OPINION
Plaintiff, two years old at the time, suffered brain damage when found in the swimming pool of the house rented by his parents. Through a guardian ad litem, he filed suit against the landlord for failing to install a fence separating the pool from the rest of the backyard. Both sides filed motions for summary judgment on the issue of the landlord’s liability. The trial court granted the landlord’s motion and entered judgment in her favor, from which plaintiff appeals.
We find that the question of whether the landlord breached a duty to the plaintiff is for the finder of fact to decide. We hold that neither motion for summary judgment should have been granted and, accordingly, reverse the ruling of the trial court.
FACTS
We view the facts most favorably to the party opposing summary judgment.
State ex rel. Corbin v. Challenge, Inc.,
On January 15, 1986, Debra was home with her two children and a neighbor’s child. She allowed Tyler, then two and one-half years old, to ride his tricycle in the backyard. A commotion between the two other children distracted her for approximately five to ten minutes. Tyler was subsequently found floating in the pool. Although he was revived, he sustained brain damage and is quadriplegic.
LAW
The issue on appeal concerns the nature of a landlord’s duty to the child of a tenant. We begin our discussion by pointing out that summary judgment is generally not appropriate in negligence actions. It may be granted only when there is no dispute as to any material facts, only one inference can be drawn from those facts, and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Tribe v. Shell Oil Co., Inc.,
A negligence claim requires the plaintiff to prove: 1) the existence of a duty recognized by the law, obligating the defendant to conform to a certain standard of conduct; 2) a breach of that duty; 3) a causal connection between the breach and injury; and 4) actual injuries or damages.
Ontive-ros v. Borak,
Whether there is a duty is a question of law, to be decided by the court.
Markowitz v. Arizona Parks Board,
The nature of a landlord’s duty to a tenant was set forth in
Cummings v. Prater,
[T]he landlord is under a duty of ordinary care to inspect the premises when he had reason to suspect defects existing at the time of the taking of the tenancy and to either repair them or warn the tenant of their existence. In other words he is under the duty to take those precautions for the safety of the tenant as would be taken by a reasonably pm-dent man under similar circumstances.
Id.
at 26,
Newcomer argues that summary judgment was proper because:
1) Tyler was not a tenant; rather, his parents were, and Newcomer allowed no unsafe condition as to them; and
2) The unfenced swimming pool was open and obvious; and
3) The fact that the outer perimeter of the property was fenced satisfied any duty Newcomer had, and landowners cannot, as a matter of law, be required to erect a “second” fence.
The trial court did not state its reasons for granting summary judgment. We are bound to uphold the trial court if its decision is supportable on any grounds.
*9 We first disagree with Newcomer’s contention that Tyler is not a tenant. Arizona law defines a tenant as “a person entitled under a rental agreement to occupy a dwelling unit to the exclusion of others.” A.R.S. § 33-1310(15) (1974). Although the one-page rental agreement in this case does not specify who will occupy the house, it can be inferred from the agreement, as well as the facts, that Tyler is Newcomer’s nephew and that several discussions were held concerning the unsafe nature of the unfenced pool, and that Tyler was residing in the house with Newcomer’s knowledge and consent. Thus, he was a person entitled to occupy the house. Tyler, as a tenant, was owed the same duty as any other tenant, including adult tenants.
At least two Arizona cases involving child plaintiffs have based their analyses on the duty owed by a landlord to a tenant. In
Presson v. Mountain States Properties, Inc.,
the plaintiff was a nine-year-old who was burned by a faulty water heater.
Newcomer’s duty, then, was to exercise such care as a reasonably prudent person would exercise toward children under similar circumstances, those circumstances being the presence of an unfenced pool in the backyard of a house rented to a family with small children.
The question whether Newcomer satisfied her duty to the parents of plaintiff is not dispositive. Because a duty was owed also to plaintiff, the issue next turns to whether that duty was breached. Whether, in regard to plaintiff, the swimming pool constituted an unreasonably dangerous condition, is a question of fact. That question must take into account all the relevant circumstances, including Newcomer’s awareness of plaintiff’s age, and attendant risks.
In the context of a landowner’s liability to a child licensee, our supreme court has stated:
The characteristics of children are proper matters for consideration in determining what is ordinary care with respect to them, and there may be a duty to take precautions with respect to those of tender years which would not be necessary in the care of adults. The duty is to exercise such care as a reasonable prudent person would exercise toward children under like circumstances.
Shannon v. Butler Homes, Inc.,
The question may not be determined as a matter of law, in either side’s favor, because reasonable minds may disagree on Newcomer’s liability. When all the discussions of the parties, circumstances of the plaintiff and his family and conditions of the house and pool are taken into consideration, the finder of fact may conclude that as to Tyler the unfenced condition of the swimming pool was unreasonably dangerous—or not.
