Cassie Pfenning, injured by a golf ball at a golf outing when she was age sixteen, filed this damage action against multiple defendants: the Estate of Jerry A. Jones, her grandfather, who brought her to the event; Joseph E. Lineman, a golfer who hit the ball that struck her; White/s 31 Club, Inc., a tavern in Marion, Indiana, that promoted the event; and the Marion Elks Country Club Lodge # 195, operator of the golf course. After the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of each of the four defendants, the plaintiff appealed, claiming that genuine issues exist to preclude summary judgment on her various claims of general negligence, negligent supervision, and premises liability of the defendants. The Court of Appeals affirmed.
Pfenning v. Lineman,
In separate but parallel rulings, the trial court granted each defendant’s motion for summary judgment, finding no genuine issues of material fact, but otherwise not detailing any analysis or reasoning. Appealing from these summary judgment entries, the plaintiff has sought reversal, urging that her claims of negligent supervision, failure to instruct, premises liability, and golfer liability due to the absence of incurred risk are matters upon which the facts are undisputed in her favor or upon which there are genuine issues of fact, precluding summary judgment. Appellant’s Br. at 6.
An appellate court reviewing summary judgment analyzes the issues in the same way as would a trial court.
Carie v. PSI Energy, Inc.,
The relevant facts presented in the designated evidence are mostly undisputed. On August 19, 2006, a golf outing, the annual Whitey’s 31 Club Scramble, was held at the Elks and attended by customers and friends of Whitey’s and its proprietor. Persons wishing to participate signed up on a poster board that had been hung on a wall at Whitey’s. Each golfer paid a charge of $45.00 per person to the Elks, which provided the golf carts and the beverages that were made available to the golfers. Whitey’s provided the sign-up list to the Elks, which then made cart signs, team sheets, score cards, and starting hole assignments. The plaintiff, Cassie Pfen-ning, then sixteen years old, attended the outing at the invitation of her grandfather and with the permission of her mother. The grandfather previously had signed up at Whitey’s as a volunteer to drive a beverage cart at the event. He brought the plaintiff with him for company. Shortly after the plaintiff and her grandfather arrived at the event, he retrieved a gasoline motor powered beverage cart for their use. It had a large cooler on the back containing water, soda pop, and beer. This beverage cart had no windshield, and the evidence is in conflict regarding whether it was equipped with a roof. Shortly after providing the plaintiff with the beverage cart, the grandfather joined a shorthanded group of golfers and left the plaintiff at the beverage cart with Lottie Kendall, sister of the grandfather and a great aunt of the plaintiff. But within about ten minutes, the great aunt also joined another group of golfers, and an employee of Whitey’s, Christie Edwards, joined the plaintiff and was present with her on the beverage cart during the event. The plaintiff drove the cart, and Christie served the beverages to groups of golfers on the golf course for about three and a half hours. After making several trips around the 18-hole golf course, the plaintiff was suddenly struck in the mouth by a golf ball while driving the beverage cart on the cart path approaching the eighteenth hole’s tee pad from its green. The ball was a low drive from the sixteenth tee approximately eighty yards away. The golfer’s drive traveled straight for approximately sixty to seventy yards and then severely hooked to the left. He noticed the roof of another cart in the direction of the shot and shouted “fore.” But neither the plaintiff nor her beverage-serving companion heard anyone shout “fore.” After hearing a faint yelp, the golfer ran in the direction of the errant ball and discovered the plaintiff with her injuries. She suffered injuries to her mouth, jaw, and teeth.
In the trial court proceedings, the Elks sought summary judgment, urging that participants and spectators in sporting events are precluded from recovery for injuries that result from the sport’s inherent dangers and that the Elks had no liability as the operator of the golf course because it was entitled to expect the plaintiff to realize and appreciate the dangers she encountered. The golfer supported his request for summary judgment by contending that he had no duty of care to a co-participant at a sporting event with respect to risks inherent in the sport. Whitey’s sought summary judgment, alleging that it was not subject to premises liability
1. Motion for Summary Judgment by the Golfer
The golfer, Joseph Lineman, sought summary judgment on grounds that he could not be held liable under a negligence theory because the plaintiff was a co-participant in the sporting event, and her injuries resulted from an inherent risk of the sport.
