Seronde v. Bnsf ( 2017 )


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  •                       NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION.
    UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL
    AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.
    IN THE
    ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION ONE
    SARAH DEL SERONDE, et al., Plaintiffs/Appellants,
    v.
    BNSF RAILWAY COMPANY, et al., Defendants/Appellees.
    No. 1 CA-CV 16-0385
    FILED 10-26-2017
    Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
    Nos. CV2011-010945
    CV2011-010947
    (Consolidated)
    The Honorable Arthur T. Anderson, Judge
    AFFIRMED
    COUNSEL
    Pottroff Law Office, Manhattan, KS
    By Robert Pottroff
    Co-Counsel for Plaintiffs/Appellants
    Schneider & Onofry PC, Phoenix
    By Luane Rose
    Co-Counsel for Plaintiffs/Appellants
    Thorpe Shwer PC, Phoenix
    By William L. Thorpe, Bradley Shwer, Adam T. Reich
    Counsel for Defendants/Appellees
    SERONDE et al. v. BNSF
    Decision of the Court
    MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Judge Jennifer B. Campbell delivered the decision of the Court, in which
    Presiding Judge Michael J. Brown and Judge Margaret H. Downie joined.
    C A M P B E L L, Judge:
    ¶1             The driver and members of the deceased passenger’s family
    (collectively, “the Serondes”) sued BNSF Railway Company (“BNSF”),
    alleging its negligence caused a car-train collision resulting in their
    damages. The superior court granted summary judgment for BNSF, ruling
    as a matter of law it did not breach the standard of care it owed to the
    vehicle occupants. For the following reasons, we affirm.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    ¶2           Tsinijinni Jean Seronde (“Jean”) was driving on I-40 with his
    mother, Ella Seronde. Attempting to bypass a traffic jam on the interstate,
    Jean pulled off and traveled approximately 10 miles south, eventually
    leaving the paved road and continuing down a gravel road. Jean was
    following several other vehicles also attempting to bypass the interstate
    gridlock. After driving over a cattle guard, Jean encountered a railroad
    crossing marked with a STOP sign and crossbuck sign (“the Crossing”). He
    stopped and looked in both directions before proceeding through the
    Crossing.
    ¶3            Immediately after traversing the railroad tracks, Jean turned
    left following the vehicle in front of him and proceeded along a railroad
    right-of-way running parallel to the tracks. The group reached an
    impassable wash approximately one mile east of the Crossing and the
    vehicles turned around and drove back the way they had come.
    ¶4             As Jean led the line of cars back toward the Crossing, a BNSF
    train approached from behind. The train crew saw the cars approximately
    one mile before the Crossing and began sounding the train’s horn. Jean
    testified that he did not hear the horn and could only see the dust trail
    emanating from the other vehicles in his rear-view mirror. When Jean
    approached the Crossing, he slowed his vehicle, but failed to stop and
    ensure the tracks were clear before entering. As Jean drove onto the tracks,
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    SERONDE et al. v. BNSF
    Decision of the Court
    the train collided with his car. Jean suffered injuries and his mother Ella
    was killed in the collision.
    ¶5             The superior court granted summary judgment for BNSF,
    ruling federal law preempted the Serondes’ allegations that the train failed
    to slow as it approached the Crossing.1 This court affirmed that ruling, but
    reversed the dismissal of the Serondes’ negligence claim insofar as it alleged
    BNSF had provided inadequate markings and warning devices at the
    Crossing because the superior court had not addressed that claim. See
    Seronde v. BNSF Ry. Co., 1 CA-CV 14-0166, 
    2015 WL 1516534
    , at *4, ¶ 16
    (Ariz. App. April 2, 2015) (mem. decision).
    ¶6              On remand, BNSF again moved for summary judgment,
    asserting that because Jean and Ella were trespassers at the time of the
    collision, its only duty was to avoid willfully and wantonly injuring them
    and it had satisfied that duty. The Serondes maintained Jean and Ella were
    not trespassers, but either licensees or invitees to whom BNSF owed a duty
    of reasonable care. The superior court granted summary judgment for
    BNSF, ruling as a matter of law that Jean and Ella were trespassers and
    BNSF had not breached the duty of care it owed them. The Serondes timely
    appealed.
