Tara Sweeney, Individually, And By Cynthia Sweeney, Her Mother And Next Friend Vs. City Of Bettendorf And Bettendorf Parks And Recreation ( 2009 )


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  •               IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 07–0127
    Filed March 13, 2009
    TARA SWEENEY, Individually, and by
    CYNTHIA SWEENEY, Her Mother and Next Friend,
    Appellants,
    vs.
    CITY OF BETTENDORF AND
    BETTENDORF PARKS AND RECREATION,
    Appellees.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Scott County, J. Hobart
    Darbyshire, Judge.
    Plaintiffs appeal district court’s grant of summary judgment in
    negligent supervision case. AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART,
    AND REMANDED.
    Joseph C. Creen of Bush, Motto, Creen, Koury & Halligan, P.L.C.,
    Davenport, for appellants.
    Martha L. Shaff and Edward J. Rose of Betty, Neuman &
    McMahon, P.L.C., Davenport, for appellees.
    2
    APPEL, Justice.
    This case involves an appeal from a district court order granting
    the City of Bettendorf summary judgment in a negligent supervision
    case. Here, an eight-year-old girl was injured by a flying baseball bat at
    a minor league game while on a field trip sponsored by the Bettendorf
    Parks and Recreation Department.          The district court found that a
    permission slip signed by the parent of the injured girl amounted to an
    enforceable anticipatory release of future claims against the City. The
    district court in the alternative ruled that the plaintiffs failed to introduce
    sufficient evidence to show that the City violated a duty of care owed to
    the plaintiffs. For the reasons expressed below, we affirm in part, reverse
    in part, and remand the case to the district court.
    I. Background Facts and Prior Proceedings.
    Eight-year-old Tara Sweeney enjoyed baseball games.                 She
    participated in field trips to Davenport, Iowa, sponsored by the
    Bettendorf Parks and Recreation Department to see minor league
    baseball games.     In the past, according to Tara, the children sat in
    “comfy seats” behind home plate that were protected by screening.
    In 2003, Tara wanted to go to another ball game. Prior to the field
    trip, Tara’s mother, Cynthia Sweeney, was asked to sign what was
    entitled a “Permission Slip,” which the Department required of all
    participants. The text of the “Permission Slip” was as follows:
    I hereby give permission for my child Tara M. Sweeney to
    attend the Bettendorf Park Board field trip to John O’Donnell
    Stadium with the Playgrounds Program on Monday,
    June 30, 2003. I realize that the Bettendorf Park Board is
    not responsible or liable for any accidents or injuries that
    may occur while on this special occasion. Failure to sign
    this release as is without amendment or alteration is
    grounds for denial of participation.
    3
    Prior to signing the “Permission Slip,” Cynthia talked with a
    supervisor about the trip. She was told the times of the field trip and
    who would be supervising Tara’s group. She then executed and returned
    the permission slip to the Department.
    At the game, the children did not sit in the “comfy seats” behind
    screening as they had in the past. Instead, Tara was required by the
    Department to sit on bleachers or the adjacent grassy area along the
    third base line that was unprotected by screening or netting. Tara chose
    a seat in the third or fourth row of bleachers.          The Department
    supervisors did not allow the children to move to another location in the
    stadium.
    At a midpoint in the game, a player lost his grip on a bat. The
    record indicated that the bat flew a distance of about 120 feet along the
    third base line at a height of approximately six feet.       The bat was
    airborne for two or three seconds before it struck Tara on the right side
    of her head. Prior to being struck by the bat, Tara had turned to talk to
    a friend.
    At the time of the incident, no supervisors from the Department
    were in Tara’s immediate vicinity.       One supervisor who viewed the
    incident from a distance testified that an adult in the area could possibly
    have done something, either trying to knock down the bat or yelling for
    the kids to duck. Cynthia, at her deposition, however, testified that the
    incident could not have been avoided had an adult been in Tara’s place.
    Plaintiffs sued the City and a number of other defendants,
    including the baseball player involved and the teams playing the game.
    The plaintiffs’ claims against the City sounded in negligence.
    The City filed a motion for summary judgment asserting that the
    permission slip constituted a waiver of the plaintiffs’ claims and that, in
    4
    any event, the plaintiffs could not show a breach of any duty of care
    owed by the City. With respect to the permission slip, the City noted that
    the language specifically states that a parent realizes that the “Bettendorf
    Park Board is not responsible or liable for any accidents or injuries that
    may occur while on this special occasion” and that “[f]ailure to sign this
    release” is “grounds for denial of participation.” On the issue of breach of
    duty, the City argued that there was nothing that the City should have
    done to avoid the accident.
    Plaintiffs resisted and filed a cross motion for summary judgment.
    On the issue of waiver, the plaintiffs contended that the permission slip
    did not amount to a valid anticipatory release of future claims based
    upon the City’s negligent acts or omissions. The plaintiffs further argued
    that even if the permission slip amounted to a valid release, it was fatally
    flawed because it purported to release only the Department and not the
    City. Finally, plaintiffs asserted even if the permission slip amounted to
    an anticipatory release of future claims based on acts or omissions of
    negligence, statutory and common law public policy prevents a parent
    from waiving such claims on behalf of a minor child.
    In resisting the City’s motion for summary judgment based upon
    the lack of a breach of duty, the plaintiffs, in addition to testimony of lay
    witnesses, offered a report from Susan Hudson, a professor at the
    University of Northern Iowa and an expert on playground and park
    safety.   Based on her review, Hudson found that the Department
    breached its duty of care toward the plaintiffs in several ways. Hudson
    opined that the Department breached its duty of care by: (1) not
    informing the Sweeneys about the nature of possible harm even though
    Cynthia personally inquired about the nature of the activity; (2) not
    anticipating the known and foreseeable harm that could occur by not
    5
    paying attention to the selection of seating; (3) not providing direct
    instructions to the children about paying attention to the possibility of
    bats and balls flying into the bleacher area; and (4) not providing direct
    supervision for children under their care.
    The district court granted the City’s motion for summary
    judgment. The district court found that the permission slip constituted a
    valid waiver of plaintiffs’ claims.   In the alternative, the district court
    found that the plaintiffs did not present sufficient evidence to establish a
    breach of duty owed to them. Plaintiffs appealed.
    II. Direct vs. Interlocutory Appeal.
    At the outset, there is a question of whether this case presents a
    direct appeal or is interlocutory in nature. A direct appeal is heard as a
    matter of right, while this court has broad discretion to consider whether
    to hear an interlocutory appeal. Iowa R. App. P. 6.1(c). The central issue
    is whether an appeal of a district court order which dismisses all claims
    against one party in a negligence action involving multiple defendants is
    direct or interlocutory.
