Appellants appeal from the granting of summary judgment by the trial court. Briefly, the trial court was of the opinion that appellants’ suit against appellee Y.M.C.A. was barred by the Recreation Use of Land and Water Act (hereinafter RULWA), 68 P.S. § 477-1 et seq. Plaintiff was injured by a falling tree limb while attending his son’s Little League baseball game at a diamond constructed upon appellee Y.M.C.A.’s land. Appellee Clapper’s Tree Service had been hired by appellee Y.M.C.A to care for the trees on the property and to remove rotted and/or dead trees. The tree limb in question broke off and fell after it made contact with overhead power lines owned by appellee Pennsylvania Electric Company. The order under review granted summary judgment only as to appellee Y.M.C.A
No fee was charged appellant husband to enter upon the land. The land in question was situated in a residential area of Roaring Spring, Pennsylvania, and occupied approximately an entire town block. The record is not entirely clear, but it *489 appears that the baseball field occupied most, if not all, of the plot of land.
The core issue presented is whether the nature of the land and the land’s location in a residential area take the property out of the purview of the RULWA, 68 P.S. § 477-6(1). A secondary issue is whether allegedly willful and malicious conduct on the part of appellee Y.M.C.A. falls under one of the exceptions to the RULWA. For the reasons which follow, we believe that appellant husband’s injury occurred on a part of appellee Y.M.C.A’s land that is of a type contemplated by the RULWA and that the conduct of appellee Y.M.C.A. was not willful and malicious; therefore, we will affirm the order entered July 3, 1991, granting summary judgment.
We begin our analysis by reiterating the standard to be employed when considering a motion for summary judgment:
[ Summary judgment] shall be rendered if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.
Pa.R.C.P. 1035(b).
See also Klineburger v. Maritrans,
Pennsylvania’s RULWA is virtually identical to the proposed model act: 1
§ 477-1. Purpose; liability
The purpose of this act is to encourage owners of land to make land and water areas available to the public for *490 recreational purposes by limiting their liability toward persons entering thereon for such purposes.
§ 477-2. Definitions
Ar, used in this act:
(1) “Land” means land, roads, water, watercourses, private ways and buildings, structures and machinery or equipment when attached to the realty.
(2) “Owner” means the possessor of a fee interest, a tenant, lessee, occupant or person in control of the premises.
(3) “Recreational purpose” includes, but is not limited to, any of the following, or any combination thereof: hunting, fishing, swimming, boating, camping picnicking, hiking, pleasure driving, nature study, water skiing, water sports and viewing or enjoying historical, archaeological, scenic, or scientific sites.
(4) “Charge” means the admission price or fee asked in return for invitation or permission to enter or go upon the land.
§ 477-3. Duty to keep premises safe; warning
Except as specifically recognized or provided in section 6 of this act, an owner of land owes no duty of care to keep the premises safe for entry or use by others for recreational purposes, or to give any warning of a dangerous condition, use, structure, or activity on such premises to persons entering for such purposes.
§ 477-4. Assurance of safe premises; duty of care; responsibility, liability
Except as specifically recognized by or provided in section 6 of this act, an owner of land who either directly or indirectly invites or permits without charge any person to use such property for recreational purposes does not thereby:
(1) Extend any assurance that the premises are safe for any purpose.
(2) Confer upon such person the legal status of an invitee or licensee to whom a duty of care is owed.
*491 (3) Assume responsibility for or incur liability for any injury to persons or property caused by an act of omission of such persons.
§ 477-5. Land leased to State or subdivision
Unless otherwise agreed in writing, the provisions of sections 3 and 4 of this act shall be deemed applicable to the duties and liability of an owner of land leased to the State or any subdivision thereof for recreational purposes.
§ 477-6. Liability not limited
Nothing in this act limits in any way any liability which otherwise exists:
(1) For wilful [sic] or malicious failure to guard or warn against a dangerous condition, use, structure, or activity.
(2) For injury suffered in any case where the owner of land charges the person or persons who enter or go on the land for the recreational use thereof, except that in the case of land leased to the State or a subdivision thereof, any consideration received by the owner for such lease shall not be deemed a charge within the meaning of this section.
§ 477-7. Construction of act
Nothing in this act shall be construed to:
(1) Create a duty of care or ground of liability for injury to persons or property.
(2) Relieve any person using the land of another for recreational purposes from any obligation which he may have in the absence of this act to exercise care in his use of such land and in his activities thereon, or from the legal consequences of failure to employ such care.