Although this Court has not addressed the issue, several decisions from the Indiana Court of Appeals, invoking varying and inconsistent rationales, have concluded that participants in athletic events owe no duty of care as to risks inherent in the sport and must refrain only from intentional or reckless infliction of injury to others.
The focus on duty arises from its role as one of the essential elements of a negligence action. A plaintiff seeking damages for negligence must establish (1) a duty owed to the plaintiff by the defendant, (2) a breach of the duty, and (3) an injury proximately caused by the breach of duty.
Caesars Riverboat Casino, LLC v. Kephart,
It is ... not surprising to find that the problem of duty is as broad as the whole law of negligence, and that no universal test for it ever has been formulated.... But it should be recognized that “duty” is not sacrosanct in itself, but is only an expression of the sum total of those considerations of policy which lead the law to say that the plaintiff is entitled to protection.... No better general statement can be made than that the courts will find a duty where, in general, reasonable persons would recognize it and agree that it exists.
Gariup Constr. Co. v. Foster,
Three recent decisions from the Court of Appeals illustrate the diverging approaches utilized in seeking to explain and apply the concept of duty in golf liability cases.
See Parsons v. Arrowhead Golf, Inc.,
In
Parsons,
the court noted that its case law addressing sporting events “has evolved in recent years,”
In
Bowman,
the Court of Appeals, acknowledging that its “rationale for the [no-duty] rule ... has not been constant,”
A third rationale for finding no duty is seen in
Gyuriak.
Here the court justified its finding of no duty on the premise that the injured plaintiff assumed the risk of “an inherent and reasonably foreseeable danger associated with the game of golf ... as a matter of law.”
Gyuriak,
Under Indiana’s Comparative Fault Act, a plaintiffs recovery will be diminished or precluded depending upon the degree of the plaintiffs own fault.
See
Ind.Code §§ 34-51-2-5, -6. Such fault includes “any act or omission that is negli
We reject this primary assumption-of-risk terminology to the extent that it suggests that a lack of duty may stem from a plaintiffs incurred risk. Under the [Comparative Fault] Act, a plaintiff may reheve a defendant of what would otherwise be his or her duty to the plaintiff only by an express consent.
Heck,
Nevertheless, the court in
Gyuriak
favored such an application of
primary,
rather than
secondary,
assumption of risk. It described secondary assumption of risk as considering whether “a plaintiff appreciated and willingly encountered the risk created by the defendant’s breach,” which amounted to “fault” under the Comparative Fault Act.
Gyuriak,
As seen in
Parsons, Bowman, Gyuriak,
and
Geiersbach,
the Court of Appeals has employed differing rationales to support a no-duty rule when analyzing sports injury claims but has consistently analyzed the
A significant variety of approaches to sports injury cases is also found among the case law and statutes of other jurisdictions. Many have adopted some variety of the general formulation that no duty is owed by a sports participant except to refrain from intentional injury or reckless conduct. Cases in several states employ the primary assumption of risk rationale for their no-duty rule.
See, e.g., Knight v. Jewett,
In various cases from several other states, we find a no-duty approach applied but primarily for public policy reasons and without evident reliance on the concept of primary assumption of risk.
See, e.g., Gauvin v. Clark,
Some cases have declined to adopt a reduced-duty standard but employ a traditional negligence analysis in all sports injury cases.
See Lestina v. West Bend Mut. Ins. Co.,
Cases from a few states have used a combination of approaches depending upon the nature of the activity involved.
See, e.g., Jogger v. Mohawk Mountain Ski Area, Inc.,
Two states, New Hampshire and Arizona, provide enhanced protection from liability for sports participants by focusing not on the element of duty but rather on breach of duty, finding that no breach of duty occurs from the ordinary activities of a sport.
Allen v. Dover Co-Recreational Softball League,
As to judicial policy, however, we are in agreement with our colleagues in the Court of Appeals and many of the courts of our fellow states that strong public policy considerations favor the encouragement of participation in athletic activities and the discouragement of excessive litigation of claims by persons who suffer injuries from participants’ conduct.
See Bowman,
We conclude that sound judicial policy can be achieved within the framework of existing Indiana statutory law and jurisprudence. As noted previously, there are three principal elements in a claim for negligence: duty, breach of duty, and a proximately caused injury. When there is no genuine issue of material fact and any one of these elements is clearly absent, summary judgment is appropriate.