    ¶7           The Serondes argue the superior court erred in ruling BNSF
    did not owe a duty of reasonable care to Jean and Ella. They contend, at
    minimum, that a material question of fact exists regarding the duty BNSF
    owed to Jean and Ella.
    DISCUSSION
    ¶8            This court reviews entry of summary judgment de novo,
    viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the party against whom the
    court entered judgment. Williamson v. PVOrbit, Inc., 
    228 Ariz. 69
    , 71, ¶ 11
    (App. 2011). “We will affirm summary judgment only if there is no genuine
    issue as to any material fact and the party seeking judgment is entitled to
    judgment as a matter of law.” 
    Id. ¶9 To
    establish BNSF’s negligence, the Serondes were required
    to prove (1) the existence of a duty recognized by law requiring BNSF to
    conform to a certain standard of care, (2) BNSF’s breach of that standard,
    (3) a causal connection between BNSF’s conduct and the Serondes’ injury,
    and (4) actual damages. Gipson v. Kasey, 
    214 Ariz. 141
    , 143, ¶ 9 (2007).
    1Ella’s children brought a wrongful-death claim against BNSF. Jean
    sued separately for personal injuries and the cases were consolidated.
    3
    SERONDE et al. v. BNSF
    Decision of the Court
    Because the superior court ruled, as a matter of law, on the elements of duty
    and breach, we confine our analysis to those issues.
    I.     Duty
    ¶10           Whether a defendant owes a duty of care to the plaintiff is a
    legal question the court decides based on the parties’ relationship or other
    statutory and public policy considerations. 
    Id. at 145-46,
    ¶¶ 19-25. Under
    Arizona common law, a landowner’s duty to persons coming onto his or
    her premises is based on the status of the visitor. In the case of a trespasser,
    a person “who enters or remains upon land in the possession of another
    without a privilege to do so,” see Restatement (Second) of Torts
    (“Restatement”) § 329 (1965), the landowner’s duty is only to refrain from
    willfully or wantonly disregarding the person’s safety. Webster v.
    Culbertson, 
    158 Ariz. 159
    , 161 (1988) (citation omitted). In contrast, in the
    case of an invitee—a person who enters the land because the landowner
    held the premises out as open to the public, see Restatement § 332—the
    landowner has an affirmative duty to use reasonable care to make the
    premises safe for the invitee’s use. Markowitz v. Arizona Parks Bd., 
    146 Ariz. 352
    , 355 (1985).2
    ¶11           The superior court ruled that Jean and Ella were trespassers
    as a matter of law. It also ruled that BNSF, as the landowner, owed them a
    duty to avoid willfully or wantonly injuring them and, as a matter of law,
    did not breach its duty. See Beesley v. Union Pac. R.R. Co., 
    430 F. Supp. 2d 968
    , 970 (D. Ariz. 2006) (“a landowner owes no duty toward a trespasser
    except not to willfully or wantonly injure him after discovering his peril”).
    Although the Serondes admitted BNSF owns the land on which the
    collision occurred, they argue that an exception to the trespasser rule
    applies because BNSF either (1) knew that trespassers regularly used the
    Crossing and acquiesced to that behavior, or (2) invited and induced Jean
    and Ella to use the Crossing. As a result, they argue Jean and Ella were no
    2  A third category, a licensee, is “a person who is privileged to enter
    or remain on land only by virtue of the possessor’s consent.” Hicks v.
    Superstition Mtn. Post No. 9399, Veterans of Foreign Wars of the U.S., 
    123 Ariz. 518
    , 521 (1979) (quoting Restatement § 330). The duty a landowner owes to
    a licensee is to refrain from willfully or wantonly causing harm or
    knowingly permitting the person to contact a hidden peril. Mull v. Roosevelt
    Irr. Dist., 
    77 Ariz. 344
    , 347 (1954). The Serondes do not assert on appeal that
    Jean and Ella were licensees.