As of 1988, 48 states had enacted some form of law limiting the liability of the landowner to those who come upon the property for a recreational purpose. Approximately 20 states have enacted essentially the model act. 2 Nevertheless, in spite of the apparent uniformity of legislation, we observe a widespread conflict among the jurisdictions as to exactly what *492 type of land is intended to be covered by the liability limitation:
The case interpretations emphasize that the type of areas protected are those which are natural, unimproved, and undeveloped. Louisiana uses the term ‘type normally encountered in true outdoors,’ which does not include playground-slide in town park, a recreational area within a populated city adjacent to a much traveled lakeshore drive, a civic center, or a wooded area in the city administered by the park district. In California the court held that the immunity was only for unaltered natural condition areas. Other areas held by case law to be under the statute include tracts of woodland and wetlands, gravel pits, abandoned mine shaft, dirt bike track parallel to railroad, concrete drainage ditch, and an improved portion of property, such as a private roadway. And, in the other direction, Boileau v. DeCecco held that amending the New Jersey statute by inserting the word ‘premise’ did not enlarge the protected class of landowners to include homeowners in suburbia and did not confer immunity on an occupier of premises in a residential setting. However, a 1985 Michigan Appeals case protected homeowners in their backyards. The Delaware court held that the statute did not apply to urban or residential areas improved with pools, tennis courts and the like; but the Ohio court included residential pools within the statute. However, Michigan extended application of Recreational Land Users Act to city property located in urban areas and then reversed itself in 1987; and, a 1987 Nebraska case in a power district substation site held its law applicable to urban as well as rural areas. A 1984 Louisiana case held that playground bleachers were within the statute, but a 1986 Connecticut case held to the contrary on football stadium bleachers. In an earlier Oregon situation the court held that the premises of a church on which softball was being played was not included because it was not ‘agricultural’ land, and a school was not covered when a child was injured while playing near a football field. However, in two 1986 cases, it was held that a baseball field was *493 included within the statute. Playgrounds have been held not within the statute; however, a vacant lot used for informal recreation was held within the statute. The courts have held that an oil well pump site where young children played, a grass strip between sidewalk and trees in city park, and a street were not within the recreational user statute, nor were areas, although used for recreation, which were in a populous, urban, or residential area. Application of the statute to injuries occasioned on roadways seems to vary with the nature of the travel and road and the status of the traveler.
van der Smissen, Betty, Legal Liability and Risk Management for Public and Private Entities, Anderson Publishing Company, 1990, pp. 207-209 (footnotes omitted).
In spite of its conciseness and apparent simplicity, the RULWA has managed to weave a tortured tapestry of decisional law in a multitude of jurisdictions in which it has been enacted. At the heart of the dispute is the ascertainment of what nature of land is contemplated as being removed from liability under the Act. This thread of conflicting case law has not left our own Commonwealth untouched.
For instance, in
Lowman v. Indiana Area School District,
Our supreme court first addressed the scope of the immunity provisions of the Act in
Rivera v. Philadelphia Theological Seminary,
The Recreation Use Act is therefore designed to encourage the opening up of large, private land holdings for outdoor recreational use by the general public by limiting the liability of the landowner. Considering that purpose, we believe the Legislature intended to limit the meaning of the words ‘buildings, structures and machinery or equipment when attached to the realty’ in Section 2 of the Act, 68 P.S. § 477-2, to ancillary structures attached to open space lands made available for recreation and not to enclosed recreational facilities in urban regions.
The intention of the Legislature to limit the applicability of the Recreation Use Act to outdoor recreation on largely unimproved land is evident not only from the Act’s stated purpose but also from the nature of the activities it listed as recreational purposes within the meaning of the statute. Specifically, with the exception of ‘swimming,’ which may be either an indoor or outdoor sport, the recreational activities enumerated in the statute are all pursued outdoors.
Id.,
In effect, the court focused on the type of land intended to be covered and the nature of the recreational activities contemplated by the Act, and determined that the Legislature intended to limit the applicability of the RULWA to outdoor recreational activities on largely unimproved land. In dissent, joined by Justices McDermott and Zappala, Chief Justice Nix took issue with what he considered to be the majority’s narrow reading of the RULWA.
*495 Both the majority opinion and appellee maintain that the Seminary, an urban building, does not fall within the scope of the Act. The Superior Court took the contrary view and concluded that an urban building could fall within the scope of the Act.
As the Superior Court aptly noted;
There is nothing unreasonable about applying the limited liability decreed by the legislature in a uniform manner to lands, whether urban, suburban or rural, which are made available for recreational use without charge. The broad language adopted by the legislature suggests most strongly that the legislature deemed the need for recreational lands in urban centers to be as great as the need therefor in rural areas of the State.
