The opinion of the court was delivered by
Plaintiff Nicholas Rosania brought a Law Division action against defendants Marvin Carmona and his business corporation, North Jersey Martial Arts Academy, Inc. (NJMAA), seeking damages for a retinal detachment suffered during a karate proficiency test match in 1992 with the instructor, Carmona. Rosania alleged he was kicked violently in the face in violation of defendants’ own written rule that prohibited targeting the head and any contact, even with a legal target area.
During the jury trial, Carmona denied making any contact during the match. He also disputed the applicability of a rule prohibiting targets above or below the front middle part of the body. The jury found on special interrogatory that Carmona did kick Rosania in the “eye” [sic]. However, it was not asked to determine whether Rosania had been informed of any change in the permissible target rules or whether such deviation from the published dojo (karate school) rules was a matter of common knowledge and acceptance. Charged that liability would only arise if the kick that caused Rosania’s injury was reckless or intentional, the jury found no cause for action, and the ease was dismissed. A new trial motion was denied.
Rosania appeals, urging that: (1) it was error to charge the jury that plaintiff had to prove defendants’ actions were reckless rather than negligent; (2) the verdict of no recklessness was contrary to the weight of the evidence; and, (3) his motion for a new trial should have been granted.
Assuming that it was correct to apply a legal duty standard of reckless or intentional conduct under the facts of this case, our review of the record discloses that Rosania’s second and third arguments are otherwise without merit. R. 2:ll-3(e)(l)(E). The appeal hinges, therefore, upon an evaluation of the existence and nature of the duty owed by defendants to Rosania under the particular circumstances and nature of relationships in this sports injury action. Was the jury properly charged under the heightened recklessness standard enunciated in Crawn v. Campo, 136
We hold that in this commercial setting, the jury should have been charged that defendants owed a duty to patrons of the dojo not to increase the risks inherent in the sport of karate under the rules a reasonable student would have expected to be in effect at that dojo. If it found that targeting of the head was not permitted, or even that a change in the written rule was not unambiguously communicated to Rosania, the jury should have been charged that the correct scope of duty owed by the expert instructor and the academy was one of due care commensurate with: (1) foreseeability by the instructor of the high degree of hazard and likelihood of injury if an illegally targeted kick to the head made contact and, (2) the student’s reasonable reliance upon the published dojo targeting rules. Only upon a jury finding, grounded in the record, that Rosania was made aware that the head was a permissible target, would the more stringent reckless or intentional conduct standard have been appropriate in this case. Accordingly, we reverse and remand.
FACTS
Rosania enrolled at NJMAA in 1991. About 45 years old, he had earlier been skilled for approximately twenty years in different martial arts traditions, but had to begin anew to learn no-contact karate as practiced at NJMAA He testified that he relied upon the printed dojo rules dated January 1992, which are reproduced in Appendix A hereto. The rules state that they are “mandatory and must be followed at all times.” They require use of safety equipment including groin cup and head gear, and provide:
*369 4. Legal target areas, with full control, no contact, are as follows: abdomen (stomach) area only.
5. ILLEGAL target areas: below the belt (groin, knees and shin), back area (kidneys), and to the head.
6. A Black Belt will always instruct class.
In order to be enrolled, Rosania read and signed a registration form which provided:
I understand that all classes undertaken are at my own risk. I also understand the physical and athletic nature of the activities involved in the Art of Karate and the possibility of incurring injuries therein. I will not hold the School Directors Marvin Carmona and Debbie Carmona or anyone else connected to the school responsible for such injuries.
Rosania engaged in a sparring match with Carmona on April 18, 1992 as a test for promotion to green belt status (one to three levels above novice). According to Rosania, who was wearing protective head gear, Carmona kicked him “very hard very suddenly right across the face” resulting in a bloody nose and temporary loss of vision in one eye. Whether Rosania was in fact kicked in the face as he indicated and whether he bled were both vigorously disputed.
Shortly after the incident, Rosania sought medical assistance, initially telling doctors he was hit by a soccer ball. He was referred to an eye specialist for repair of a detached retina.
Carmona denied that the incident occurred, but also testified as to the applicable dojo rules, “I wouldn’t particularly call it a no-blow-to-the-head rule. The face is a legal target area. You can go to the head. However, no contact or light contact is permissible.” Another karate instructor called as an expert by defendants testified similarly as to a general understanding, irrespective of rules.
