Opinion
Marilyn J. Miller was injured when the horse she was riding slipped on a portion of a public riding trail that crosses over the driveway of Janice and Jeffrey Weitzen (together the Weitzens). In this appeal, we must determine whether Civil Code 1 section 846, which immunizes property owners from liability arising from the recreational use of their property, applies to protect the Weitzens and, if so, whether the statutory exception for persons who enter property “for a consideration” is triggered by Miller’s payment of trail maintenance fees to her riding club. In addition, we must determine whether the trial court properly instructed the jury on the appropriate standard of care required of persons protected by sectiоn 846. As we resolve each of these questions in favor of the Weitzens, and in accordance with the challenged rulings of the trial court, we affirm the judgment.
FACTS
On November 3, 2001, Miller was riding her horse along a public riding trail adjacent to San Elijo Road in San Diego County. The horse lost its footing on the surface of the trail at the point where the trail crossed over the Weitzens’ drivеway. Both horse and rider fell to the ground, and Miller seriously injured her wrist and hand.
Miller sued both the Rancho Santa Fe Association, the organization responsible for maintaining the trail (the Association), and the Weitzens. At trial, Miller put on evidence that about two months before her accident, Jeffrey Weitzen had resurfaced the driveway, including the portion that crossed thе riding trail, with a common driveway resurfacing product. He did not
It is undisputed that the riding trail that passes alongside the Weitzens’ home is on land owned by the County. By virtue of their home ownership, the Weitzens held an encroachment permit issued by the County that allowed them to construct a driveway across the trail. A County public works coordinator and former trails coordinator testified that by virtue of this permit, the Weitzens and any future owners of their property possess a right to use the driveway to travel to and from the property.
Miller testified that she paid dues to the Rancho Santa Fe Riding Club (Riding Club) whеre she boarded her horse. These dues included a “trail maintenance fee,” which Miller asserts “she was advised was used to help maintain the forty . . . miles of riding trails throughout the community of Rancho Santa Fe.” Although the Riding Club does not maintain the trail at issue in this case, it occasionally gives money to the Association, which does maintain the trails, and pays the Association $1 a year to rent an acre of land on which its physical facility sits. While some trails in Rancho Santa Fe are on private property and can only be used by Riding Club members, trails that are on County land, such as the trail in front of the Weitzens’ house, are open to any member of the public.
At the close of the evidence, the trial court determined, as a matter of law, that section 846 applied to protect both the Weitzens and the Association. It further determined that Miller’s evidence regarding payments for trail maintenance (if credited by the jury) was sufficient to abrogate section 846 immunity as to the Association, but not as to the Weitzens. The court therefore instructed the jury that if it determined that consideration was pаid, it could find the Association liable for Miller’s injuries under ordinary negligence principles. Under the court’s instructions, however, the jury could only find the Weitzens liable if it found their failure to warn or prevent Miller’s injury was “willful or malicious”—the heightened burden required for proving liability against persons protected by section 846 recreational use immunity.
After the jury issued, and the trial court responded to, a number of notes indicating confusion about the consideration exception to section 846 recreational use immunity, the jury returned a special verdict, finding Miller had paid consideration to use the trails, and that the Association was liable for Miller’s injuries. The jury found that the Weitzens were not liable under the heightened “willful and malicious” standard. The jury determined that Miller’s damages were $94,603.81, with liability apportioned 0 percent for the Weitzens, 60 percent for the Association and 40 percent for Miller’s own negligence. 2
DISCUSSION
Section 846 immunizes property owners from liability arising from the recreational use of their property. The statute has two exceptions relevant to this appeal. A
Miller claims that the trial court improperly applied section 846 to limit the Weitzens’ liability for her injuries because: (i) Section 846 immunity does not apрly to the Weitzens as they are not property owners subject to the protection of the statute; (ii) even if the Weitzens are considered property owners under section 846, the statutory exception for recreational users who enter “for a consideration” strips them of its protection; and (iii) even if section 846 immunity properly applies tо the Weitzens, the trial court’s instruction to the jury defining the heightened “willful and malicious” standard for liability was improper because it deviated from an available Judicial Council of California Civil Jury Instructions (CACI) form instruction. We address each of these contentions in turn. 3
I
The Weitzens’ Rights to the Property at the Intersection of Their Driveway and the Trail Constitute an “Interest in Real Property” Under Section 846
Miller’s contention that the Weitzens’ interest in the property where she was injured is insufficient to come within the protection of section 846 fails to recognize the section’s “exceptionally broad and singularly unambiguous” definition of protected property “interests.”