Rivera v. Philadelphia Theological Seminary,326 Pa.Super. 509 ,474 A.2d 605 , 611 (1984).
An attempt to create an artificial exclusion to limit the owners of private property who would choose to open their lands for recreational purposes merely because the property is situated in an urban area, undercuts legislation such as the Act and frustrates the salutory [sic] purposes sought to be achieved.
Thus, because the Seminary is a building located in an urban area, it does not follow that the Seminary is not covered by the Act. Nowhere is it expressly stated in the Act that the recreational use must occur outdoors. I therefore believe it improper to create such a limitation by judicial fiat.
Id.
The majority however, eschewing the clear intent of the General Assembly, ignores the obvious fact that the legislature, without comment, in plain words and intention, did not *496 mean to exclude those who cannot walk out their back door through leafy lanes to shining lakes, from the charity of those who offer indoor swimming pools in the hot and dusty city. The argument that they are excluded because they are easily supervised is ludicrous.
There is unexpected danger inherent in all recreational activities, whether it be the wild danger of the outback or a slip on a marble floor. The whole concept of immunity is the presence of danger. To say that a pond, lake, quarry, brook or swimming pool across a city line is immune when offered free to the public, but the same in an urban area is not, however comparable in size and danger, because it has a roof, is simply whimsical. The legislature balanced danger against a benefit to a great number of people; allowing a use of facilities with immunity from liability, great and small, so that many could have, what the possible consequences for an injury to one, would make improvident to give to any.
Id.,
Sifting through the various interpretations of the legislative intent of the Act as set out in the opposing views of Rivera, we are left with the conclusion that in addition to any requirements imposed directly under the RULWA, the majority holding required that in order for land to fall within the purview of the Act, it must be outdoors, largely unimproved and, inferentially, rural as opposed to urban. This gels with two policies that have been articulated as underlying the RULWA:
The first policy is the protection of the owners of large tracts of unimproved land. If a tract of land is large, the landowner will be disinclined to open it for public use because of the high costs of monitoring and maintaining the property. The RUA is intended to motivate this landowner to open his lands for public use by relieving him of the duty of monitoring and maintaining the property when the property is in public use. The size and remoteness of the property must be considered when determining whether property qualifies as land under the RUA. Large and *497 remote tracts are expensive to monitor and maintain and, therefore, should be protected. By contrast, smaller, readily accessible tracts of land are less costly to maintain and therefore should not qualify as land under the RUA----
The second policy underlying recreational use acts is the protection of the reasonable expectations of recreational users. Under this policy, two factors should dictate whether property qualifies as land under a recreational use act. The first factor to consider is the location of the land (urban versus rural). The second factor is the extent of improvements on the land.
It is more reasonable for the recreational user to expect that land located in urban (populated) areas will be maintained, and therefore such land should not be protected by the RUA.... The more improved the property, the more reasonable it is for the user to expect that the landowner has maintained it in a safe condition.
Renwand, Sandra M., “Beyond Commonwealth v. Auresto: Which Property Is Protected by the Recreation Use of Land & Water Act?,” 49 U.Pitt.L.R. 261, 1987, pp. 277-80 (footnotes omitted). While our supreme court did not expressly state these policies in Rivera, certainly they were implicit in the rationale utilized by the majority therein. 3
*498
Rivera
was soon followed by
Commonwealth Department of Environmental Resources v. Auresto,
In the interlude between
Auresto
and the supreme court’s latest pronouncement on the RULWA, the Commonwealth Court and this court have grappled with this issue. In
Walsh v. City of Philadelphia,
In
Zackhery v. Crystal Cave Company,
In
Wurth by Wurth v. City of Philadelphia,
This Court notes that the litany of defined ‘recreational purposes’ under the Recreation Act, while not exhaustive, supports the interpretation that the act was intended to provide immunity for landowners who donated largely unimproved land for such ‘outdoors/ purposes: hunting, fishing, hiking, camping, picknicking [sic], etc.
This Court therefore concludes that a playground is not per se land covered by the Recreation Act.
Wurth,
However, in 1991 our supreme court had an opportunity to revisit the Act in its reversal of the Commonwealth court’s decision in Walsh I and in so doing the court appears to have abandoned Rivera’s exclusionary focus on the nature of the land in favor of one which is more inclusive and looks to the use and condition of the land covered by the Act. After Walsh II, it appears that any land no matter where situate is covered by the RULWA if used for recreational purposes; however such land may lose its immunity status if substantially improved and such improvement causes injury.