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    SERONDE et al. v. BNSF
    Decision of the Court
    longer trespassers but invitees to whom BNSF owed a duty of reasonable
    care.
    A.     Knowledge of Trespassers and Acquiescence
    ¶12            Arizona follows Restatement § 334, which states that when a
    landowner knows or should know that trespassers “constantly intrude
    upon a limited area” of the landowner’s property, he or she owes a duty to
    exercise reasonable care for the trespasser’s safety. Id.; Delgado v. S. Pac.
    Transp. Co., 
    763 F. Supp. 1509
    , 1512 (D. Ariz. 1991). The Serondes contend
    BNSF had knowledge that trespassers constantly traversed the Crossing
    and therefore had a duty to use reasonable care when conducting its
    activities on the land. The evidence, however, does not establish that BNSF
    knew that trespassers “constantly intrud[ed]” on the Crossing.
    ¶13           BNSF constructed the Crossing in 1983 to permit restricted
    access to the National Park Service for access to a road located immediately
    south of the Crossing that lies within the Petrified National Forest. This
    private access road is gated and not open to the public. BNSF also permits
    a neighboring landowner to use the Crossing to access her private, gated
    driveway south of the Crossing.3
    ¶14           Despite this evidence that the remote Crossing served only as
    access to the private roads located to the south, the Serondes contend there
    is evidence that the public regularly used the Crossing with BNSF’s
    knowledge and acquiescence. First, they cite a United States Department
    of Transportation Inventory Information form in which BNSF estimated
    3   The United States Department of Transportation identifies the
    Crossing as private, which is consistent with BNSF’s internal classification
    of the Crossing and applicable law. See Arizona Administrative Code R14-
    5-101(14) & (15) (defining a private grade crossing as “any crossing where
    a legal agreement exists between a private property owner and a railroad
    company for the exclusive use of the landowner and the landowner’s
    invitee” and a public grade crossing as “any crossing used by the general
    public, for which a legal agreement between a private property owner and
    a railroad company does not exist”); 49 C.F.R. § 222.9 (defining a public
    highway-rail grade crossing as a “location where a public highway, road,
    or street, including associated sidewalks or pathways, crosses one or more
    railroad tracks at grade. If a public authority maintains the roadway on both
    sides of the crossing, the crossing is considered a public crossing.”). The
    Serondes asserted in the superior court that the Crossing was a public
    crossing, but do not raise that argument on appeal.
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    SERONDE et al. v. BNSF
    Decision of the Court
    that 55 vehicles per day used the Crossing. However, because the inventory
    form does separate the vehicles into groups of trespassers as opposed to
    licensees or invitees, it is not probative of whether the public constantly
    intruded on the Crossing. See Ariz. R. Evid. 401(a) (defining relevant
    evidence, in part, as evidence that “has any tendency to make a fact more
    or less probable than it would be without the evidence”). Moreover,
    because BNSF identified the Crossing as private on its inventory form, this
    case is distinguishable from the one on which the Serondes rely, Ross v.
    Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Ry. Co., 
    63 F. Supp. 3d 1330
    (W. D. Okla.
    2014). In that case, the plaintiff offered evidence that the defendant railroad
    considered the crossing to be public and knew that the public used it,
    supporting an inference that the railroad had included public use in the
    “vehicles per day” estimate contained on its Department of Transportation
    inventory form. 
    Id. ¶15 The
    Serondes next argue that BNSF’s engineer, Guy Nunley,
    agreed it was “not unusual” to see motorists in non-BNSF vehicles using
    the Crossing. A review of Nunley’s testimony, however, shows he testified
    that most of the vehicles he saw near the Crossing belonged to BNSF and
    he could not say whether the non-BNSF vehicles were authorized to be on
    the right-of-way or were, in fact, trespassers. Nunley’s testimony therefore
    does not raise a material question of fact regarding whether the public
    “constantly and persistently” intruded on the Crossing. See Orme Sch. v.