    In Buechel v. Five Star Quality Care, Inc., 
    745 N.W.2d 732
     (Iowa
    2008), we considered this question. In Buechel, we noted that under our
    comparative fault statute, fault sharing cannot occur with a defendant
    who is no longer a party to the litigation through grant of summary
    judgment.     Buechel, 745 N.W.2d at 735; Spaur v. Owens-Corning
    Fiberglas Corp., 
    510 N.W.2d 854
    , 863 (Iowa 1994).         As a result, the
    issues in the motion for summary judgment had impact on the issues of
    liability against the remaining defendants, are not severable, and are
    therefore interlocutory in nature.        Buechel, 745 N.W.2d at 735.
    Nonetheless, as in Buechel, we exercise our discretion to treat the notice
    6
    of appeal here as an application for interlocutory appeal, grant the
    application, and consider the underlying merits. Id. at 736.
    III. Standard of Review.
    We review a district court’s order on a motion for summary
    judgment for correction of errors at law. Ratcliff v. Graether, 
    697 N.W.2d 119
    , 123 (Iowa 2005).          Summary judgment is appropriate when the
    moving party shows there is no genuine issue of material fact. Berte v.
    Bode, 
    692 N.W.2d 368
    , 370 (Iowa 2005). Summary judgment should not
    be granted if reasonable minds can differ on how a material factual issue
    should be resolved. Walker v. Gribble, 
    689 N.W.2d 104
    , 108 (Iowa 2004).
    IV. Discussion.
    A.    Permission Slip as Anticipatory Release of Claims of
    Negligence. This case involves an exculpatory provision contained in a
    permission slip signed by the parent of a minor child in connection with
    recreational activities sponsored by a municipality.1                 The validity of
    exculpatory provisions which release future claims in connection with
    recreational activities is a topic that has been thoroughly explored in the
    academic literature. See, e.g., Mary Ann Connell & Frederick G. Savage,
    Releases: Is There Still a Place for Their Use by Colleges & Universities?,
    29 J.C. & U.L. 579 (2003); Mark Seiberling, “Icing” on the Cake: Allowing
    Amateur Athletic Promoters to Escape Liability in Mohney v. USA Hockey,
    Inc., 9 Vill. Sports & Ent. L.J. 417 (2002). The academic commentators
    note courts considering such exculpatory provisions deal with the
    1While   many cases appear to use the terms interchangeably, an exculpatory
    provision is similar but not identical to an indemnity provision. An indemnity provision
    ordinarily allocates risks of third party losses among parties to a contract. In an
    indemnity context, at least one party remains liable for the third party losses. The
    victim thus still has a source of recovery. An exculpatory provision, however, does not
    allocate risk between responsible parties but eliminates liability all together. Cathleen
    M. Devlin, Indemnity & Exculpation: Circle of Confusion in the Courts, 33 Emory L.J.
    135, 170–71 (1984).
    7
    inherent tensions between the law of torts, which generally requires
    parties to be responsible for their acts of negligence, and the law of
    contracts, which allows a competent party to make his or her own
    agreements. Connell & Savage, 29 J.C. & U.L. at 580; Seiberling, 9 Vill.
    Sports & Ent. L.J. at 428.
    The early Iowa cases dealing with exculpatory provisions involve
    real estate contracts.   As early as 1921, we considered the effect of a
    provision in a real estate lease that provided that in no case should the
    lessor be liable for damage to the property. Oscar Ruff Drug Co. v. W.
    Iowa Co., 
    191 Iowa 1035
    , 
    181 N.W. 408
     (1921). Among other things, we
    noted that the clause in the lease was couched in general terms and did
    not specifically exempt the lessor from liability for its own negligent acts.
    Id. at 1042, 181 N.W. at 411. As a result, we held that the lease did not
    release the lessor from damages resulting from the lessor’s own
    negligence. Id. at 1043, 181 N.W. at 412.
    More than thirty-five years later, we considered the effect of
    provisions in a real estate lease which the tenant claimed relieved the
    tenant from liability for a fire that was allegedly caused by its own
    negligence. Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Poling, 
    248 Iowa 582
    , 
    81 N.W.2d 462
    (1957). The lease in Sears, among other things, obligated the tenant to
    keep the premises in good condition, “loss by fire . . . excepted.” Id. at
    586, 81 N.W.2d at 464. While this contractual provision might have had
    a bearing on fire losses not caused by the tenant’s negligence, we held
    that the general exculpatory language did not immunize the tenant from
    liability for damage to the landlord’s premises caused by its own
    negligence.    Id. at 589, 81 N.W.2d at 466.             In reaching this
    determination, we cited with approval an annotation stating that “broad
    exculpatory provisions” would rarely immunize a defendant for acts of
    8
    affirmative negligence. Id. at 588, 81 N.W.2d at 465 (citation omitted).
    We further cited with approval Oscar Ruff Drug and cases from other
    jurisdictions holding that contract provisions will not be held to relieve a
    party of liability for its own negligence unless the intention to do so is
    clearly expressed. Id. at 591–92, 81 N.W.2d at 467–68; see Oscar Ruff
    Drug, 191 Iowa at 1035, 181 N.W.2d at 408; see also Fields v. City of
    Oakland, 
    291 P.2d 145
    , 149 (Cal. Ct. App. 1955); Winkler v. Appalachian
    Amusement Co., 
    79 S.E.2d 185
    , 190 (N.C. 1953); Carstens v. W. Pipe &
    Steel Co., 
    252 P. 939
    , 941 (Wash. 1927).
    Following Sears, we decided Baker v. Stewarts’ Inc., 
    433 N.W.2d 706
     (Iowa 1988), a case outside the real estate setting.      In Baker, we
    considered the validity of a document signed by a plaintiff who claimed
    that hair straightening products applied to her scalp at a cosmetology
    school produced subsequent baldness. Baker, 433 N.W.2d at 707. The
    document stated in relevant part, “I will not hold the Stewart School, its
    management, owners, agents, or students liable for any damage or
    injury, should any result from this service.” Id.
    In Baker, we held that this document did not amount to an
    anticipatory release of future claims based upon negligent acts or
    omissions of the professional staff of a cosmetology school because a
    release of such claims would not be apparent to a casual reader. Id. at
    709. We cited Sears and dicta in the indemnity case of Evans v. Howard
    R. Green Co., 
    231 N.W.2d 907
    , 916–17 (Iowa 1975), for the proposition
    that general exculpatory provisions do not cover the negligence of a party
    unless the intention to do so is clearly expressed. Id. In other words, the
    general exculpatory provision in Baker, which stated that the customer
    would not hold “management, owners, agents or students liable for any
    9
    damage or injury,” was insufficient to release the defendant from liability
    for the negligent acts of its professional staff. Id.
