with the question whether the injury was the result of a “natural condition of unimproved property” to which governmental immunity applies pursuant to section 3(1) of the Indiana Tort Claims Act, Ind.Code 34-4-16.5-1 et seq. 1
For the reasons stated below we must reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
FACTS
The evidence properly before the trial court most favorable to the non-moving party (the McKennas) is as follows: In his complaint and published deposition, 13-year-old Sean McKenna alleged (without contradiction by the City) he was sitting on or standing next to a picnic table situated under a tree in Foster Park when he was injured by a limb which fell from the tree. McKenna also alleged the City had placed the table under the tree, and in his deposition he noted a playground was “within that area.” The City’s responses to McKen-na’s interrogatories reveal the tree in question was a 100-year-old hackberry which was 80 feet in height, had a base circumference of 10 feet, and whose lowest limbs were 30 feet from the ground.' The City’s motion for summary judgment was accompanied by an affidavit signed by the city arborist alleging facts “within his personal knowledge.” Significantly, the affidavit contradictorily asserted the tree “was growing in a ‘natural’ or ‘wilderness’ area” of the park and that “the only maintenance of the ground beneath the tree was in the periodic mowing of the grass.” Somewhat evasively, the arborist also concluded the tree itself was “in no way improved” — in part because there had been no pruning or trimming of living branches of the tree.
The trial court ruled the City immune from liability because McKenna’s injury “resulted from the natural condition of unimproved property.” IC 34-4-16.5-3(1), supra. In making its ruling the trial court found “the only appropriate consideration [in this case] is the condition of the tree . . . which inflicted the injury in question[;] Sean McKenna’s injury resulted solely from the falling limb of the hackberry tree, which was in its natural condition and unimproved.”
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
The procedural posture of this case is McKenna’s appeal from the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the City. Consequently, we repeat the familiar principles of summary judgment. Summary judgment may be granted
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only if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits and testimony, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact, and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Ind.Rules of Procedure, Trial Rule 56(C);
Papp v. City of Hammond,
(1967)
Because summary judgment deprives the non-moving party of the right to a trial the burden is upon the moving party to establish that no genuine issue as to any material fact exists.
Barbre v. Indianapolis Water Co.,
(1980) Ind.App.,
The phrase “natural condition of unimproved property” which is the basis of the trial court’s ruling in favor of the City is not defined anywhere in the Indiana Tort Claims Act. Furthermore, our research and the research of the parties reveals there are no cases in which the appellate courts of Indiana have construed such language. When construing Indiana statutes Indiana courts are not bound by decisions from foreign jurisdictions. However, “ ‘[i]t is a general rule of law that, where a question of statutory construction is one of novel impression, it is proper to resort to decisions of courts of other states construing statutory language which is identical or of a similar import. Indeed it is highly desirable that a statute be given a similar interpretation by the several states wherein it is in force.’ ”
Witherspoon v. Salm,
(1969)
In this regard we note California Government Code § 831.2 provides in language very similar to our own statute: “Neither a public entity nor a public employee is liable for an injury caused by a natural condition of any unimproved public property, including but not limited to any natural condition of any lake, stream, bay, river or beach.” Two recent opinions construing this provision of the California statute are useful in the instant analysis of our own legislative enactment. The later of these eases,
Fuller v. State,
(1975)
In reaching its ultimate conclusion, the
Fuller
court cited with approval its earlier decision in
Rendak v. State,
(1971)
With these opinions in mind, 3 we now turn to the case at bar, in which the record reveals the trial court focused entirely — and we believe incorrectly — on the tree itself, without regard to the improved parkland in which it is located.
As noted above, it is undisputed that the soil surrounding the base of the tree and the tree’s root system was covered by a lawn which was periodically mowed by the City. Ordinarily, one does not mow
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“wilderness.” Additionally, the City had built a playground near the tree, and someone, allegedly the City, had placed a picnic table under the tree. In viewing such evidence of improvements within the immediate vicinity of the tree, however, the City urges us to accept a definition of “improvement” which at the threshold requires “permanence and value.” In light of the fact there is nothing in the statutory phrase “natural condition of unimproved property” which
requires
the notion of permanence and value, we are unpersuaded. “[W]here a statute is clear and unambiguous, we have no choice but to hold it to its plain meaning.”
Seymour Nat’l Bank v. State,
(1981) Ind.,
Reversed and remanded to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The Act provides in relevant part: “A governmental entity or an employee acting within the scope of his employment is not liable if a loss results from: (1) the natural condition of unimproved property.” IC 34-4-16.5-3(1).
. We note the relevant California Act, like our own, specifically excludes such roads and trails from the “improvements” affecting the State’s immunity. In this regard IC 34 — 4-16.5-3(4) provides a governmental entity is not liable if a loss results from “the condition of an unpaved road, trail, or footpath, the purpose of which is to provide access to a recreation or scenic area. . . . ”
. Both parties refer us to two New Jersey cases which we find inapplicable.
Diodato v. Camden County Park Comm’n,
(1978)
. Arguably, the evidence before the trial court raised at least an inference the hackberry tree was not in a pristine, natural state, since, as we observed earlier, the arborist’s affidavit merely asserted none of the tree’s living branches had been pruned or trimmed in the last 18 years.