    Reeves, 
    166 Ariz. 301
    , 309 (1990) (noting evidence that may provide a
    “scintilla” or create the “slightest doubt” is not sufficient to withstand a
    motion for summary judgment); Shaw v. Petersen, 
    169 Ariz. 559
    , 560-61
    (App. 1991) (a motion for summary judgment should not be denied simply
    upon speculation that some doubt, scintilla of evidence, or dispute over
    irrelevant or immaterial facts “might blossom into a real controversy in the
    midst of trial” (quoting Orme 
    Sch., 166 Ariz. at 311
    )).4
    4   This case is therefore distinguishable from S. Pac. Co. v. Bolen, in
    which the Arizona Supreme Court reversed a verdict for the plaintiff
    because the trial court improperly instructed the jury on the railroad’s duty
    of care. 
    76 Ariz. 317
    , 327-28 (1953). In that case, there was evidence from
    which a jury could find that the public constantly intruded on a pathway
    across the tracks and the railroad should therefore have reasonably
    anticipated the presence of people on the tracks. 
    Id. at 321,
    326. The court
    held that the railroad’s knowledge of the likelihood of the presence of
    trespassers was one of the circumstances that informed the degree of care
    (i.e., the duty) the railroad owed to the plaintiffs. 
    Id. at 327-28.
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    SERONDE et al. v. BNSF
    Decision of the Court
    ¶16            Finally, we reject the Serondes’ argument that BNSF
    approved of the public’s use of the Crossing because it did not post signage
    stating “no trespassing” or otherwise restricting access to authorized
    persons. Absent evidence that the public persistently used the Crossing,
    BNSF’s failure to post “keep out” signs could not constitute acquiescence
    to trespass. See Restatement § 334 (imposing a heightened duty of care only
    on a landowner who knows or should know that trespassers constantly
    intrude upon his land); 
    Delgado, 763 F. Supp. at 1513
    (knowledge of
    trespassers in general does not confer a duty to specific trespassers in other
    areas of whom a railroad has no knowledge).
    B.    Invitation
    ¶17            The Serondes allege BNSF’s construction of the Crossing and
    installation of warning signs was an invitation or inducement to the public
    to use the Crossing.
    ¶18            They rely on cases, however, in which the railroad had
    constructed or maintained a crossing for the benefit of either the plaintiff or
    the public in general. See St. Louis-San Francisco Ry. Co. v. Ready, 
    15 F.2d 370
    (5th Cir. 1926) (decedent “was not a trespasser or licensee, but an invitee”
    because railroad established a crossing and treated it as a public crossing);
    Missouri Pac. Ry. Co. v. Bridges, 
    74 Tex. 520
    , 522 (1889) (holding that when a
    railroad voluntarily maintains a crossing, “knowing that it is a road in
    common use by the public, it in effect invites the use of it and proclaims it
    safe”); Cent. R.R. & Banking Co. v. Robertson, 
    95 Ga. 430
    (1895) (railroad
    established the crossing “to accommodate the settlement,” thereby inviting
    the public to use it); Creten v. Chicago, Rock Island and Pac. R.R. Co., 
    184 Kan. 387
    , 389 (1959) (the railroad’s private crossing had been used for thirty years
    by the public generally and by the plaintiff to gain access to a field he rented
    on the south side of the tracks). Here, the evidence established that BNSF
    constructed the Crossing for the benefit of the National Park Service and
    permitted use by a neighboring landowner only. The Serondes did not offer
    any evidence that BNSF constructed the Crossing for the benefit of the
    motoring public or that it was regularly used by the public.
    ¶19           Next, the Serondes argue the signage at the Crossing invited
    the public to trespass because BNSF placed the STOP sign and crossbuck
    sign in the same “sign configuration” it used at public crossings.5 However,
    5The Serondes also discuss a private sign located at the entrance to a
    gas facility approximately one mile from the Crossing that directs “all
    7
    SERONDE et al. v. BNSF
    Decision of the Court
    the Serondes did not offer any evidence to support that claim.6 Even
    assuming, however, that BNSF installed the same warning signage at both
    public and private crossings, that fact alone would not constitute an
    invitation for trespassers to use a private crossing. Orme 
    Sch., 166 Ariz. at 309
    ; 
    Shaw, 169 Ariz. at 560-61
    . Necessarily, the public would have to see the
    signs before they were invited or induced to use the Crossing. Unless Jean
    and Ella trespassed on BNSF property, they never would have seen the
    railroad crossing signs. Significantly, the Serondes did not offer any
    evidence that Jean and Ella relied on the STOP and crossbuck signs as an
    inducement to use the Crossing.