    In contrast, in Huber v. Hovey, 
    501 N.W.2d 53
    , 56 (Iowa 1993), we
    held that a document signed by a spectator to an auto race did amount
    to an enforceable anticipatory release of future claims based on negligent
    acts or omissions of a party.        In Huber, the document in question
    emphasized that it was a “covenant not to sue” and that it “releases” the
    promoter “from all liability . . . [for] all loss or damage, and any claim . . .
    on account of injury . . . whether caused by the negligence of the
    releasees or otherwise. . . .” 501 N.W.2d at 54. We distinguished this
    language from the sort utilized in Baker, noting that the document
    specifically indicated that it was a release of claims caused by the
    negligence of one of the parties.     Id. at 56; see also Grabill v. Adams
    County Fair & Racing Ass’n, 
    666 N.W.2d 592
     (Iowa 2003).
    The permission slip in this case is much closer to the document in
    Baker than in Huber. As in Baker, the permission slip contains no clear
    and unequivocal language that would notify a casual reader that by
    signing the document, a parent would be waiving all claims relating to
    future acts or omissions of negligence by the City. Baker, 433 N.W.2d at
    707. The language at issue here refers only to “accidents” generally and
    contains nothing specifically indicating that a parent would be waiving
    potential claims for the City’s negligence. See Alliant Energy-Interstate
    Power & Light Co. v. Duckett, 
    732 N.W.2d 869
    , 878 (Iowa 2007) (holding a
    utility tariff that released utility from “all claims, demands, costs, or
    expenses for injury . . . or damage” was not sufficient to release utility
    from its own negligent acts). As noted in a recent best seller, the term
    “accident” normally means “unpreventable random occurrences.”               See
    Marc Gernstein with Michael Ellsberg, Flirting with Disaster:              Why
    10
    Accidents are Rarely Accidental 3 (2008). The general language in this
    permission slip simply does not meet the demanding legal standards of
    our Iowa cases.
    While we have not previously considered the effect of exculpatory
    provisions in the specific context of sponsored recreational activities, we
    see no basis for departing from the Baker-Huber principles in this
    context. The cases from other jurisdictions demonstrate the reluctance
    of courts to provide defendants who sponsor recreational activities a
    more lenient framework for analyzing exculpatory clauses seeking to
    limit liability for the sponsors’ own negligence. Several state courts in a
    recreational context have adhered to a bright-line test, requiring that the
    specific words negligence or fault be expressly used if an exculpatory
    provision is to relieve a defendant from liability for its own negligent acts
    or omissions. See Alack v. Vic Tanny Int’l of Mo., Inc., 
    923 S.W.2d 330
    ,
    337 (Mo. 1996) (noting general exculpatory language releasing “any . . .
    injuries” and “all claims” does not suffice to release party of its own
    negligence, because such language creates a latent ambiguity in
    exculpatory contracts); Geise v. Niagara County, 
    458 N.Y.S.2d 162
    , 164
    (Sup. Ct. 1983) (holding words “fault” or “neglect” must be used to bar
    claim for party’s own negligence).
    Other courts in the context of recreational activities have not
    required magic words, but have imposed a demanding requirement that
    the intention to exclude liability for acts and omissions of a party must
    be expressed in clear terms. Sirek v. Fairfield Snowbowl, Inc., 
    800 P.2d 1291
    , 1295 (Ariz. Ct. App. 1990) (requiring intention to immunize for
    negligent acts be clearly and explicitly stated); Turnbough v. Ladner, 
    754 So. 2d 467
    , 470 (Miss. 1999) (finding general exculpatory provision
    inadequate and noting release of acts of a party’s own negligence must be
    11
    expressed in “specific and unmistakable terms”); Gross v. Sweet, 
    400 N.E.2d 306
    , 309–10 (N.Y. 1979) (noting that while the word “negligence”
    need not specifically be used, words conveying a similar import must
    appear).2 The approach of these cases is consistent with the approach in
    Iowa exculpatory clause cases generally. See Baker, 433 N.W.2d at 709
    (requiring a clear and unequivocal expression).               We see no reason to
    relax from the approach in Baker merely because this case involves a
    recreational activity.
    In looking at cases involving recreational activities, language
    similar to that used by the City in this case has been found insufficient
    to support a release of a party’s own negligence. For example, in Doyle v.
    Bowdoin College, 
    403 A.2d 1206
    , 1208 (Me. 1979), the court found the
    use of the term “accidents” insufficient to provide a basis for release from
    a party’s own negligence. See Hroblak, 27 U. Balt. L. Rev. at 471 (noting
    drafter should not seek to release party from any “accidents” because the
    term is ambiguous and insufficient to release own negligent acts); see
    also O’Connell v. Walt Disney World Co., 
    413 So. 2d 444
    , 446–47 (Fla.
    Dist. Ct. App. 1982) (finding language stating company held harmless
    from liability and from risks inherent in riding activity not sufficient to
    release its own negligence); Calarco v. YMCA of Greater Metro. Chicago,
    
    501 N.E.2d 268
    , 272–73 (Ill. App. Ct. 1986) (holding provision to hold
    2Even   in these jurisdictions, the better practice is to expressly use the term
    “negligence” in the exculpatory agreement. See Swartzentruber v. Wee-K Corp., 
    690 N.E.2d 941
    , 945 (Ohio Ct. App. 1997) (noting that the “better practice” would be to
    expressly include the word “negligence”); Dobratz v. Thomson, 
    468 N.W.2d 654
    , 663
    (Wis. 1991) (refusing to adopt a magic words test, but noting the use of term
    “negligence” would be “very helpful”); see also Steven B. Lesser, How to Draft
    Exculpatory Clauses That Limit or Extinguish Liability, 75 Fla. B.J. 10, 14 (Nov. 2001)
    (noting from a practical standpoint, utilization of the word “negligence” should increase
    the likelihood of enforcement); Kevin G. Hroblak, Adloo v. H.T. Brown Real Estate, Inc.:
    “Caveat Exculpator”—An Exculpatory Clause May Not Be Effective Under Maryland’s
    Heightened Level of Scrutiny, 27 U. Balt. L. Rev. 439, 469 (1998) (noting a risk adverse
    drafter should use the word “negligence” in all exculpatory clauses).
    12
    YMCA “free from any and all liability” and discharging “any and all rights
    and claims for damages” not sufficient to relieve YMCA of liability for its
    own negligence).
    For the reasons expressed above, we hold that the language in the
    permission slip in this case does not constitute an enforceable
    anticipatory release of claims against the City for its negligent acts or
    omissions in connection with the field trip.3
    B. Application of Inherent Risk Doctrine to Defeat Negligent
    Supervision Claim. The City, while acknowledging that it owed Tara a
    duty of care, seeks to limit that duty through the application of the
    inherent risk doctrine. The City claims that the risk of being injured by
    flying bats and balls when seated outside screening is unavoidable as it
    is an inherent part of attending a baseball game. As a result, the City
    claims, it had no duty to protect Tara from the subsequent injuries. The
    question of the proper scope of legal duty is a question of law to be
    determined by the court. J.A.H. ex rel. R.M.H. v. Wadle & Assocs., P.C.,
    
    589 N.W.2d 256
    , 258 (Iowa 1999); Leonard v. State, 
    491 N.W.2d 508
    ,
    511–12 (Iowa 1992).