(Ornelas v. Randolph
(1993)
Miller’s contention is directly refuted by
Hubbard v. Brown
(1990)
This sweeping scoрe of section 846 is a result of a 1980 amendment to the statute that came in response to two Court of Appeal cases, one of which,
Darr
v.
Lone Star Industries, Inc.
(1979)
It would, thus, fly in thе face of the unambiguously expressed legislative intent to rule that section 846, as amended, does not apply to the Weitzens’ property interest. That interest (an improved right-of-way over a public trail) clearly fits within the statutory language of “any . . . interest in real property,” and is indistinguishable
In light of the broad statutory language and unambiguous legislative intent to protect virtually every species of property “owner” under section 846, we conclude the trial court properly determined that the section applies to protect the Weitzens in this case. 9
II
The Considerаtion Exception to Section 846 Does Not Apply to Abrogate the Weitzens ’ Immunity
Miller contends that even if the Weitzens possess the requisite property interest, her payment of dues to the Riding Club, and the club’s subsequent payments to the Association, which maintained the riding trails, constitute sufficient consideration to trigger the statutory exception to section 846. She adds thаt these payments had a “direct present and actual benefit” to the Weitzens by contributing to an improved trail system in the area in which they lived and decreasing their proportional maintenance payments for the same. We disagree with Miller’s contention.
To trigger the consideration exception of section 846, payment must be made in exchangе for
“permission to
enter” the property or “received from others for the same purpose.”
(Ibid.,
italics added.) Consistent with this text, the few published California cases interpreting the consideration exception have noted that for the exception to apply, consideration must generally be paid “in the form of an entrance fee.”
(Johnson, supra,
21 Cal.App.4th at pр. 316-317 [“as regards section 846, we are aware of no cases in which consideration did not involve the actual payment of an entrance fee by plaintiff to defendant”];
Moore v. City of Torrance
(1979)
Miller’s reliance on
Johnson, supra,
The trial court, thus, proрerly determined that the consideration exception did not apply to strip the Weitzens of section 846 recreational use immunity because neither Miller nor anyone else paid consideration for “permission to enter” the property on which Miller was injured. 13
III *
The Trial Court’s Jury Instruction Defining “Willful and Malicious” Conduct Does Not Constitute Reversible Error
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
Huffman, Acting P. J., and Aaron, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied November 10, 2005, and appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied January 4, 2006, S139137.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Civil Code unless otherwise specified.
The Association is not a party to this appeal.
Miller’s first two contentions are primarily questions of statutory interpretation and, therefore, our standard of review is de novo.
(Johnson v. Unocal Corp.
(1993)
The parties agree that the Weitzens hold an encroachment permit that enables their driveway to cross the trail to the road, as well as the right to enter and exit their property by way of the driveway.
In arguing that the Weitzens do not have the requisite property interest, Miller frequently references the fact that the Weitzens needed to, but did not, obtain a permit to resurface the driveway. This fact plays no role in determining whether the Miller’s had an “interest” in property under section 846.
As summarized in
Hubbard,
the court in
Pacific Gas & Electric Co.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
145 Cal.App.3d at pages 258-259, incorrectly reasoned that “because all navigable waterways are held in trust by the state for the benefit of the public, and because plaintiff as a member of the public had a right to navigate the lake in his boat, the legislative purpose of section 846 would not be served by applying the statutory immunity to P. G. & E. as against persons using the public waterways whom it had no right to exclude.”
(Hubbard, supra,
Miller attempts to distinguish
Hubbard
by arguing that there the permit holder “stepped into the shoes” of the owner by assuming responsibility for maintaining imрrovements on the property, including the subject barbed wire gate—a fact missing here.
Hubbard
did not, however, rely on this fact in determining that the grazing permit holder was protected by section 846, and, in any event, the property interest here—essentially an easement that runs with the
land—is significantly more robust than the contractual license held by the defendant in
Hubbard
who, under federal regulations, possessed “ ‘no right, title, or interest’ ” in the land.
(Hubbard, supra,
Miller relies on
Jenson
v.
Kenneth I. Mullen Inc.
(1989)
The two cases cited by Miller regarding the duties of a property owner to refrain generally from creating a dangerous condition on a public sidewalk
(Selger
v.
Steven Brothers, Inc.
(1990)
Miller’s argument here is analogous to that advanced in
Moore v. City of Torrance, supra,
We note that the analysis might be different if Miller’s accident had occurred on a portion of the trail system that was private and could only be used by Riding Club members.
The two federal casеs cited by Miller are consistent with our analysis.
(Graves v. United States Coast Guard
(9th Cir. 1982)
We express no position as to whether the trial court properly placed the consideration exception before the jury with respect to the Association, as that party did not appeal the trial court’s decision and any claims it might have are not before us.
See footnote, ante, page 732.