    ¶20            Nevertheless, citing Arizona Copper Co. v. Garcia, 
    25 Ariz. 158
    (1923), the Serondes contend that when a railroad recognizes a crossing by
    installing warning signs, it must use reasonable care to avoid injury to those
    using the crossing. In Garcia, the plaintiff was injured at a railroad crossing
    that intersected a highway. 
    Id. at 159.
    Although the crossing was established
    without the proper statutory permission, the evidence showed that it had
    been a “thoroughfare between populous communities and frequented by
    travelers” for several years before the collision. 
    Id. The railroad,
    recognizing
    the public use of the crossing, had installed several warning signs to alert
    drivers on the highway to the crossing. 
    Id. The Arizona
    Supreme Court
    rejected the railroad’s argument that it owed only the limited trespasser
    duty to the plaintiff because the crossing was unlawfully established. 
    Id. at 159-60.
    The court ruled that in light of the railroad’s knowledge of the
    “long-continued current of travel” over the crossing, its placement of the
    warning signs was a recognition of the crossing and “an invitation to cross
    upon such conditions as apply generally to a public crossing.” 
    Id. at 160.
    The court did not hold, as the Serondes suggest, that Arizona law presumes
    that a railroad invites the public to trespass and must act with reasonable
    care every time it places warning signs at a crossing.
    through traffic and railroad access” toward the Crossing and an Apache
    County sign identifying a “nearby” road and posting a speed limit. Because
    there is no evidence that BNSF posted either of these signs, they could not
    constitute an invitation from BNSF to the public to trespass at the Crossing.
    6Although the Serondes cited the report of their expert, William
    Hughes, that the signage at the Crossing was the same type of signage BNSF
    used at its public highway-grade crossings the superior court struck Mr.
    Hughes’ report. Accordingly, there was no material dispute of fact on this
    issue.
    8
    SERONDE et al. v. BNSF
    Decision of the Court
    ¶21            Similarly, the other cases the Serondes cite each involved
    continuous and open use of the crossing by the public in addition to the
    railroad’s posting of warning signs. See Cleveland, C., C. & St. L. Ry. Co. v.
    Weil, 
    68 F.2d 48
    , 49-50 (7th Cir. 1933) (holding that where crossing in a
    public road had been used by general public for fifty-eight years, the
    evidence—including railroad’s installation of warning signs—supported
    jury finding that railroad had given it over to public use and extended
    invitation to cross); Schoonover v. Baltimore & O.R. Co., 
    69 W. Va. 560
    (1911)
    (reversing dismissal of negligence action because railroad had established
    the crossing to allow the public to access a park and, therefore, plaintiff was
    an invitee to whom it owed duty of reasonable care); Lake Erie & W.R. Co. v.
    Fleming, 
    183 Ind. 511
    (1915) (railroad constructed a crossing for vehicles and
    pedestrians traveling between public street and poultry plant that was in
    “constant daily use by many people, and was the only way to reach the
    plant”); McGunegill v. Chesapeake & O. Ry. Co., 
    199 F.2d 302
    , 302-03 (7th Cir.
    1952) (railroad’s maintenance of a crossing to provide ingress and egress
    for buildings and a public swimming pool, coupled with its erection of
    warning signs, impliedly invited the public to use the crossing); Ross, 63 F.
    Supp. 3d at 1334 (evidence showed railroad considered the crossing to be
    public and knew an average of thirty vehicles per day used it); Chesapeake
    & Ohio Ry. Co. v. Pulliam, 
    185 Va. 908
    , 912-13 (1947) (evidence showed
    crossing was used daily by the general public for at least forty years); Belcher
    v. Norfold & W. Ry. Co., 
    140 W. Va. 848
    , 853 (1955) (evidence showed
    crossing had been used by the public for eight to thirty-five years) overruled
    on other grounds by Bradley v. Appalachian Power Co. v. Elk Grocery Co., 163 W.