    3As   a result of our disposition of the release issue, we do not consider four other
    arguments advanced by the plaintiffs. First, we do not consider whether the failure to
    specifically name the City in the release prevents its enforcement by the City. Second,
    we also do not address the question of whether a parent may release the claims of a
    minor for the negligent acts or omissions of a sponsor of recreational events. The case
    law from other jurisdictions is divided on this issue. Compare Hojnowski v. Vans Skate
    Park, 
    901 A.2d 381
    , 389–90 (N.J. 2006), with Zivich v. Mentor Soccer Club, Inc., 
    696 N.E.2d 201
    , 205 (Ohio 1998). See generally Doyice J. Cotten, Sarah J. Young, & Sport
    Risk Consulting, Effectiveness of Parental Waivers, Parental Indemnification Agreements,
    & Parental Arbitration Agreements as Risk Management Tools, 17 J. Legal Aspects Sport
    53 (2007). Third, we do not consider the implications on this case, if any, of Iowa Code
    section 599.2 (2003), which allows a minor to disaffirm contracts with certain
    exceptions. Fourth, we do not consider the general question of whether public policy
    voids a contract provision releasing claims of negligence under the circumstances
    presented here. See Tunkl v. Regents of Univ. of Cal., 
    383 P.2d 441
    , 446–47 (Cal. 1963).
    13
    In support of its position, the City cites Anderson v. Webster City
    Community School District, 
    620 N.W.2d 263
     (Iowa 2000). In Anderson, a
    seven-year-old boy broke his leg while sledding during a noon recess at
    his elementary school.     Anderson, 620 N.W.2d at 265.           The jury
    instruction in that case noted that some risks naturally attend
    participation in recreational activities and that the sponsor has a duty
    only to protect a participant from unreasonable risks of harm.       Id. at
    266. The Anderson court noted that the instruction was similar to the
    “primary assumption of risk doctrine” which, while no longer utilized in
    Iowa, was an alternative expression for the proposition that a defendant
    is not negligent or owed no duty for risks inherent in certain activities.
    Id. at 267.
    The City also cites Dudley v. William Penn College, 
    219 N.W.2d 484
    (Iowa 1974), in support of its motion for summary judgment. In Dudley,
    a plaintiff baseball player, who was hit by a foul ball, claimed that the
    college should have had dugouts or netting protecting the participants
    from the playing field.   Dudley, 219 N.W.2d at 485.       We rejected that
    claim, noting that the duty that was owed extended only to those risks
    that were unreasonable.     Id. at 486–87.   “[P]layers in athletic events
    accept the hazards which normally attend the sport.” Id. at 486. As a
    result, we held that the injured player did not have a cause of action
    against the coach and college. Id. at 487. In sum, the City argues that it
    did not breach its duty of care because being struck by a bat is an
    inherent risk of attending a minor league baseball game.
    Plaintiffs view the case differently. They distinguish Anderson on
    the ground that the City had a much greater control over the activities of
    the children in this case. They note that the City determined that Tara
    would sit on bleachers unprotected by screening and that the City chose
    14
    not to follow accepted recreational and leisure standards for the proper
    safety and supervision of children by failing to ensure direct supervision
    and by failing to warn them and their parents of the danger of flying bats
    when sitting in unprotected areas.        The plaintiffs further note that in
    Anderson, whether the defendants unreasonably failed to protect the
    plaintiff was a question for the jury to decide.
    The plaintiffs assert Dudley is inapposite. They see Dudley as a
    variant of the limited liability rule which relieves baseball park owner-
    operators of responsibility for flying objects. Here, however, the question
    on appeal relates not to the duty of the owner-operator of a baseball
    facility, but to the duty of the City to properly supervise Tara while
    attending the game. The City, plaintiffs argue, directed Tara to sit in an
    unprotected area and then did not provide adequate direct supervision in
    that area. Further, plaintiffs argue that their expert provided a sufficient
    basis for a jury to determine that the City acted unreasonably under all
    the facts and circumstances.
    In the majority of cases, spectators sitting outside protective
    netting at baseball stadiums have been unable to recover from owners or
    operators for injuries related to errant bats and balls on the ground that
    such injuries were an “inherent risk” of attending the game.               See
    generally James L. Rigelhaupt, Jr., Annotation, Liability to Spectator at
    Baseball Game Who is Hit by Ball or Injured as Result of Other Hazards of
    Game, 
    91 A.L.R. 3d 24
     (1979). Claims against owners or operators for
    injuries incurred by flying bats and balls that have been decided after the
    movement     toward    comparative     negligence    tend     to   characterize
    nonliability as based on a “limited duty” theory.           See, e.g., Vines v.
    Birmingham Baseball Club, Inc., 
    450 So. 2d 455
    , 456 (Ala. 1984) (Torbert,
    C.J., concurring specially); Lawson v. Salt Lake Trappers, Inc., 
    901 P.2d 15
    1013, 1015–16 (Utah 1995); Perez v. McConkey, 
    872 S.W.2d 897
    , 900
    (Tenn. 1994); Daniel E. Wanat, Torts and Sporting Events: Spectator and
    Participant Injuries—Using Defendant’s Duty to Limit Liability as an
    Alternative to the Defense of Primary Implied Assumption of Risk, 31
    U. Mem. L. Rev. 237 (2001).
    Regardless of whether the approach is characterized as involving
    inherent risk or a limited duty, courts applying the doctrine have held
    that the owner or operator of a baseball stadium is not liable for injury to
    spectators from flying bats and balls if the owner or operator provided
    screened seating sufficient for spectators who may be reasonably
    anticipated to desire such protection and if the most dangerous areas of
    the stands, ordinarily the area behind home plate, were so protected.
    Quinn v. Recreation Park Ass’n, 
    46 P.2d 144
    , 146 (Cal. 1935); Akins v.
    Glens Falls City Sch. Dist., 
    424 N.E.2d 531
    , 533–34 (N.Y. 1981).                       In
    Arnold v. City of Cedar Rapids, 
    443 N.W.2d 332
    , 333 (Iowa 1989), we
    adopted a version of the limited duty rule in a premises liability case with
    respect to misthrown balls.4
    4There  has been some resistance to inherent risk or the limited duty doctrine.