Colen v. Pride Vending Serv.,
We hold that, in negligence claims against a participant in a sports activity, if the conduct of such participant is within the range of ordinary behavior of participants in the sport, the conduct is reasonable as a matter of law and does not constitute a breach of duty. 3
In any sporting activity, however, a participant’s particular conduct may exceed the ambit of such reasonableness as a matter of law if the “participant either intentionally caused injury or engaged in [reckless] conduct.”
Bowman,
The plaintiffs action against the golfer is also predicated upon her claims that he hit an errant drive when he knew of the presence of bystanders on the golf course and that he failed to yell “fore” in a man-
As to the golfer’s hitting an errant drive which resulted in the plaintiffs injury, such conduct is clearly within the range of ordinary behavior of golfers and thus is reasonable as a matter of law and does not establish the element of breach required for a negligence action. ner sufficient to enable her to avoid being struck. Both the golfer and another golfer in his foursome state that he yelled “fore” when his shot hooked to the left. But neither the plaintiff nor the woman with her on the beverage cart heard any warning. With respect to the alleged failure to warn, the plaintiff does not present any evidence directly disputing the golfer’s claim that he yelled “fore,” only that she didn’t hear it, but her undisputed failure to hear the warning may arguably warrant an inference disputing the golfer’s assertion. The parties agree that conventional golf etiquette includes calling “fore” when a golfer’s shot may endanger others. But whether giving such warning can be effective in providing protection is dependent upon a variety of factors including the distance involved, the velocity and trajectory of the ball, the course topography, the presence of wind and ambient sound sources, the existence of foliage or other impediments to sound, the timing and volume of the golfer’s shout of “fore,” and the flexibility of movement possible within the available seconds for persons at risk to avoid or protect themselves from a ball coming from an unknown direction.
For each of two reasons, we find that neither the omission nor manner of yelling “fore” can be a proper basis for a claim of negligence in golf ball injury cases. First, the myriad of factors that relate to the effectiveness of such a warning at any particular time will almost inevitably call for speculation and surmise, precluding the establishment of the element of
While not asserted in her memorandum in opposition to summary judgment at trial, the plaintiff declares in her Appellant’s Brief that a question of fact precluding summary judgment “exists as to whether [the golfer] acted recklessly” in failing to yell “fore” or, if not, “whether he did so timely and sufficiently.” Appellant’s Br. at 19. We reject this claim. For the same reasons that we hold that whether and how a golfer yells “fore” in a particular situation cannot be a basis for a claim of negligence, it likewise cannot support a claim of liability based on recklessness.
Summary judgment was properly granted in favor of the golfer.
2. Motion for Summary Judgment by the Elks
In its motion for summary judgment, the Elks asserted two claims: (a) regardless of whether the plaintiff is considered a participant or a spectator in the golf event, she is precluded from recovery for injuries resulting from the sport’s inherent dangers, and (b) as to the plaintiffs premises liability claim, the Elks is not liable because her injury did not result from an unreasonable risk of harm nor one that the Elks should have expected the plaintiff would fail to realize and protect against.
As to its contention that the plaintiffs claim is automatically precluded because it resulted from inherent risks of the game, the Elks seeks application of the series of decisions by the Court of Appeals predicated on the no-duty rationale, which we today disapprove, as explained above. Our superseding formulation, which looks at whether the acts of the defendant sports participant constituted a breach of duty, declares that the participant’s conduct is reasonable as a matter of law if within the range of ordinary behavior of participants in the sport. The blanket protection from liability embodied in the new formulation does not extend to persons or entities other than the athlete whose conduct allegedly caused a claimed injury.
In seeking summary judgment against the plaintiffs claim of premises liability, the Elks argues that the undisputed designated evidence conclusively establishes that one of the elements of premises liability is not satisfied and that the plaintiffs premises liability claim fails because of a lack of evidence on one of the necessary elements of her claim. As authority, the Elks cited a case strikingly similar to the present one,
Linche v. Long Beach Country Club,
In opposing the motion at the trial court, and in her arguments on appeal, the plaintiff has not directly responded to the claim that the evidence conclusively establishes that one of the elements of premises liability is not satisfied. Instead, she urges for a broader application of the
Webb
test, arguing that (a) the Elks had a duty of
The elements of premises liability discussed in
Linche
are well established. A landowner owes to an invitee or social guest “a duty to exercise reasonable care for his protection while he is on the landowner’s premises.”