    Va. 332, 342 n.16 (1979).
    ¶22           In this case, there is no evidence that BNSF placed the signage
    at the Crossing in response to trespassers’ constant and persistent use of the
    Crossing. To the contrary, as discussed, there is no evidence that the public
    regularly used the Crossing. Therefore, BNSF’s installation of the STOP and
    crossbuck signs does not support an inference that it invited the public to
    use the Crossing.
    1.     The Crossing’s Appearance Was Not Misleading
    ¶23           Relying on Restatement § 367 and several out-of-state cases,
    the Serondes allege that Jean and Ella fell within another exception to the
    general rule regarding trespassers. They allege this exception changed their
    status from trespassers to invitees, requiring BNSF to act with reasonable
    care toward them.
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    SERONDE et al. v. BNSF
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    ¶24           Section 367 provides:
    A possessor of land who so maintains a part thereof that he
    knows or should know that others will reasonably believe it to be a
    public highway is subject to liability for physical harm caused
    to them, while using such part as a highway, by his failure to
    exercise reasonable care to maintain it in a reasonably safe
    condition for travel.
    (Emphasis added).
    ¶25           Arizona, however, does not follow the Restatement position
    that a landowner’s duty changes to one of reasonable care if he “knows or
    should know that others will reasonably believe” they are travelling on
    public land. Rather, Arizona law requires a plaintiff to show that the
    defendant permitted open use by the public of the land in question. Olsen
    v. Macy, 
    86 Ariz. 72
    , 74. Interpreting § 367 in Olsen, the Arizona Supreme
    Court stated:
    We find the law to be that if an owner or occupant of property
    has permitted persons generally to use or establish a way across it
    under such circumstances as to induce a belief that it is public
    in character, he owes to persons availing themselves thereof
    the duty due to those who come upon the premises by
    invitation.
    
    Id. at 74
    (emphasis added).
    ¶26           While plaintiff urges us to adopt this standard, we must
    follow both Arizona statute and Arizona Supreme Court jurisprudence as
    more fully set forth above. Again, because the Serondes did not offer any
    evidence from which a reasonable jury could conclude that BNSF permitted
    the public to openly use the Crossing, the undisputed facts demonstrate
    that Jean and Ella were trespassers when they entered BNSF’s property.
    II.    Breach
    ¶27           The superior court correctly ruled, as a matter of law, that
    BNSF owed the plaintiffs a duty to avoid willfully and wantonly causing
    them harm. See 
    Webster, 158 Ariz. at 161
    (“In the typical ‘trespasser’ case,
    plaintiff may not recover unless the landowner has been guilty of some
    willful or wanton disregard for the plaintiff’s safety.”); Barnhizer v. Paradise
    Valley Unified Sch. Dist. No. 69, 
    123 Ariz. 253
    , 254 (1979) (“Ordinarily, the
    duty of a landowner to a trespasser is to not willfully or wantonly injure
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    SERONDE et al. v. BNSF
    Decision of the Court
    him.”); Restatement § 333 (unless an exception applies, “possessor of land
    is not liable to trespassers for physical harm caused by his failure to exercise
    reasonable care (a) to put the land in a condition reasonably safe for their
    reception, or (b) to carry on his activities so as not to endanger them”);
    
    Delgado, 763 F. Supp. at 1516
    (concluding that because none of the
    exceptions to Restatement § 333 applied, railroad owed trespasser “the
    mere duty not to willfully or wantonly injure him”).
    ¶28            The superior court also determined, as a matter of law, that
    BNSF had not breached that duty. Whether a defendant has exercised the
    care required to satisfy its duty is generally a question of fact for the jury,
    but a court may rule as a matter of law when “no reasonable juror could
    conclude that the standard of care was breached.” 