    For example, Professor James noted long ago that the primary assumption of risk
    doctrine, of which the limited duty rule is a variant, provides “an exceptional
    curtailment of defendant’s duty below the generally prevailing one to take care to
    conduct oneself so as not to cause unreasonable danger to others.” Fleming James, Jr.,
    Assumption of Risk, 61 Yale L. J. 141, 168 (1952). More recently, a few judges have
    directly challenged the limited duty rule. See Maisonave v. Newark Bears Prof’l
    Baseball Club, Inc., 
    881 A.2d 700
    , 710–13 (N.J. 2005) (Wallace, J., concurring),
    superseded by statute, New Jersey Baseball Spectator Safety Act of 2006, N.J. Stat.
    Ann. § 2A:53A-43-48 (2006); Akins, 424 N.E.2d at 536 (Cooke, J., dissenting). There
    appears to be a move within the legal profession away from the rule. See Restatement
    (Third) of Torts: Apportionment of Liability § 3 cmt. c, illus. 6, at 32–33 (2000)
    (replacing limited duty with comparative fault in cases involving injury to baseball
    spectators). In addition, recent academic commentary has challenged the doctrine.
    David Horton, Rethinking Assumption of Risk & Sports Spectators, 51 UCLA L. Rev. 339,
    366 (2003) (noting increasingly hazardous nature of stadium seating in light of
    increased pitching speeds, greater batting capability, and stadium design that places
    patrons in a zone of danger); Gil Fried & Robin Ammon, Baseball Spectators’
    Assumption of Risk: Is it “Fair” or “Foul”?, 13 Marq. Sports L. Rev. 39, 61 (2002) (same).
    16
    This case, however, does not involve a premises liability claim
    against the owner or operator of a baseball stadium. Instead, the issue
    is whether the district court erred in granting summary judgment in a
    negligent supervision case against the City based on its view that the
    injury was due to “an inherent risk in attending the baseball game.”
    We conclude that the district court erred in granting summary
    judgment based on inherent risk.                A negligent supervision case is
    fundamentally different than a case involving premises liability.                    The
    eight-year-old child in this case made no choice, but instead sat where
    she was told by the Department. The plaintiffs further claim that there
    was inadequate adult supervision where the child was seated.                         The
    alleged negligence in this case does not relate to the instrumentality of
    the injury, but instead focuses on the proper care and supervision of
    children in an admittedly risky environment. See, e.g., Stanley v. Bd. of
    Educ., 
    293 N.E.2d 417
    , 422 (Ill. App. Ct. 1973) (holding alleged negligent
    supervision of children in thrown bat case raises jury question in light of
    expert opinion); Cook v. Smith, 
    33 S.W.3d 548
    , 553–54 (Mo. Ct. App.
    2000) (noting acceptance of custody and care of minor child creates duty
    of care independent of premises liability); Havens v. Kling, 
    277 A.D.2d 1017
    , 1018 (N.Y. App. Div. 2000) (holding parents of eleven-year-old
    inexperienced golfer did not have claim against twelve-year-old golfer who
    hit son on the head with club, but did have claim against golf shop and
    event sponsor for negligent supervision); Gordon v. Deer Park Sch. Dist.
    No. 414, 
    426 P.2d 824
    , 828 (Wash. 1967) (finding possible negligence
    claim where bat slips from hands of teacher).
    ___________________________
    There is no occasion on this appeal to revisit the application of inherent risk or limited
    duty doctrine in the context of a premises liability claim.
    17
    Viewed as a negligent supervision case, the City had a duty to act
    reasonably, under all the facts and circumstances, to protect the
    children’s safety at the ball park. City of Cedar Falls v. Cedar Falls Cmty.
    Sch. Dist., 
    617 N.W.2d 11
    , 16–17 (Iowa 2000). The gist of the plaintiffs’
    claim is that a substantial cause of the injury was the supervisors’
    decision to allow the children, who cannot be expected to be vigilant at
    all times during a baseball game, to be seated in what a jury could
    conclude was an unreasonably hazardous location behind third base
    instead of behind the safety of protective netting. From this perspective,
    the inevitable exposure of the children to flying balls and bats that arises
    from sitting outside the range of protective netting does not provide a
    complete defense, but instead is a factor for a jury to consider in
    determining whether the acts and omissions of the supervisors were
    reasonable under all the facts and circumstances.          As in Anderson,
    moreover, whether a defendant has breached its duty of care under all
    the circumstances is ordinarily a jury question, particularly where the
    plaintiff has offered expert testimony indicating that the defendant did
    not follow customary practices for the safety of children when engaged in
    recreational activities. Anderson, 620 N.W.2d at 266–67.
    As a result, the City is not entitled to summary judgment with
    respect to the specifications of negligence in the plaintiffs’ expert report
    on the ground of “inherent risk” or the “limited duty doctrine.”         The
    extent to which an injured party knowingly engages in risky behavior in a
    negligent supervision case is a factor for the fact finder to consider in the
    framework of comparative fault.
    C.    Cause in Fact Challenge to Claim of Lack of Direct
    Supervision. The City also advances an alternate argument in partial
    defense to some aspects of the plaintiffs’ negligent supervision claim. To
    18
    the extent that the plaintiffs’ case rested on the failure to have adult
    supervision in close proximity to Tara when the children were seated
    along the third base line, the City argued that such direct supervision
    would not have made a difference. The City’s argument amounts to a
    claim that even if the City breached its duty toward Tara by not providing
    adequate adult supervision, that breach of duty was not the cause of
    Tara’s injuries.
    We have held that causation has two components: cause in fact
    and legal cause. Faber v. Herman, 
    731 N.W.2d 1
    , 7 (Iowa 2007). Cause
    in fact is a but-for test, while determination of legal or proximate cause
    reflects a policy judgment that the cause of the accident is not so remote
    or attenuated that liability should not be imposed.       Id.   Ordinarily,
    determination of cause in fact is a question for the fact finder to
    determine. Id.
    Conceding for purposes of summary judgment that the City had a
    legal duty to reasonably supervise its charges, and further assuming that
    the City breached its duty of reasonable care by failing to provide direct
    supervision to the children in a ratio of one adult for ten children as
    suggested by plaintiffs’ expert, the alleged breach of duty cannot satisfy
    the “but-for” element of proximate cause for Tara’s injuries as a matter of
    law. Although whether a breach of duty was a cause in fact of injuries
    sustained by the plaintiff is ordinarily a fact question, the evidence in
    this case, even when viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff,
    does not establish a triable issue.
    In order to establish cause in fact, the plaintiff need not show
    certainty or inevitability, but the plaintiff must offer something beyond
    mere conjecture and speculation. Easton v. Howard, 
    751 N.W.2d 1
    , 6
    (Iowa 2008) (quoting George v. Iowa & S.W. Ry. Co., 
    183 Iowa 994
    , 997–
    19
    98, 
    168 N.W. 322
    , 323 (1918)). A plaintiff must offer sufficient evidence
    for a fact finder to conclude by a preponderance of evidence that the
    injuries that occurred would likely have been avoided absent the breach
    of duty. Mere guesswork about what might have occurred is not enough.