Burrell v. Meads,
A possessor of land is subject to liability for physical harm caused to his invitees by a condition on the land if, but only if, he
(a) knows or by the exercise of reasonable care would discover the condition, and should realize that it involves an unreasonable risk of harm to such invitees, and
(b) should expect that they will not discover or realize the danger, or will fail to protect themselves against it, and
(c) fails to exercise reasonable care to protect them against the danger.
Burrell,
The plaintiff notes that the designated materials show that she had never played golf before and had no interest in it, that she did not know any golf safety or etiquette rules, and that she had been to a golf course only once before when she was six or seven years old. She urges that a subjective test should apply to show her actual lack of appreciation of the risks involved. We disagree. While the subjective test is essential in assessing the defense of incurred risk,
Beckett v. Clinton Prairie Sch. Corp.,
More significantly, we find the absence of a genuine issue of fact regarding the first element of premises liability — that the premises owner had actual or constructive knowledge of a condition on the premises that involves an unreasonable risk of harm to invitees. We acknowledge that
We find that the undisputed designated evidence conclusively establishes that crucial aspects of two of the elements of premises liability are not satisfied. There is no showing that (a) the Elks should have reasonably expected that its invitees would fail to discover or realize the danger of wayward golf drives, and (b) the risk of being struck by an errant golf ball involved an unreasonable risk of harm. For these reasons, the plaintiff cannot prevail on her premises liability claim against the Elks.
Summary judgment was properly granted in favor of the Elks.
3. Motion for Summary Judgment by Whitey’s
In seeking summary judgment, Whitey’s asserted that the undisputed facts establish that it was not subject to premises liability because it did not own, control, or have any interest in the Elks golf course and that it otherwise owed no duty to the plaintiff.
As against Whitey’s, the plaintiff asserts claims of negligent supervision and premises liability, arguing that Whitey’s allowed the sixteen-year-old plaintiff to ride on an alcoholic beverage cart, failed to issue safety instructions, placed her on a golf cart under dangerous conditions, and placed her in a windowless, roofless cart with an inadequately-trained employee.
With respect to the premises liability issue, the facts are undisputed that the golf event was conducted on premises owned and operated by the Elks, not Whitey’s. The fact that Whitey’s arranged for the advance promotion and sign-up of golfers for the event, or that the grandfather, as a volunteer for Whitey’s, selected the particular beverage cart used by the plaintiff, does not establish that Whitey’s was a possessor of the golf course so as to subject it to premises liability. Summary judgment was correctly entered in favor of Whitey’s on the plaintiffs claim for premises liability.
To support its no-duty claim, Whitey’s has cited the previously-discussed Court of Appeals decisions finding no duty to a sports participant or spectator, and it has separately argued that, under the three-factor test of Webb, no duty should be found. As discussed above, we reject the no-duty rule in sports injury cases. Our replacement formulation (finding no breach by an athlete engaged in the sport’s ordinary activities) applies to conduct of sports participants, not promoters of sporting events, and thus does not insulate Whitey’s from potential liability.
We thus turn to whether summary judgment for Whitey’s was appropri
The plaintiff argues that she was “put to [the] purpose” of distributing beverages by Whitey’s and her grandfather, from which arose a relationship “to instruct, warn and/or supervise [the plaintiff], as an un-knowledgeable minor.” Appellant’s Br. at 15. She claims that her lack of understanding about golf, the absence of safety instructions given her in contrast to the usual safety instructions given other beverage cart operators, and Whitey’s knowledge of the risk of being struck by an errant golf ball are all relevant considerations in determining whether her injury was reasonably foreseeable. As to public policy, the plaintiff urges that permitting negligence claims by persons not players or ticketed spectators would create a bright-line approach that would be convenient to administer, that Whitey’s and the Elks have a better capacity to bear any loss and prevent future injuries, and that adults who organize and run golf events should be discouraged from putting unsupervised minors on a beverage cart without instructions on safety or golf etiquette. Acknowledging that the determination of duty is a question of law for the court, the plaintiff nevertheless argues that it depends on a full development of the underlying facts at trial.
