Opinion
In this case, we hold that a hotel has no duty to warn its guests of a dangerous condition of adjacent property over which the hotel has no control, to wit, the ocean currents.
Petitioner Princess Hotels International, Inc. (Princess) is a defendant in an action for personal injuries and wrongful death brought by real parties Linda L. Pearson and the estate of her deceased former husband, Robin H. Pearson. Linda Pearson was seriously injured and Robin Pearson was killed when the two went swimming in the ocean adjacent to their Acapulco hotel. Their complaint alleges the hotel, purportedly under Princess’s corporate control, was negligent for failing to warn them of the dangers of ocean swimming. Princess moved for summary judgment, arguing, inter alia, that the hotel had no duty to warn. The superior court denied the motion. *647 Princess now seeks a writ of mandate to compel the superior court to grant the motion. We stayed proceedings, issued the alternative writ, and heard oral argument. We agree with Princess and issue the writ of mandate.
I. Procedural Background and Facts
Although certain facts surrounding the swimming accident are in dispute, the basic facts are more or less established. The decedent, Robin Pearson, was a manufacturing sales representative for SEM Products, a California company which makes automobile paint. SEM awarded Mr. Pearson with an all-expense paid vacation at the Pierre Marques Hotel, Acapulco, in recognition of his sales record. Mr. Pearson left for his Acapulco vacation November 8, 1990. He took his former wife, real party Linda Pearson, along with him; there is a suggestion that the couple planned a reconciliation.
The Pearsons arrived at the Pierre Marques on the evening of November 9. The Pierre Marques is a 344-room hotel which shares a 480-acre oceanfront parcel, including 2 golf courses and gardens, with the 1,019-room Acapulco Princess Hotel. Adjacent to both hotels is a beach fronting the Pacific Ocean. Like all beaches in Mexico, the beach in front of the Pierre Marques is federal property, patrolled only by Mexican Marines and police. The beaches are considered government property, subject only to government control, and open to public access at any time. 1
Each room in the Pierre Marques contains an information pamphlet called a “Directory of Services.” This document contains various descriptions of hotel services and amenities including this notation: “The Beach in Front of the Hotels [U The beach in front of the hotels is under the exclusive jurisdiction of the Federal Government. The hotel cannot assume any responsibility for incidents that occur on the beach.”
After their arrival in their room, the Pearsons went for an ocean swim between 10:30 p.m. and midnight. (The Pearsons were not swimming neophytes: Linda was a certified swimming instructor with some experience with ocean swimming; Robin was a certified scuba diver.) To reach the beach from the hotel, the Pearsons walked through a gate let into a seawall. Their path would have taken them past two signs, one a sign with a red pennant warning of high tides, the other a warning sign, which stated with red capital letters on a white background: “Warning[:] [1] Swimming in *648 the Ocean Can Be Dangerous[.] The Beach Is Federal Property and the Hotel Is Not Responsible for any Act Oc[c]urring in This Area[.] Use the Beach and Water at Your Own Risk[.] Do Not Visit the Beach at Night[.] Do Not Go Far From the Hotel at Any Time[.]” In her deposition, Linda Pearson denied seeing either sign, although there is evidence that the beach area was well lit.
The November 9 swim went without incident. The next day, November 10, 1990, after consuming a light to moderate amount of alcohol, the Pearsons went back to the ocean for another swim. They walked through the hotel lobby with towels and in bathing attire, and no hotel employee warned them not to swim in the ocean. While swimming the Pearsons were caught in a sudden undertow, large waves, and riptide currents. Robin Pearson drowned; Linda Pearson was injured.
Linda Pearson and Robin Pearson’s estate filed the present action for personal injuries and wrongful death. Their complaint alleged, inter alia, that as the operator of a hotel Princess had an affirmative duty to warn its guests of the known hazards of swimming in the ocean. 2
Princess moved for summary judgment on the legal question of whether a hotel operator has a duty to warn guests of the dangers of ocean swimming.
3
The trial court denied the motion, ruling that
Swann
v.
Olivier
(1994)
II. Discussion
Swann
contains a cogent and exhaustive discussion of the California cases on the liability of a landowner for a defective or dangerous condition of adjacent property. In that case, a man was injured while swimming in the surf area of the “public ocean” (seaward of the high tide line) of a private
*649
beach. (
Referring to this “commonsense rule,”
Swann, supra,
22 Cal.App.4th at pages 1329-1330, reviewed the California premises liability decisions uniformly holding that: (1) summary judgment may be granted where a defendant unequivocally establishes a lack of ownership, possession, or control (see, e.g.,
Seaber
v.