    Here, the evidence simply is not sufficient to allow a reasonable
    fact finder to conclude that in all likelihood the injuries to Tara would
    have been avoided if the City would have provided the direct adult
    supervision as urged by plaintiffs’ expert. Even if the City provided direct
    supervision in the ratio of one adult for every ten children, there no is
    reason to believe that an adult supervisor would likely have been able to
    knock down the bat or warn Tara effectively to avoid injury.
    In order to block the flying bat, the supervisor would have had to
    have seen the bat leave the hands of the batter and would have had to
    have sufficient presence and verve to thrust himself or herself into
    harm’s way to knock down the projectile. This scenario is improbable
    enough, but there is also no reason to believe that a supervisor would
    have been sitting in sufficiently close proximity to be physically able to
    knock down the bat.      In short, the City could have met the plaintiffs’
    expert’s standard for direct supervision without affecting the outcome of
    this tragic affair.
    Perhaps realizing the difficulties of persuading a fact finder that a
    fortuitous courageous block would have occurred but for the breach of
    duty, the plaintiffs fall back on a warning theory. While an adult seated
    in the vicinity of Tara would have been in a position to provide a louder
    and more direct warning to her than a supervisor at a greater distance, a
    reasonable fact finder could not conclude that the accident would have
    likely been avoided if there was direct supervision as suggested by
    plaintiffs’ expert. The errant bat in this case did not fly like a helicopter
    20
    seed dropping from some tree, but rapidly ripped through the air at a low
    elevation to its unhappy destination. Under these facts, it is anyone’s
    guess as to whether a sharp verbal warning, even if immediately given,
    would have done the job. We therefore hold that plaintiffs have failed to
    generate a fact question on the proposition that enhanced direct
    supervision would have provided sufficient warning to Tara to avoid the
    injuries.
    Our ruling on the issue of cause in fact is consistent with the case
    law in a number of other jurisdictions that have considered the issue in
    the context of flying balls and bats.5           Further, our decision, though
    disappointing perhaps, will not come as a total shock to the plaintiffs.
    Tara’s mother testified in this case that there was nothing a supervisor
    sitting in the vicinity could have done to avoid Tara’s injuries. We do not
    regard Tara’s mother’s testimony as a binding admission, but the
    observation is obviously consistent with our conclusion that the evidence
    does not establish a triable issue of cause in fact on the ground of lack of
    direct supervision. Cf. Meyer v. Mulligan, 
    889 P.2d 509
    , 516 (Wyo. 1995)
    (noting that lay people are generally not competent to pass judgment on
    legal questions, including cause).
    V. Conclusion.
    The permission slip in this case did not release the City from
    alleged acts of future negligence. Further, the doctrine of inherent risk
    does not provide a basis to defeat the plaintiffs’ theories of negligence in
    this case. To the extent the plaintiffs argue that the City breached its
    duty of care by failing to provide direct supervision to the children once
    5See,  e.g., Benedetto v. Travelers Ins. Co., 
    172 So. 2d 354
    , 355 (La. Ct. App.
    1965) (finding no amount of supervision could have altered manner in which bat was
    thrown); Lang v. Amateur Softball Ass’n of Am., 
    520 P.2d 659
    , 662 (Okla. 1974) (finding
    no triable issue in wild pitch case where it was not reasonably apparent that injuries
    suffered were caused by wrongful act).
    21
    they were seated along the third base line at the ball park, we conclude
    that the plaintiffs failed as a matter of law to adduce sufficient evidence
    to raise a triable issue. To this extent, the City is entitled to summary
    judgment in this case. As a result, the district court’s grant of summary
    judgment is affirmed in part and reversed in part.
    AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
    All justices concur except Cady, J., who dissents and Streit, J.,
    who concurs in part and dissents in part.
    22
    #112/07–0127, Sweeney v. Bettendorf Parks & Recreation Dep’t
    CADY, Justice (dissenting).
    I respectfully dissent.    My departure from the decision of the
    majority is based on two principal reasons, both tied by a common
    thread. This common thread is woven with the clear understanding that
    a baseball game—America’s pastime—presents a known, but acceptable,
    threat of harm to spectators.        This threat, of course, comes from
    baseballs and, on very rare occasions, bats or broken pieces of bats that
    enter the spectator area from the playing area.       While these objects
    become coveted possessions for spectators of all ages, they are at the
    same time an inherent danger of attending the game. This danger is the
    basis for the lawsuit in this case, which I believe should be thrown out
    by a call made with relative ease.
    I. Release of Liability.
    First, I believe the release of liability signed by the parents of the
    child hit by the baseball bat in this case was valid and prevents the
    parents from suing. The majority, of course, concludes the release was
    insufficient to cover the particular claim of negligent supervision brought
    against the city parks and recreation department, who organized the field
    trip to the ballgame. I agree the release would not cover the full range of
    injuries a child could reasonably be expected to encounter during a
    supervised field trip to a professional baseball park, but I believe it at
    least covered the very obvious and common danger associated with
    watching a baseball game—the very purpose of the field trip—that any
    reasonable parent would have understood and contemplated when
    deciding to permit their child to attend a baseball game.
    The majority seems to construct a rule that invalidates all but the
    most sophisticated and carefully drawn releases by focusing on the
    23
    general principle of law that agreements to release a party from liability
    for his or her own negligence are disfavored. Yet, this broad principle is
    not a working rule of law and has given way to the more pragmatic,
    specific rule that a release must clearly identify to a casual reader those
    claims or injuries covered under the release. Baker v. Stewarts’ Inc., 
    433 N.W.2d 706
    , 709 (Iowa 1988). Importantly, a release does not need to
    specifically mention a party’s “own negligence” to be valid.     In proper
    context, most releases could only have meaning as applied to common
    claims of negligence.       Instead, the inclusion of such language merely
    helps remove any doubt that the release intended to cover any
    circumstance under the umbrella of negligence. Yet, the critical inquiry
    is whether the incident claimed to be covered under the release was
    unambiguously identified to a casual reader.