Whitey’s disputes the plaintiffs argument that the Webb factors support a finding that Whitey’s owed a duty of reasonable care to the plaintiff. Whitey’s argues that there was “no relationship” between it and the plaintiff, and that, until after the injury occurred, “Whitey’s did not even know that [the plaintiff] was on the golf course that day.” Appellee Whitey’s 31 Club, Inc.’s Br. at 14. Whitey’s challenges the plaintiffs assertion that it provided her with the beverage cart, arguing that the assertion is unsupported. Further urging that it had no knowledge of the plaintiffs presence on the golf course that day, Whitey’s argues that it could not have foreseen the risk of injury to her. As to public policy, Whitey’s argues that it bears no “moral blame” for the mishap and that finding a duty would create a potential for mass litigation and deter sports participation.
Upon several issues related to these arguments by Whitey’s, the designated summary judgment materials favor the plaintiff or are not conclusive as to the issue of duty. Contrary to Whitey’s claims that it had no knowledge of the plaintiffs presence at the outing, there is support for the fact that for three and one-half hours the plaintiff was driving the beverage cart accompanied by an adult woman who was or had been an employee of Whitey’s and that the proprietor of Whitey’s was personally present as a participating golfer. It is unclear from the designated materials whether the woman was at the time acting in the course of or within the scope of such employment. The plaintiffs presence on the golf course resulted from the actions of her grandfather who had signed up at Whitey’s to work as a volunteer beverage cart driver for the Whitey’s 31 Club Scramble. Because there exist insufficient undisputed facts as to issues of relationship and foreseeability, we find that the designated summary judgment materials are insufficient to establish the absence of any duty on the part of Whitey’s.
If warranted by the designated materials, the elements of breach of duty and proximate cause, however, may provide alternative bases for granting summary judgment for Whitey’s. An appellate court may affirm summary judgment if it is proper on any basis shown in the
The plaintiff claims that the breach of duty by Whitey’s may be established by facts showing the failure to inform her of the usual safety instructions; the placement of her on a golf cart under dangerous conditions and in a windowless, roofless cart with an inadequately-trained employee; and the selection of the sixteen-year-old plaintiff to drive a beverage cart serving alcoholic beverages.
As to her claim of omitted safety instructions, the designated materials show that the plaintiff was not given the usual directive to operate the beverage cart only on cart paths, to drive in a direction always facing the approaching tee, and to protect herself if she hears a shout of “fore.” At the time the plaintiff was stuck by the golf ball, her beverage cart was proceeding on a cart path and facing in the direction of the eighteenth tee that she was approaching from its green, and she did not hear anyone shout “fore.” Thus, the absence of such instructions was not causally related to her injuries. This is likewise true as to her claim that the woman accompanying her lacked knowledge or instruction about how to respond in the event of a shout of “fore” because she also did not hear any such warning before the ball struck the plaintiff. Similarly, the issue of whether the beverage cart was used to distribute alcoholic beverages fails for a lack of proximate cause.
But, with respect to the plaintiffs claim that Whitey’s, presumably through the conduct of her grandfather arguably as an agent of Whitey’s, provided her with a windowless and roofless beverage cart, issues of fact exist that preclude summary judgment. There is a factual dispute regarding whether her cart was equipped with a roof. And while the deposition of the Elks’s representative stated that roofs and windshields are used to shelter cart occupants from inclement weather, an assertion the plaintiff does not dispute, there are no facts that obviate the possibility that such equipment may also serve other safety functions and might have operated here to shield the plaintiff or deflect the errant drive. In addition, the designated materials do not sufficiently designate the precise location and angle of the beverage cart and the plaintiffs body with respect to the trajectory of the golf ball so as to prove that the plaintiffs injuries would have been inflicted even if the cart was equipped with an impervious windshield and/or roof. Finally, genuine issues of fact remain regarding whether the grandfather or the woman accompanying the plaintiff on the beverage cart were in sufficient relationship with Whitey’s to vicariously impose upon Whitey’s the legal responsibility for their permitting the plaintiff to use a windowless or roofless beverage cart.
