Tory Baughan v. Mid America Snow and Terrain Expert Racers ( 2018 )


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  •                            STATE OF MICHIGAN
    COURT OF APPEALS
    TORY BAUGHAN,                                                      UNPUBLISHED
    October 16, 2018
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    and
    MEGAN MACNEILL,
    Plaintiff,
    v                                                                  No. 338036
    Ontonagon Circuit Court
    MID AMERICA SNOW AND TERRAIN                                       LC No. 2014-000111-NO
    EXPERT RACERS, doing business as MASTERS
    RACING CIRCUIT,
    Defendant/Third-Party Plaintiff-
    Appellee,
    and
    DEREK ZIMNEY and POLARIS INDUSTRIES,
    INC.,
    Third-Party Defendants.
    Before: MURPHY, P.J., and SAWYER and SWARTZLE, JJ.
    PER CURIAM.
    In this interlocutory appeal, plaintiff Tory Baughan1 appeals by leave granted2 the trial
    court’s order granting in part and denying in part defendant’s motion for summary disposition, in
    1
    The trial court dismissed plaintiff Megan MacNeill’s negligence claim, and this appeal
    concerns only the court’s ruling regarding the applicable standard of care with respect to
    Baughan’s negligence claim. Accordingly, unless otherwise indicated, we use “plaintiff” to refer
    to Baughan.
    -1-
    which it ruled that a “recklessness” standard of care applies to plaintiff’s negligence claim. We
    reverse the trial court’s ruling and hold that defendant is subject to a duty of ordinary care.
    I. BACKGROUND
    In February 2012, plaintiffs, Baughan and Megan MacNeill, were injured during a
    snowmobile “hillclimb” racing event sponsored by defendant.3 Plaintiffs were watching the race
    within a designated and unprotected spectator area when Derek Zimney, one of the racers,
    became dismounted from his Polaris snowmobile on his way up the hill. Zimney’s driverless
    snowmobile continued to travel back down the hill at a high rate of speed before colliding with
    plaintiffs. Plaintiffs sued under theories of negligence, premises liability, gross negligence, and
    willful and wanton misconduct.
    Defendant moved for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(8) and (C)(10). The
    motions were denied with respect to the gross negligence and wanton misconduct claims and
    granted with respect to the premises liability and willful misconduct claims. As a result of the
    motions, the trial court dismissed MacNeill’s negligence claim, concluding that she signed an
    enforceable waiver of liability. With respect to Baughan’s negligence claim, however, the court
    ruled that a genuine issue of material fact remained and that the applicable standard of care is the
    “recklessness” standard articulated in Ritchie-Gamester v City of Berkley, 
    461 Mich 73
    ; 597
    NW2d 517 (1999), and applied in Benejam v Detroit Tigers, Inc, 
    246 Mich App 645
    ; 635 NW2d
    219 (2001).
    II. ANALYSIS
    The sole issue before this Court in this interlocutory appeal is whether the limited duty of
    care adopted in Ritchie-Gamester for coparticipants in recreational activities—and extended, in
    Benejam, to baseball stadium owners with respect to spectators—similarly applies with respect
    to spectators of a snowmobile racing event. We hold that it does not.
    “The existence of a legal duty is a question of law for the Court to decide,” Groncki v
    Detroit Edison Co, 
    453 Mich 644
    , 649; 557 NW2d 289 (1996), and this Court reviews questions
    of law de novo, Herald Co, Inc v Eastern Mich Univ Bd of Regents, 
    475 Mich 463
    , 471-472; 719
    NW2d 19 (2006).
    The trial court’s determination that a recklessness standard applies to plaintiff’s
    negligence claim is drawn from the rule announced in Ritchie-Gamester and applied in Benejam.
    In Ritchie-Gamester, 
    461 Mich at 75
    , the plaintiff was struck and injured by another skater, who
    2
    Baughan v Mid America Snow and Terrain Expert Racers, unpublished order of the Court of
    Appeals, entered September 15, 2017 (Docket No. 338036).
    3
    Because the third-party defendants are not parties to this appeal, we use “defendant” to refer to
    Mid America Snow and Terrain Expert Racers, doing business as Masters Racing Circuit.