Deposition testimony of Carmona was read to the jury in which he gave this answer to a question as to what parts of the body are permissible targets: “[The] frontal part of the body would be a permissible target.” He described the front part of the body as “the chest, the abdomen,” ruling out anything below the abdomen as a permissible target. Respecting the frontal part of the face,
Q Could you tell the jury which one is it? Is the face a permissible target or is it as it says in the rules an illegal target? Which one is it?
A I would say that in my opinion that as long as there is no contact to the frontal part of the face that it can be a target area without any contact.
Q Was it a target area when you gave Mr. Rosania his test—
A No.
Q —on April 18,1992?
A Say no.
Q Why? You just told the jury it was a target area.
A This is a testing environment. Mr. Rosania spars quite a few people and, you know, it’s during testing all of your technique is going towards the midsection, period.
Q Mr. Carmona, do you understand my question, sir?
A Could you repeat it?
Q My question was very simple. During the test on April 18, 1992, when you sparred with the plaintiff, was his face a target area that you considered a legal target area?
A No.
Q It was not?
A No.
Rosania acknowledged on cross examination that there were also some “secondary” rules in effect. Those have not been included in the record provided by the parties.
Viewed in the best possible light for defendants, we believe that there was at least an ambiguity as to defendants’ rules respecting permissible target areas and as to the rules governing the sparring incident in question. Accepting the rule reproduced in Appendix A, which was promulgated shortly before the incident, the only legal target was the “abdomen (stomach) area,” “with full control, no contact,” and it was “ILLEGAL” even to target areas below the belt, the back (kidneys) or the head. Rosania said he relied on the published rule and that his reason for enrolling in NJMAA was a desire to learn the safer form of martial art it taught.
Effect of the Rules and, Fantini
We believe that the trial judge erred in applying Fantini to the facts of this case, thereby making irrelevant the dojo’s rules, a critical factor in ascertaining the degree of risk to which Rosania had reason to believe he would be exposed. It is true that in Fantini we held that the practice in a given karate school did not establish a basis for expert testimony as to the generally recognized standard in the profession. Fantini, supra, 172 N.J.Super. at 111,
Barring consideration of NJMAA’s house rules was pivotal in this case. Having rejected the customer/student’s ability to rely on the rule of the dojo rather than a “generally recognized standard,” Rosania was charged by the court with being “fully
It is under this basis for reasonable risk expectation that the appropriate standard of duty owed by defendants to Rosania should have been assessed. As noted above, by his reliance on the “generalized standard” rather than the rules of the dojo, the trial judge concluded that Rosania was fully aware of the particular risks, and so resolved the duty issue by applying Crawn’s reckless or intentional standard rather than the conventional negligence standard for liability.
Duty
The issue of whether defendants owed a legal duty to Rosania and the scope of that duty is a matter of law. Clohesy v. Food Circus Supermarkets, Inc., 149 N.J. 496, 502,
The determination of the existence of a duty ultimately is a question of fairness and policy. Crawn v. Campo, 136 N.J. 494, 501,643 A.2d 600 (1994); Dunphy v. Gregor, 136 N.J. 99, 108,642 A.2d 372 (1994); Kelly v. Gwinnell, 96 N.J. 538, 544,476 A.2d 1219 (1984); Goldberg v. Housing Auth., 38 N.J. 578, 583,186 A.2d 291 (1962). An important, although not dispositive consideration, is the foreseeability of injury to others from the defendant’s conduct. Carter Lincoln-Mercury v. EMAR Group, 135 N.J. 182, 194,638 A.2d 1288 (1994). Also important are the nature of the risk posed by the defendant’s conduct, the relationship of the parties, and the impact on the public of the imposition of a duty of care. Dunphy, supra, 136 N.J. at 108,642 A.2d 372 .
[Id. at 292,676 A.2d 1036 .]
However, a more case-specific theme dominates the cases. In Benitez v. New York City Board of Education,
In Crawn, the Supreme Court took notice that sometimes, as between equally situated participants in competitive contact sports, “practices that technically violate safety rules become part of the accepted behavior of a sport.” Crawn, supra, 136 N.J. at 506,
Utilizing a case-specific analysis appropriate to the present facts, and informed by the policy considerations enunciated in Snyder, supra, 144 N.J. at 292-94,
Reversed and remanded for a new trial.
Notes
In Crown, the catcher in an informal softball game was injured in a collision with a base runner. The Supreme Court held that the "duty of care in establishing liability arising from informal sports activity should be based on a standard that requires, under the circumstances, conduct that is reckless or intentional." Id. at 508,