Because the undisputed facts shown in the materials designated on summary judgment fail to conclusively establish a lack of duty on the part of Whitey’s or the absence of a breach of duty or proximate cause, Whitey’s is not entitled to summary judgment.
4. Motion for Summary Judgment by the Grandfather
To support his motion for summary judgment, the grandfather asserted to the trial court that the designated materials establish that he did not have a legal duty to warn his granddaughter about the inherent risks of driving the beverage cart during the golf event. On appeal, he additionally argues in the alternative that the plaintiff failed to timely present her claim of negligent supervision in the trial court,
In the trial court, the plaintiffs written opposition to the grandfather’s motion for summary judgment claimed negligence on the part of her grandfather because he brought a minor child who knew nothing about golf or golf course safety to work at a golf event, volunteered her to work on a beverage cart, failed to provide her with safety instructions, and allowed her to work on a cart serving alcoholic beverages. At argument during the trial court hearing on summary judgment, the plaintiffs counsel explicitly argued her claim of negligent supervision and provided supporting legal authority, although acknowledging that the claim “was something I didn’t dwell on in my brief.” Appellant’s App’x at 31. Her argument reflected facts shown in the designated evidence. We decline to find forfeiture against the plaintiff on the issue of negligent supervision.
With respect to the grandfather’s claim of no duty, on appeal he seeks refuge both in the sports participant no-duty test of which we disapprove today, and in application of the Webb three-factor test. He minimizes their relationship, arguing that he “simply picked his granddaughter up to spend the afternoon with him at the golf tournament.” Appellee Estate of Jerry A. Jones’s Br. at 10-11. While not discussing foreseeability, he asserts that “public policy would not stand for” imposing liability on “any parent or grandparent who wants to attend a sporting event with a child/grandchild and a freak accident occurs.” Id. at 11.
We find that the facts do not preclude the existence of a duty on the grandfather to exercise reasonable care in the supervision of the plaintiff. Negligent supervision involves the “well recognized duty in tort law that persons entrusted with children, or others whose characteristics make it likely that they may do somewhat unreasonable things, have a special responsibility recognized by the common law to supervise their charges.”
Miller v. Griesel,
As in our discussion with respect to Whitey’s, we also consider whether the designated evidence forecloses the plaintiffs claim against her grandfather on grounds that he did not breach such duty of reasonable care or that there is an absence of proximate cause. While the mechanism of her injury, being struck by an errant golf ball, is not an unusual risk to adults on a golf course, a possible viable claim for breach of duty is nevertheless shown by the particular circumstances of the present case. The grandfather does not challenge the facts and inferences indicating that he was aware of the plaintiffs age, her lack of familiarity with golf, and particularly her lack of awareness of the risk of injury from wayward golf balls. The designated evidence does not establish that the plaintiffs mother was aware of and agreed to her daughter’s exposure to such risks. As to the issue of breach of duty, whether it was reasonable for him to subject her to such risks depends upon genuine issues of fact for determination at trial.
The grandfather is not entitled to summary judgment.
Conclusion
We reject the concept that a participant in a sporting event owes no duty of care to protect others from inherent risks of the sport but adopt instead the view that summary judgment is proper due to the absence of breach of duty when the conduct of a sports participant is within the range of ordinary behavior of participants in the sport and therefore reasonable as a matter of law. We affirm summary judgment in favor of the golfer, Joseph E. Lineman, and the Marion Elks Country Club Lodge # 195. We reverse the summary judgment granted to Whitey’s 31 Club, Inc. and to the estate of the grandfather, Jerry A. Jones. This cause is remanded for further proceedings.
Notes
. For a thoughtful and comprehensive review of the function of duty in negligence actions, see Theodore R. Boehm, A Tangled Webb— Reexamining the Role of Duty in Indiana Negligence Actions, 37 Ind. L.Rev. 1(2003).
. Article 18, Section 5 of the Arizona Constitution provides: "The defense of contributory negligence or of assumption of risk shall, in all cases whatsoever, be a question of fact and shall, at all times, be left to the jury.”
. Our opinion today thus disapproves of the no-duty approach employed by the Court of Appeals in
Parsons, Bowman, Geiersbach, Gyuriak, Mark,
and
Sprunger v. E. Noble Sch. Corp.,
