*1401 Opinion
Maurine Scroggs, plaintiff and surviving spouse of Frank W. Scroggs, appeals a summary judgment entered against her in her wrongful death action against Coast Community College and Barry Bandaruk. She contends the trial court erred in finding a release and waiver, executed by her husband before his death, bars the action as a matter of law. We agree and reverse.
In September 1982 Frank Scroggs enrolled in a scuba diving class offered by Coast Community College, and in that connection executed a release prepared by Coast. The following February, during a class certification dive, Frank drowned. The release provides for the participant to waive any claims “[he or his] heirs, representatives, executors and administrators thereof . . . have or may have against the said The Coast Community Colleges [sic] or any or all of the above mentioned persons ... by reason of any accidents, illness, injury or death, or other consequences arising or resulting directly or indirectly from participation in SCUBA diving under the auspices of the Coast Community Colleges occurring during said participation, or any time subsequent thereto.”
Following the death of her husband, Mrs. Scroggs filed a complaint against Coast Community College and Barry Bandaruk, the class instructor, alleging the death of her husband by drowning was a result of defendants’ negligence. Defendants answered the complaint asserting a release as an affirmative defense and then moved for summary judgment. On December 3, 1985, the trial court granted the motion and judgment was entered in favor of both defendants and against plaintiff. This appeal followed. 1
I
Our review of a summary judgment is limited to determining upon a de novo examination whether there was no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. (See
D’Aguisto
v.
Campbell Industries
(1984)
*1402
Scroggs cites two California cases in support of her position that the court erred in finding the release binding.
Earley
v.
Pacific Electric Ry. Co.
(1917)
The effectiveness of a release to bar a wrongful death action was recently considered in
Coates
v.
Newhall Land & Farming, Inc.
(1987)
The absence in Coates of any analysis of section 377 can only be justified by the court’s conclusion that the express contractual assumption of the risk, combined with the express waiver of defendants’ negligence, constituted a complete defense to the surviving heirs’ wrongful death action. This is different than holding the action is barred. The failure to draw a distinction between facts giving rise to a complete defense to a wrongful death action, and facts precluding a wrongful death action, tends unnecessarily to obfuscate a clear and uncomplicated chain of decisional law concerning the nature and effect of California’s wrongful death statute.
It is axiomatic that a plaintiff in a wrongful death action is subject to defenses which could have been asserted against the decedent. (See, e.g.,
*1403
Hasson
v.
Ford Motor Co.
(1977)
The longstanding rule is that a wrongful death action is a separate and distinct right belonging to the heirs, and it does not arise until the death of the decedent.
(Earley
v.
Pacific Electric Ry. Co., supra,
The wrongful death action was created by the Legislature, and apart from amendments affecting damages, the statute establishing the action has remained virtually unchanged since its enactment in 1862. Exceptions to the rule that the action is not derivative should be made by the Legislature, not the courts. Any contract, intending to limit or destroy a cause of action which belongs to the heirs, should be construed with an abundance of caution.
Respondents rely on a series of so-called “railway pass” cases from other jurisdictions but these are not persuasive. Nor are we impressed by their efforts to analogize the situation here to medical malpractice cases in which California courts have consistently upheld the right of medical plan members to bind others, including heirs, to the arbitration of their claims. (See, e.g.,
Madden
v.
Kaiser Foundation Hospitals
(1976)
*1404 “The arbitration provision in such contracts [for medical care] is a reasonable restriction, for it does no more than specify a forum for the settlement of disputes.” Thus, it is clear that imposing a requirement to arbitrate only limits the litigant’s choice of a forum, and in no way proscribes or impairs the substantive right. It would be a reach of Bunyanesque proportions to stretch these holdings to one which would bar the prosecution of the wrongful death action itself.
In the release prepared by Coast Community College, there is no language indicating the decedent intended to assume all risks of the activity, nor does the release encompass a waiver of defendants’ negligence. The presence of a clear and unequivocal waiver with specific reference to a defendant’s negligence is a distinct requirement where the defendant seeks to use the agreement to escape responsibility for the consequences of his negligence.
(Vinnell Co.
v.
Pacific Elec. Ry. Co.
(1959)
The trial court here found
McAtee
v.
Newhall Land & Farming Co.
(1985)
Furthermore, it is of no moment that scuba diving is of little public importance and serves no significant public purpose. Contracts seeking to release in advance the right to bring a wrongful death action, are not binding on the decedent’s heirs, and there is no compelling reason to create an exception in the case of so-called “sports risk” cases. A surviving heir of a sports enthusiast is entitled to the same protection as the surviving heir of the victim of an automobile accident. If the decedent has provided the defendant with a partial or total defense, the defendant may assert it in response to the lawsuit. The release in this case fails to provide defendants with such protection.
The judgment is reversed. Appellant is entitled to costs on appeal.