Newcomer also argues that any duty she had was assumed by plaintiff's parents during discussions regarding who would erect a fence around the pool and who would pay for it. While Newcomer may recall, and may argue to the jury, that plaintiff’s parents voluntarily assumed the obligation, in her deposition she gave the following:
Q. In any of these conversations did you ever say words, in substance or in effect: Yes, I agree to put a fence up there at some point in time, not a specific point in time, but yes, I agree to put a fence up?
A. Not in those words but, yes, I said: ‘Yes, we will in the future at some point in time.’
From the above and similar statements at depositions, we find that the question of *10 assumption of the duty is for the finder of fact.
Similarly, as to whether the unfenced pool constituted an open and obvious condition, we find the question inappropriate to resolve as a matter of law. Here the question is not whether the condition and its dangerousness were open and obvious to plaintiffs parents, but to plaintiff. As stated in
Tribe v. Shell Oil Co., Inc.,
whether the condition “was dangerous, open and obvious or whether appellees should have anticipated the harm if open and obvious are issues to be decided by a jury in its capacity as triers of fact.”
The open and obvious condition is merely a factor to be taken into consideration in determining whether the condition was unreasonably dangerous.
Newcomer argues that wherever parents with children rent a residence, it is for the parents to insure the safety of children from obvious dangers, not for the landlord. She cites cases such as
Reek v. Lutz,
Other courts, however, have refused to hold that parents alone are responsible for their children’s safety as opposed to landlords. In
Rahn v. Beurskens,
We will not attempt to alter the duty of a landlord to child tenants in Arizona. We believe the quotation from Reek v. Lutz has stated the matter backwards. The existence of a parent-child relationship alone does not serve to transfer a landlord’s obligation, without additional circumstances (to-wit: an agreement as described in the following). The mere fact that a child resides with parents will not relieve a landlord from his or her duty as described by Cummings v. Prater. In the case of “open and obvious” dangers to children too young to realize them, however, the landlord and parents may agree that the parents will assume the full duty of making those repairs or taking the proper and realistic measures which will protect their children from a recognized, specific hazard. Such would constitute a discharge of duty by a landlord. If it is raised in this case, it remains a jury question.
Newcomer argues that since a perimeter fence is in place around the entire property, the law cannot require a “second” fence between a swimming pool and the rest of the yard. Once again, whether a reasonably prudent landlord would not be required to take further precautions for the safety of adult tenants is not the question. We do believe, however, that a jury could conclude that a reasonably prudent landlord, knowing that a rented house was to be occupied by small children, should take precautions. It is not unforeseeable that a young child could obtain access to an unfenced pool and drown or suffer injuries, despite the parents’ awareness of the dangers involved, as evidenced by the high number of swimming pool accidents involv *11 ing young children in Arizona and elsewhere each year. 2
An almost identical factual situation from Arizona resulted in a Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals decision, holding the same way as we do now.
Schultz v. Eslick,
No Arizona decision appears to have decided whether an unfenced residential pool is unreasonably dangerous to a three-year-old child as a matter of law. We believe that the liability question should be sent to an Arizona jury because reasonable minds could differ on whether the unfenced pool was unreasonably dangerous to small children. The type of precautions required of the landlord would depend, in part, upon the anticipated tenants and reasonable preparation for them.
Id.
at 559-60. The court also pointed out that the proper inquiry was whether the landlords satisfied their duty of care to the three-year-old plaintiff, as opposed to their duty of care to the parents, and that the character or age of the victim must be considered in that inquiry.
Id.
at 560.
See also Johnson v. Tucson Estates, Inc.,
Newcomer argues that the reasoning in
Schultz
is flawed and that it misconstrues Arizona law, primarily because many of the cases it relies on concern a property owner’s liability to entrants. We find, however, that a landlord’s duty to a tenant is analagous to that of a property owner to an invitee.
Forbes v. Romo,
Because it is a fact question, we are equally unwilling to conclude that a pool unfenced from the rest of the backyard is unreasonably dangerous as a matter of law, as urged by Tyler.
See Presson,
In summary, we do not hold that an internally unfenced swimming pool is or is not unreasonably dangerous as a matter of law. It is for the finder of fact to decide. The jury’s determination in this type of case will necessarily depend upon such facts as the landlord’s knowledge of the proposed tenants, any agreement for the parents to assume responsibility, the layout of the premises, and so forth. We do not intend this holding to create any new duty on the part of landlords. Given the facts of this case, however, a jury could conclude *12 that Newcomer did not fulfill her duty to Tyler because she did not erect a fence around the pool. On the other hand, it could also conclude that she did fulfill her duty by virtue of the arguments discussed herein.
This matter is reversed and remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
NOTE: The Honorable ALLEN G. MINK-ER was authorized to participate in this case by the Chief Justice of the Arizona Supreme Court pursuant to Ariz. Const, art. VI, § 3.
Notes
. The evolution of a landlord’s duty from
“caveat
lessee” to the present is described in
Udy v. Calvary Corp.,
. The dangers posed by swimming pools without adequate fencing are not new to this court.
See, e.g., Giacona v. Tapley, 5
Ariz.App. 494,