Hotel Del Coronado
(1991)
Swann
then distilled the two exceptions to the rule: (1) Liability may be imposed when the landowners “imposed or created some palpable external effect on the area where the plaintiff was injured”; and (2) liability may be imposed on the landowners when they “received a special commercial benefit from the area of the injury plus had direct or de facto control of that area.” (
Swann
then waxed eloquent: “In the present case, by contrast, any thought of ‘control’ over the area of injury is out of the question. The idea that anyone can control the ‘ “sledge hammering seas” ’ and ‘ “inscrutable tides of God” ’ is debatable, to say the least. (See
Carolina Beach
Fish[.]
Pier
v.
Town of Carolina Beach
(1970)
Swann
distinguished two cases, which are now relied on by real parties, in which there was at least the possibility raised of a plaintiff’s recovery for surf injuries;
Buchanan
v.
City of Newport Beach
(1975)
The present case seems to be
Swann
once removed: This is a suit against private adjacent landowners whose property abuts a public beach— owned and controlled by the Mexican government—in turn abutting the uncontrollable ocean.
Swann
provides compelling authority that the Pierre Marques had no duty to warn as a matter of law. Real parties argue that as an innkeeper, not just a landowner, the hotel had an enhanced duty to take care of its guests and thus a duty to warn. The California cases do not distinguish between landowners and innkeeper-landowners in this context of liability for adjacent premises. Indeed,
Seaber,
a leading case in the area, involved a hotel whose guest was killed while crossing a public street which the hotel
*651
knew was used by its guests to reach a nearby parking lot. The lack of premises liability, or a duty to warn, was based on the lack of control: “Implicit in the absence of control is that the Hotel cannot be reasonably expected to take action where it is, in fact, powerless to do so. [Citation].”
(Seaber, supra,
The Florida courts have held that an innkeeper “has no duty to warn its guests of naturally occurring surf conditions off of a public beach. [Citation].”
(Adika
v.
Beekman Towers, Inc.
(Fla.Dist.Ct.App. 1994)
Other courts suggest a modem expansion of the traditional Restatement mle quoted by
Adika
against off-premises liability. Oregon courts leave it to the trier of fact to determine whether the innkeeper’s failure to warn of a risk not known to the plaintiff was reasonable in a given case. (See
Fuhrer
v.
Gearhart by the Sea
(1988)
One must be sensitive to the obvious fact that the hotel does substantially commercially benefit from its oceanfront premises, and that the proximity of *652 the Pacific Ocean no doubt draws substantial numbers of paying guests. The argument that because of this commercial benefit the hotel bears a duty to warn its guests of the ocean’s dangers simply ignores the law of this state. The California cases, as correctly analyzed by Swann, require control as well as a commercial benefit; and the ocean is simply not within the control of humankind. Moreover, the mere fact that an aesthetic natural phenomenon attracts tourists may not ipso facto impose such liability: The owner of a concession of mountain cabins may use color brochures of the Trinity Alps to attract customers, but has no legal duty to warn of the dangers of mountain climbing.
We regularly review and must affirm summary judgments in tort cases denying recovery to plaintiffs who have plainly been the
sole
authors of their own injuries, through carelessness or by engaging in conduct fraught with risk. (See, e.g.,
State of California
v.
Superior Court
(1995)
III. Disposition
Let a peremptory writ of mandate issue commanding respondent superior court to set aside its order denying Princess’s motion for summary judgment, and to enter a new and different order granting the motion. The stay of proceedings will dissolve upon finality of this opinion as to this court.
King, J., and Haning, J., concurred.
The petition of real parties in interest for review by the Supreme Court was denied June 15, 1995.
Notes
There is some dispute over whether the hotel had some control over the beach, especially with regard to the hotel’s ability to control access and lighting. As we will discuss post, this factual dispute is not determinative of the legal issue of whether there is a duty to warn.
Other allegations against other defendants are irrelevant to this writ proceeding and, therefore, are not discussed in this opinion.
Princess also moved for summary judgment on its defense that real parties had wrongfully sued Princess because Princess had no corporate control over the Pierre Marques and was not, as real parties alleged, the corporate alter ego of the managing corporations of the Acapulco hotel. The trial court found triable issues of material fact on this issue. We do not discuss it herein because our resolution of the legal question of the duty to warn renders moot the factual question of actual control over the hotel. Whoever operated the Pierre Marques had no duty to warn guests of the dangers of ocean swimming.
The Swann court might have added Shakespeare to its literary romp: “Glendower: I can call spirits from the vasty deep.
Hotspur: Why, so can I, or so can any man;
But will they come when you do call for them?”
(Shakespeare, The First Part of King Henry IV, act III; scene 1.)