    Gipson, 214 Ariz. at 143
    ,
    ¶ 9 n.1 ; see also 
    Markowitz, 146 Ariz. at 357
    ; Coburn v. City of Tucson, 
    143 Ariz. 50
    , 53-54 (1984). We agree with the superior court. The Serondes did
    not offer any evidence that would allow a reasonable jury to conclude BNSF
    willfully and wantonly caused Jean and Ella harm.7
    ¶29           Arizona courts group willful and wanton conduct with
    reckless conduct as an “aggravated form of negligence.” Williams v. Thude,
    
    188 Ariz. 257
    , 259 (1997) (“Gross negligence and wanton conduct have
    generally been treated as one and the same.”). Wanton misconduct is
    negligence that “involves the creation of an unreasonable risk of bodily
    harm to another (simple negligence) together with a high degree of
    probability that substantial harm will result (wantonness).” DeElena v. S.
    Pac. Co., 
    121 Ariz. 563
    , 566 (1979); see also S. Pac. Transp. Co. v. Lueck, 
    111 Ariz. 560
    , 562 (1975) (“Conduct is wanton if a defendant intentionally does
    or fails to do an act, knowing or having reason to know of facts which
    would lead a reasonable man to realize that his conduct not only created an
    unreasonable risk of harm to another but involved a high degree of
    probability that such harm would result.”).
    ¶30           The evidence showed that the train crew began sounding the
    train’s horn when they saw the cars on BNSF’s right-of-way, and applied
    emergency braking procedures as soon as they observed Jean enter the
    7 The Serondes’ argument on appeal that BNSF failed to adequately
    warn of, mark, or restrict access to the Crossing is premised on the notion
    that BNSF owed Jean and Ella a duty of reasonable care because they were
    invitees. We have rejected that premise and therefore do not consider
    whether the Serondes created a material question of fact regarding whether
    BNSF breached that higher standard of care.
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    SERONDE et al. v. BNSF
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    Crossing.8 There is no dispute that Jean was aware of the tracks and the
    danger they posed before he entered the Crossing at the time of the collision
    because he had stopped and looked in both directions when he first crossed
    the tracks only minutes earlier.
    ¶31             BNSF’s duty to avoid willfully and wantonly injuring Jean
    and Ella did not require it to post “no trespassing” signs, fence the Crossing
    to keep trespassers away, or install lights and crossing gates to prevent
    trespassers from disregarding the STOP sign and inherent danger of the
    train tracks and entering the Crossing without stopping. 
    Barnhizer, 123 Ariz. at 255
    (1979) (noting a landowner’s duty to a trespasser is to avoid willfully
    and wantonly injuring him, not “to prevent every possibility of harm”); cf.
    
    Delgado, 763 F. Supp. at 1515-16
    (rejecting argument that railroad’s alleged
    failure to prevent trespassers from boarding its trains was a failure to carry
    on its activities with reasonable regard for persons it had reason to know
    were trespassing). Arizona courts have long recognized that “[a] railroad
    track of itself is unquestionably a warning of danger, and it is the duty of
    every person who sees such a danger signal to look and listen before going
    on the track.” Canion v. S. Pac. Co., 
    52 Ariz. 245
    , 251 (1938).
    ¶32            Because no reasonable juror could find that BNSF breached
    the applicable standard of care, the superior court correctly granted
    summary judgment for BNSF. 
    Gipson, 214 Ariz. at 143
    , ¶ 9 n.1; 
    DeElena, 121 Ariz. at 569
    (noting evidence of wantonness must “be more than slight and
    it may not border on conjecture” in order to create a material question of
    fact for the jury).
    CONCLUSION
    ¶33           For the foregoing reasons, we affirm. We will award costs to
    8 Because this court determined in the Serondes’ earlier appeal that
    federal law preempted their negligence claim insofar as it was based on the
    train’s failure to slow as it approached the Crossing, Seronde v. BNSF Ry.
    Co., 1 CA-CV 14-0166, 
    2015 WL 1516534
    , at *4, ¶ 16 (Ariz. App. April 2, 2015)
    (mem. decision), their negligence claim is limited to alleged inadequate
    markings and warning devices.
    12
    SERONDE et al. v. BNSF
    Decision of the Court
    BNSF upon its compliance with ARCAP 21.
    AMY M. WOOD • Clerk of the Court
    FILED: AA
    13