*500
In
Walsh v. City of Philadelphia,
When a recreational facility has been designed with improvements that require regular maintenance to be safely used and enjoyed, the owner of the facility has a duty to maintain the improvements. When such an improved facility is allowed to deteriorate and that deterioration causes a foreseeable injury to persons for whose use the facility was designed, the owner of the facility is subject to liability. We do not believe that the RUA was intended by the legislature to circumvent this basic principle of tort law.
Walsh II,
Returning to the instant case, we determine that under the authority of Walsh II, we must hold that a fenced-in baseball field in a small community is land within the meaning of RULWA. However, while generally our next inquiry would focus on whether or not this land was improved within the meaning of Walsh II such that it would be beyond the purview of the Act, we find that such an inquiry is unnecessary under the facts of this case.
*501 We note that while appellant husband was on appellee Y.M.C.A.’s land to observe a baseball game, his injury did not arise out any improvement to the baseball field. Appellant husband’s injury was caused by a falling, decayed tree limb. Importantly, this limb came from a part of appellee Y.C.M.A’s land which remained unimproved. For this reason, we believe the section of land upon which appellant husband’s injury was occasioned was within the purview of the RULWA Moreover, under the apparent implication of Walsh II’s policy of inclusion, the fact that the land in question was a partially developed, residential tract is of no consequence; unimproved portions of it may still come under the liability limitation of the RULWA.
This holding puts us in seeming conflict with a recent decision of the Commonwealth Court. In
Mills v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and Penn’s Landing Corporation,
However, I disagree that an urban mixed use facility such as Penn’s Landing can never be covered by RULWA. Those portions of Penn’s Landing that are devoted to public recreation and require no maintenance as defined in Walsh [Walsh II], e.g., large grassy areas are within RULWA ambit just as if they were in a rural area. The purpose of the Act is to make private land open for recreational use no matter where located.
Mills,
We find appellants’ second argument, whether allegedly willful and malicious conduct on the part of appellee Y.M.C.A falls under one of the exceptions to the RULWA, 68 P.S. § 477-6(1), easier to refute. When appellee Y.M.CA. was put on notice that some of the trees on its property were in a state of dangerous decay, appellee Y.W.C.A engaged a tree service to cut back and/or remove those trees which presented a danger. Appellants’ claim that appellee Y.M.C.A was willful or malicious in waiting four or five years from time of notice until hiring a tree service appears misplaced to us. Not only was the tree service engaged at least a month or two prior to appellant husband’s accident, but according to appellants’ brief, 4 it apparently had worked on the very tree which caused the injury. We would characterize this sort of behavior as prudent rather than willful or malicious.
Accordingly, the order of the trial court entered July 3, 1991, granting summary judgment as to appellee Y.M.C.A, is hereby affirmed. Jurisdiction relinquished.
Notes
. See "Public Recreation on Private Lands: Limitations on Liability,” XXIV Suggested State Legislation 150-52 (Council of State Governments, 1965).
. van der Smissen, Betty, Legal Liability and Risk Management for Public and Private Entities, Anderson Publishing Company, 1990, p. 190.
. In a footnote, the Rivera court stated:
The need to limit owner liability derives from the impracticability of keeping large tracts of largely undeveloped land safe for public use. The same need does not arise in the case of indoor recreational facilities which, in contrast, are relatively easy to supervise and monitor for safety hazards. See, e.g., Harrison v. Middlesex Water Co.,80 N.J. 391 ,403 A.2d 910 (1979) (New Jersey’s act applies specifically to certain enumerated outdoor activities which, ordinarily, can be accommodated only on large sized tracts of rural or semi-rural lands which are difficult to defend from trespassers and to make safe for invited persons engaging in recreational activity); Tijerina v. Cornelius Christian Church,273 Or. 58 ,539 P.2d 634 (1975) (Oregon act applies to landholdings which have recreational value but are not susceptible to adequate policing or curing of dangerous conditions). See also Barrett, Good Sports and Bad Lands: The Application of Washington's Recreational Use Statute Limiting Landowner Liability, 53 Wash.L.R. 1, 23 (1977) (“the amount of land owned by the defendant is important in determining whether the maintenance of safe conditions or adequate warning signs is practical!;] [f]air-grounds, a lakeside resort, a military reservation, and a twenty-seven
*498 acre pond have all been found within the intended scope of state recreational use statutes [while] an abandoned barge, a residential swimming pool, and a three-acre ball field have been held to be beyond the reach of such statutes” (footnotes omitted)).
Rivera,
. Brief at 21.
