Opinion
Plaintiff, Jaime Perez, appeals from an order of dismissal after the trial court sustained without leave to amend the demurrer to his first amended complaint for negligence. We conclude that Perez has failed to state a cause of action because the defendant, the City of Los Angeles (hereinafter, the city), is statutorily immune from suit for injury from the hazardous recreational activity of “tree rope swinging.” (Gov. Code, § 831.7, subd. (b).) 1
Facts
We view the limited factual allegations in this rather bare-bones complaint as true in accordance with the usual rule governing appellate review following a successful demurrer.
(Moore
v.
Regents of University of California
(1990)
Discussion
I. Hazardous Recreational Activities
Section 831.7 provides that a public entity is not liable to “any person who participates in a hazardous recreational activity ... for any . . . injury . . . arising out of that . . . activity.” Specifically listed among the hazardous recreational activities for which public entities have immunity from liability is “tree rope swinging.” (§ 831.7, subd. (b)(3).) However, this grant of statutory immunity has several exceptions.
Perez relies on the exception which reads as follows: “[T]his section does not limit liability which would otherwise exist for any of the following: [H (1) Failure of the public entity or employee to guard or warn of a known dangerous condition or of another hazardous recreational activity known to the public entity or employee that is not reasonably assumed by the participant as inherently a part of the hazardous recreational activity out of which the damage or injury arose.” (§831.7, subd. (c)(1).) Both the legislative history of this provision (see
DeVito
v.
State of California
(1988)
Thus, for example, as noted in
DeVito's
discussion of the legislative history of section 831.7, a person safely engaging in a hazardous recreational activity, but injured by another person engaged in a hazardous activity, is not necessarily precluded from suing the public entity.
(DeVito
v.
State of California, supra, 202
Cal.App.3d at p. 271.) More to the point in the present case is the possibility of a public entity’s failure to warn of an additional known “dangerous condition” (§831.7, subd. (c)(1)), the phrase focused
Accordingly, Perez’s characterization of the rope hanging from the tree as constituting a “known dangerous condition” (§ 831.7, subd. (c)(1)), about which the city had a duty to guard or warn is unavailing. Section 830, subdivision (a) defines “dangerous condition” to mean “a condition of property that creates a substantial (as distinguished from a minor, trivial or insignificant) risk of injury when such property or adjacent property is used with due care in a manner in which it is reasonably foreseeable that it will be used.” A condition is not dangerous within the meaning of section 830, subdivision (a) “unless it creates a hazard to those who foreseeably will use the property . . . with due care. Thus, even though it is foreseeable that persons may use public property without due care, a public entity may not be held liable for failing to take precautions to protect such persons.” (Cal. Law Revision Com. com., Deering’s Ann. Gov. Code, § 830 (1963 ed.) p. 849.) “Any property can be dangerous if used in a sufficiently abnormal manner; a public entity is required only to make its property safe for reasonably foreseeable careful use. [Citation.]”
(Mathews
v.
City of Cerritos
(1992)
II. Inapplicability of Assumption of the Risk Doctrine to Section 831.7
Perez also contends that the exception to the grant of immunity permitting liability where there is a failure to warn, which applies when the public entity has knowledge of a dangerous condition not reasonably assumed by the participant (§ 831.7, subd. (c)(1)), must be analyzed differently in the context of a minor who may be unaware of the risks of a hazardous activity. According to Perez, whether there is a duty in the present case depends upon whether he reasonably assumed the risk, and it is a question of fact whether he, as a juvenile, reasonably assumed the risk of tree rope swinging. He thus asserts that his age must be taken into consideration in
Perez reasons that since the city had knowledge that young children were engaging in the hazardous activity of rope swinging, the city should have taken steps to prevent rope swinging by children because “what would have been perceived by an adult as the obvious inherent dangers of the activity, might not have been so evident to a child.” Perez thus urges that the facts as pleaded gave rise to issues regarding his capacity as a juvenile to assume the reasonable risks of the rope swinging activity.
However, Perez’s analysis of the doctrine of the assumption of risk—with the related requirement that the participant in the activity have actual knowledge of the risk through experience, observation or warning—is inapplicable to the affirmative defense of statutory governmental immunity. There is simply no support for the unfounded assertion that the statutory immunity in section 831.7 is somehow a codification of the assumption of the risk doctrine and its various requirements. (See
Yarber
v.
Oakland Unified School Dist.
(1992)
In
DeVito
v.
State of California, supra,
Perez’s reliance on
Valenzuela
v.
City of San Diego
(1991)
In
Rombalski
v.
City of Laguna Beach
(1989)
Perez also urges that the language of the immunity statute itself requires a determination in each particular case whether there was a reasonable assumption of the risk. On the other hand, the city urges that section 831.7, subdivision (c)(1) establishes an objective standard and that any risk which is “inherent” is within the scope of the statutory immunity. The analysis in
Mathews
v.
City of Cerritos, supra, 2
Cal.App.4th 1380, regarding the
Similarly, the statutory phrase “a known dangerous condition or . . . another hazardous recreational activity . . . that is not reasonably assumed by the participant as inherently a part of the hazardous recreational activity out of which the damage or injury arose” (§ 831.7, subd. (c)(1)) does not refer to what the particular plaintiff before the court did or did not assume about the nature of the activity or the risk involved. Rather, the statute refers to the reasonable assumption of the public generally (i.e., what a reasonable participant would assume to be inherent in the activity). The use of the word “another” in this subdivision (i.e., “another hazardous recreational activity” [italics added]) of the statute establishes that the Legislature’s aim was to withhold immunity if the public entity failed to warn or guard against a dangerous condition or hazardous activity that was not an inherent part of the activity specified in the statute. Thus, in determining whether a public entity is entitled to statutory immunity, a plaintiff’s knowledge of any particular risks is irrelevant.
Moreover, traditional rules of statutory interpretation also require the application of an objective standard in interpreting the phrase “reasonably assumed.” (§ 831.7, subd. (c)(1).) It is well settled that a phrase used in one place and omitted in another should not be inferred where it has been excluded
(People
v.
Woodhead
(1987)
Nonetheless, the use of an objective standard to determine the reasonable assumption of the public generally, meaning the risk of injury a reasonable participant would assume as inherent, includes an assessment of the activity to the extent that minors are likely participants. As observed in
Mathews
v.
City of Cerritos, supra,
III. No Triable Issue of Fact as to Statutory Immunity
Applying these principles here, we conclude that allowing ropes to be tied to trees does not create a substantial risk of injury to those, even children, using due care in a reasonably foreseeable manner. The added height off the ground when swinging and the possibility of falling from such a height are obvious, even to children. Indeed, an aspect of the excitement and allure of tree rope swinging, as with many hazardous recreational activities (e.g., bungee jumping, skydiving), is the enhanced height and potential danger. Accordingly, allowing ropes to be tied to trees does not create a dangerous condition of the property about which there is a duty to warn or guard against, within the meaning of the exception to immunity in section 831.7, subdivision (c)(1). Perez’s complaint thus reveals the city’s immunity as a matter of law for liability from injury during the hazardous recreational activity of tree rope swinging. (§ 831.7, subds. (a), (b)(3).)
“‘While it is common knowledge that children often heedlessly engage in games or activities which are dangerous or harmful to their health, at some point the obligation of the public entity to answer for the malfeasance or misfeasance of others, whether children or parents, reaches its outer limits.’ [Citation.]”
{Mathews
v.
City of Cerritos, supra,
The order under review is affirmed.
Gates, J., and Nott, J., concurred.
