These cases come before this Court on appeals by plaintiffs from the trial court’s granting of summary judgments in favor of defendant Norwich University. We affirm.
Plaintiffs are engineers for the Central Vermont Railway. They were wounded in separate shooting incidents on December 17, 1981, and on March 10, 1982. Defendant Kenneth Day, a student at Norwich University, was apprehended by the police shortly after the second shooting incident. Day pled guilty to one count of aggravated assault and was incarcerated for a period of one year.
On December 11, 1984, plaintiffs filed civil actions against both Day and Norwich University, seeking damages for injuries suffered as a consequence of the shooting incidents. On June 11, 1986, the Washington Superior Court entered judgment in favor of defendant Norwich University on its motions for summary judgment, finding that (1) Norwich University owed no duty of care to plaintiffs, (2) even if such a duty did exist, the breach of the alleged duty was not the proximate cause of plaintiffs’ injuries, and (3) the doctrine of strict liability was inapplicable to the circumstances of the case.
Plaintiffs appealed, alleging error by the trial court in granting the summary judgment motions while genuine issues of material fact existed, and that the court erred as a matter of law in finding that Norwich University owed no duty to plaintiffs. At oral argument, plaintiffs abandoned their claim of strict liability. Since we find, as a matter of law, that Norwich University owed no duty of care to plaintiffs, we need not reach plaintiffs’ other contention.
In order to succeed on a motion for summary judgment, the moving party must satisfy a two-part test: first, no genuine issue of material fact must exist between the parties, and second, there must be a valid legal theory which entitles the moving party to judgment as a matter of law. V.R.C.P. 56(c);
Gore
v.
Green Mountain Lakes, Inc.,
The first prerequisite in any negligence proceeding must be to establish the existence of a legally cognizable duty. 1 “A duty, in negligence cases, may be defined as an obligation, to which the law will give recognition and effect, to conform to a particular standard of conduct toward another.” W. Prosser & W. Keeton, The Law of Torts § 53, at 356 (5th ed. 1984). A legal duty may arise in a broad range of situations. See, e.g., Duty to Aid the Endangered Act, 12 V.S.A. § 519(a) (“A person who knows that another is exposed to grave physical harm shall. . . give reasonable assistance to the exposed person . . . .”). Plaintiffs’ claims against Norwich University rely on the unrecognized theory that a duty of care extends from a university to third persons harmed by the criminal acts of its students.
This Court recently examined the question of an institution’s “duty” to control the actions of others. In
Peck
v.
Counseling Service of Addison County, Inc.,
Generally, there is no duty to control the conduct of another in order to protect a third person from harm. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 315 (1965). A recognized exception to this general rule arises in the situation “where there is ... a special relationship between two persons which gives the one a definite control over the actions of the other . . . .” Harper & Kime, The Duty to Control the Conduct of Another, 43 Yale L.J. 886, 895 (1934).
Id.
at 64-65,
Plaintiffs argue that a special relationship existed in this case, because of the degree of control exerted by Norwich University *598 over its students’ activities. Plaintiffs particularly stress the importance of the fact that Norwich University has numerous rules and regulations which prohibit the illegal conduct engaged in by Cadet Day. Plaintiffs allege that it was the breakdown in the enforcement of these rules and regulations which proximately caused plaintiffs’ injuries. Finally, plaintiffs argue that the degree of control exerted by Norwich University over its students through its stringent rules and regulations resulted in the creation of a duty running from Norwich University to plaintiffs. We disagree.
The fact that Norwich University may exercise a large degree of control over the activities of its students does not, of itself, impose a legal duty upon the university to control the volitional criminal acts of its students.
2
See
Heller
v.
Consolidated Rail Corp.,
*599
Plaintiffs would have us create a new common law duty of care where none has previously existed. We have recently stated that “[o]ur Court should not recognize a new cause of action or enlarge an existing one without first determining whether there is a compelling public policy reason for the change.”
Langle
v.
Kurkul,
*600 Affirmed.
Notes
It remains indisputable that “[a]bsent a duty of care, an action for negligence must fail.”
Behn
v.
Northeast Appraisal Co.,
The fact that Norwich University is a military college, and not the typical liberal arts university, is of no materiality. Our refusal to extend the duty of care in this instance would be equally applicable to any institution of higher learning. The students attending these institutions are usually of age and must be treated as adults with the full range of rights and responsibilities for their actions as any other adult. See
American Future Systems, Inc.
v.
Pennsylvania State University,
While the effect of rules and regulations governing student life at Norwich University is a genuine factual issue which would be improper to dispose of on a summary judgment motion, these rules and regulations fail to give rise to a legal duty, no matter how much “control” may be exerted therein by Norwich University. See
Langle
v.
Kurkul,
While we recognize that the university does not stand in loco parentis to its students, the following analogy may be applicable. It is “suggested that a parent may be liable for his failure so to rear and train his child as to make it amenable to discipline. Parents might properly be horrified at the thought of being held legally responsible for the efficacy of their disciplinary measures.” Harper & Kime, The Duty to Control the Conduct of Another, 43 Yale L.J. 886, 895 (1934).
By way of example, we would not want universities to stop teaching computer science for fear that one of their students might use this knowledge for fraudulent electronic bank transfers.