    For example, in Baker a release of “liability for any damage or
    injury” between a cosmetology school and a patron of services performed
    by students at the school did not cover an injury to the hair and scalp of
    the patron that was the subject of a negligence claim for liability against
    the professional staff who supervised the student services.        Id.   The
    language of the release failed to “clearly and unequivocally” express to a
    casual reader of the release that it included professional staff in the
    release of liability. Id. We did not totally invalidate the release as too
    vague due to the absence of any specific mention of negligence, but only
    found the language of the release was not broad enough to include
    professional staff.   Id.    A patron of the cosmetology school would not
    understand that he or she was releasing the professional staff from
    liability by casually reading the release. Id. Similarly, in Huber v. Hovey,
    
    501 N.W.2d 53
    , 54 (Iowa 1993), we were presented with a release of “all
    liability” for any claim of injury “whether caused by the negligence of the
    24
    releasees or otherwise.”    The release was between a racetrack and
    spectators who entered the pit area of the racetrack, and we found the
    release did cover a spectator who entered the pit area and was injured
    when a wheel of a race car came off and struck the spectator. Id. at 56–
    57. In response to the argument that the language of the release did not
    sufficiently identify the accident, we found the release covered the claim
    because it clearly identified the parties to the release, including
    spectators who entered the pit area, and clearly covered personal injuries
    to spectators who entered the pit area. Id. Under the circumstances, a
    casual signer of the racetrack release would understand that the injuries
    referred to in the release included injuries associated with car racing that
    could be expected to occur in the pit area. We did mention the release
    specifically covered injuries caused by the track’s own negligence, but
    only to further clarify that the release covered a broad range of personal
    injuries to spectators. The use of the term “negligence” in the release
    only helped clarify the broad type of injuries covered.       It was not a
    predicate to covering any injury.
    Overall, the Baker-Hovey approach considers the context and
    subject of a release between the parties and the language expressed in
    the release and looks to consider whether a casual signer would
    understand the injury or incident at issue was unambiguously covered.
    In this case, the language of the release may not cover a broad range of
    injuries that could be sustained by children who go on a field trip to a
    baseball park. For example, the release did not express the notion that
    injuries during the transportation of the children would be covered. The
    subject of the release was a baseball game, and a parent signing the
    release would likely not have transportation in mind without some
    specific identification or reference to the transportation component of the
    25
    field trip. However, the release did have meaning, and that meaning was
    the city would at least not be liable for those inherent injuries known to
    occur to spectators of a baseball game—the subject of the release. The
    release clearly identified the baseball stadium as the subject of the trip
    and stated the city would not be “liable for any accidents.”         At a
    minimum, any parent signing the release would understand that those
    accidents known to occur to spectators were contemplated under the
    release of liability.
    II. No Duty of Care.
    There is a second, more fundamental, reason the case should be
    dismissed. This reason is the city had no duty to protect the children at
    the baseball park from the inherent risks of the game of baseball as the
    children sat in their seats watching the game being played.
    I completely agree the city had a duty to supervise the children
    throughout the field trip and to generally protect the children from
    reasonably foreseeable harm. However, the creation of a duty of care and
    the scope of the duty created are always questions of law. Courts have
    drawn a line on the scope of a duty of care to protect spectators of a
    baseball game at a baseball park. That line is roughly drawn in an area
    behind home plate.      This area is where spectators need the most
    protection from foul balls, or perhaps an occasional wild throw.
    Protection is most needed in this area because the risk of harm to
    spectators is most foreseeable in this area of a baseball park.     Thus,
    courts have consistently imposed a duty of care on baseball parks to
    protect spectators from balls entering the spectator area, and baseball
    parks have responded to this duty by installing protective netting in the
    area behind home plate.
    26
    Of course, protective netting could easily be installed around the
    entire perimeter of the playing field, which would provide a consistent
    level of full protection for all spectators in all areas of the baseball park.
    Yet, courts have almost universally rejected such a notion as a legal
    duty, driven largely by public policy, which is normally a major
    component in deciding to create any duty of care. Thus, baseball parks
    have only a limited duty to spectators, and this duty is to protect
    spectators behind the area of home plate from foul balls. There is no
    duty to protect spectators in other areas of the baseball park, even
    though a foreseeable risk of harm continues to exist for spectators. Yet,
    this gap in protection comes into play due to public policy. Spectators
    want some limited protection from the inherent risks of attending a
    baseball game, but they also attend the game for the chance to catch a
    foul ball or a home run ball. This is a time-honored tradition, deeply
    imbedded into the game itself and the American culture. It is as much a
    part of the game as the game itself and has become an inherent but
    acceptable danger for spectators.
    The majority throws a knuckleball in an effort to dance around this
    culture and the supporting legal principles by relying on the general duty
    of supervision as a separate, more demanding area of tort law. It holds
    that supervisors of children have a greater duty of care to protect child
    spectators from the inherent risks of watching a baseball game than the
    owner of the ballpark by requiring adult supervisors to place children in
    seats that are reasonably protected from the inherent risks. Put another
    way, the majority essentially declares an adult supervisor can commit
    negligence by allowing a child to sit in an area of the ballpark outside the
    27
    protective netting.6 This approach by the majority is scuffed and flawed.
    Most noticeably, it has no support in the application of the factors that
    go into the imposition of any duty of care and is detached from the
    traditions and expectations of the game of baseball.
    At the outset, it must be acknowledged that, from a legal
    standpoint, this case is not merely about a flying bat. If it was, there
    could be no liability imposed on the city park and recreation department
    because a flying bat is too unforeseeable to give rise to a legal duty of
    care to protect a spectator. That is, it is not reasonably foreseeable to
    spectators that a flying bat will leave the playing field of a baseball park
    and enter the spectator area, especially an area thirty feet beyond third
    base. While the field trip organizers were charged with the responsibility
    to protect the children during the trip, a flying bat could not have been
    reasonably anticipated by the trip organizers as a potential harm to the
    children as they sat in the area of the ballpark beyond third base. Even
    on those rare occasions when a bat slips from the hands of a batter while
    6It might be argued that the majority does not actually hold children must be
    seated behind the netting, but instead could be seated in those areas unprotected by
    netting that are not unreasonably exposed to the inherent risks of the sudden presence
    of flying objects. In other words, the majority believes the area of Tara’s seat in this
    case—thirty feet beyond third base, three or four rows into the spectator area—was an
    “unnecessarily hazardous location.” There was, of course, no evidence to support such
    a proposition, and such a proposition is contrary to the accepted configuration of a
    baseball stadium. This configuration recognizes the unreasonably hazardous area is
    behind home plate, which supports a duty of the owner of the ballpark to install
    protective netting around the area of home plate. Moreover, any spectator who has
    attended a professional baseball game or two knows that a sharply hit line drive off the
    bat of a professional baseball player that hooks foul can make any spectator location in
    the path of the ball, for a split second, hazardous. This hazard is the same whether a
    spectator is seated thirty feet beyond third base, 130 feet beyond third base, or even
    230 feet beyond third base. It is simply of no avail to attempt to distinguish between
    areas of reasonable hazards outside the area protected by netting and areas of
    unreasonable hazards outside the area protected by netting.            Spectators at a
    professional baseball game are exposed to inherent dangers most anywhere outside the
    area protected by netting, and it is a danger society has chosen, until this case, to
    accept.
    28
    attempting to hit a pitched ball, the bat will most likely travel in the
    direction of the playing field, not 120 feet into the spectator area. It is an
    extremely rare event for spectators outside the playing area to be placed
    in the zone of danger of a flying bat, especially a spectator located 120
    feet down the third base spectator area. Consequently, no duty of care
    could be imposed to protect another against such specific, remote harm.
    Nevertheless, the law does not impose a duty of care based on the
    foreseeability of a specific means of injury. See Nachazel v. Miraco Mfg.,
    
    432 N.W.2d 158
    , 160 (Iowa 1988) (“In negligence cases it is not
    necessary to a defendant’s liability that the wrongdoer should have
    foreseen the extent of the harm or the manner in which it occurred, so
    long as the injuries are the natural, though not inevitable, result of the
    wrong.”).   Instead, only some type of injury must be foreseeable to give
    rise to a duty of care. In this case, the known danger is flying objects,
    which is nearly always a baseball. Thus, the duty of care imposed by the
    majority applies to all flying objects, including baseballs and flying bats.
    This means a supervisor must protect children from baseballs in the
    same way as flying bats. Accordingly, this is the duty imposed by the
    majority that I believe cannot withstand the scrutiny of the factors we
    rely upon in deciding to impose a duty of care on people, or the scope of
    such duty of care.
    When courts step up to decide whether or not to establish a duty
    of care under a particular circumstance, three factors are primarily
    considered: (1) the relationship between the parties, (2) the reasonable
    foreseeability of harm, and (3) public policy concerns.        See Stotts v.
    Eveleth, 
    688 N.W.2d 803
    , 810 (Iowa 2004). These are the same factors
    that were essentially applied by courts in creating the limited duty of
    care for baseball parks. Yet, the majority avoids any serious discussion
    29
    and analysis of these factors, but instead merely recognizes that premise
    liability law, which supports a limited duty of care, is different from
    supervision-liability law. The majority finds this difference justifies the
    imposition of a greater duty of care for supervisors to protect others from
    a premise-based harm than the entity responsible for the creation of the
    harm. The rationale for this finding is that the supervisor in this case
    “directed” the children to sit outside the area protected by the netting.
    I agree a supervisor should have a continuing duty of care for the
    safety of children while at the ballpark to protect children from those
    foreseeable risks of harm that might be encountered from strangers,
    horseplay on the steps, or other such events, but not from the very risks
    unique to the game of baseball and those risks that our law has already
    decided do not need to be eliminated by the baseball parks. An analysis
    of the factors used to create a duty of care clearly supports this
    approach.
    First, there is nothing particular about a relationship between a
    child spectator and an adult supervisor who accompanies the child to a
    baseball game that favors the imposition of liability.     The relationship
    between parties is a factor in creating a duty of care because it often
    introduces special considerations that help support a duty, such as
    control by one party over the other party or special benefits derived by a
    party.     As applied to a baseball game, this factor actually tends to
    support liability on the premise owner more than it does for liability of a
    supervisor. The premise owner has a contractual relationship with the
    spectator, primarily controls the designation of the area to sit, and
    receives a financial benefit.     Moreover, the premise owner has the
    greatest practical ability to protect the spectator.         For sure, the
    relationship between a supervisor of a field trip to a baseball game and a
    30
    participant on the field trip is also marked by control over the
    participant, but not the same type of control that relates to a reasonable
    and effective ability to provide protection from the inherent risks of
    watching the game.      That is to say, the relationship does not easily
    transform into the ability of a supervisor to protect the child spectator
    from the inherent risks of the game.
    The majority finds supervisors determine where children sit, but
    the   baseball   park   ultimately   controls   the   seating   arrangement.
    Moreover, the seats around home base protected by netting are usually
    the most expensive seats and are normally reserved for season
    ticketholders.   It is impractical to conclude the relationship between
    supervisors and children gave supervisors the ability to seat children
    behind the protective netting.
    Second, the foreseeability of harm to child spectators in an
    unprotected area of the baseball park is the same, if not greater, for the
    owner of the premise as it is for supervisors of the spectators. The owner
    has considerably more knowledge of the baseball park and the dangerous
    areas of the park. A supervisor should be able to safely expect the most
    dangerous areas for flying objects have been covered by netting, allowing
    spectators to sit in unprotected areas that are less dangerous.
    Third, and most important, the public policies that support
    limiting the duty of care to protect spectators from the inherent risks of
    watching baseball are the same under premise-liability law as under
    supervisor-liability law.   These public-policy concerns have drawn the
    line, which leaves spectators unprotected except in an area behind home
    plate. In the other areas of the baseball park, the opportunity to catch or
    retrieve a foul ball has won out over the slight risk of harm presented to
    spectators. In other words, the known risk of harm is not unreasonable
    31
    under common, practical standards and policies society has embraced
    since the game was invented by Alexander Cartwright in 1845.7
    Without examining these factors, the majority has changed the
    game for spectators who bring children to a baseball park to take in the
    joys of our national pastime. It does this by concluding children must
    not be exposed to the same inherent risks of attending a baseball game
    as unsupervised spectators, and by placing the responsibility for
    protecting children from the inherent risks of attending a baseball game
    on adults who accompany children to the game. This conclusion, at its
    core, can only be explained by policies of overprotectionism and the
    innate desire to remove children from all potential harm they might
    encounter in life. Yet, this goal can go too far and can end up depriving
    children of some of the most rewarding and beneficial experiences of
    their youth. This will be the likely result of the overprotective decision by
    the majority in this case.
    With this decision, America’s pastime risks becoming a different, or
    less frequent, event for children than enjoyed in the past.           With the
    imposition of liability on supervisors and others who accompany children
    to a professional baseball game, the common field trip, as well as the
    simple pleasure of a parent accompanying a child and the child’s friend
    to a baseball park, gives rise to new considerations that can only
    diminish enthusiasm for the trip.           Court decisions can have vast
    consequences on our way of life, and a trip to the ballpark with children
    in tow may now need to be preceded by a trip to a lawyer’s office to
    obtain a release containing all the essential legal language demanded by
    7Alexander Cartwright is recognized as the inventor of modern baseball. He
    published the rules of baseball in 1845, and his team, the Knickerbocker Club of
    New York, played the first recorded baseball game in 1846.
    32
    the majority or be confined to the most expensive seats behind home
    base, safely protected from the excitement and anticipation of catching a
    foul ball.
    Just as there was no joy in Mudville the day the mighty Casey
    struck out, there is no joy on this day around Iowa’s ballparks.8 The
    majority has taken a mighty swing at the correct result in this case and
    missed by a mile.
    8The   legendary baseball poem, “Casey at the Bat,” was written by
    Ernest Lawrence Thayer, and first published in the San Francisco Examiner on June 3,
    1888.
    33
    07–0127, Sweeney v. Bettendorf Parks & Recreation Dep’t
    STREIT, Justice (concurring in part and dissenting in part).
    I concur in the majority’s opinion in regard to the release of
    liability signed by the parent of the child but join Justice Cady’s dissent
    as to the duty of care.