    -2-
    the plaintiff alleged “was skating backward without keeping a proper lookout behind her” during
    an open skating session. The Court determined that such allegations merely amounted to
    carelessness or negligence, and announced “that coparticipants in a recreational activity owe
    each other a duty not to act recklessly.” 
    Id. at 90, 95
    . The Court’s analysis was “limited to a
    determination of the proper standard of care among coparticipants for unintentional conduct in
    recreational activities.” 
    Id. at 77
    .
    The Ritchie-Gamester recklessness standard has generally been limited to coparticipants
    in recreational activities. See Behar v Fox, 
    249 Mich App 314
    , 316-318; 642 NW2d 426 (2001)
    (recklessness standard applied to youth soccer player’s claim against coach for injuries sustained
    when coach used “full effort” while participating in a scrimmage); Sherry v East Suburban
    Football League, 
    292 Mich App 23
    , 27-28; 807 NW2d 859 (2011) (recklessness standard did not
    apply to injured cheerleader’s claim against her coach for failure to supervise).
    The trial court here analogized the circumstances in this case to those in Benejam, 246
    Mich App at 647, 654-657, in which this Court, relying in part on Ritchie-Gamester, held that “a
    baseball stadium owner is not liable for injuries to spectators that result from projectiles leaving
    the field during play if safety screening has been provided behind home plate and there are a
    sufficient number of protected seats to meet ordinary demand.” There, the plaintiff was seated
    along the third base line, close to the ball field, when she was struck and injured by a baseball bat
    fragment. Id. at 647. Although the plaintiff was seated behind a net that was affixed behind
    home plate and partially extended down the first and third base lines, she claimed that the net
    was not sufficiently long and that the defendant provided inadequate warnings of projectiles
    leaving the field. Id. at 647-648.
    Benejam was specifically concerned with the general concept of protective screening at
    baseball stadiums, and this Court essentially adopted the multijurisdictional majority approach
    for baseball stadium owners’ liability. Id. at 649-658. “The logic of these precedents is that
    there is an inherent risk of objects leaving the playing field that people know about when they
    attend baseball games.” Id. at 651. This Court also noted the “inherent value” in allowing most
    seats to remain unprotected, because baseball spectators generally desire to be intimately
    involved with the game and hope to come in contact with a souvenir baseball from the field. Id.
    Thus, to a certain extent, spectators welcome the risk of their presence knowing that, “as a
    natural result of play,” objects may leave the field and potentially injure them. Id. at 651, 653.
    A critical concept underlying the limited-duty rule also concerns the stadium owner’s interest in
    accommodating fans who enjoy unobstructed seating while also protecting those seated in the
    most dangerous areas. Id. at 656.
    In Van Guilder v Collier, 
    248 Mich App 633
    , 634-637; 650 NW2d 340 (2001), this Court
    declined to apply the Ritchie-Gamester recklessness standard to a negligence action in which the
    plaintiff was injured in an off-road vehicle (ORV) accident when the defendant, in an attempt to
    help the plaintiff reach the top of a hill, used his ORV to “nudge” the plaintiff’s ORV, causing it
    to flip over. The trial court relied on Ritchie-Gamester in granting the defendant’s motion for
    summary disposition and holding that the standard of care for claims arising out of recreational
    activity is recklessness, and the plaintiff’s allegations merely supported a claim of ordinary
    negligence. Id. at 635. The plaintiff argued on appeal that the trial court’s application of a
    recklessness standard of care was erroneous because the type of recreational activity considered
    -3-
    in Ritchie-Gamester did not include the operation of motorized recreation vehicles, and this
    Court agreed. Id. This Court’s reasoning was bifurcated. First, it distinguished Ritchie-
    Gamester, and second, it held that under the Michigan Vehicle Code (MVC), MCL 257.1 et seq.,
    an ORV is a motor vehicle, and, therefore, “liability may be imposed for its negligent operation.”
    Van Guilder, 248 Mich App at 636-637, 639. This Court addressed Ritchie-Gamester as
    follows:
    In that case, the Court primarily focused its analysis on injuries sustained during
    the course of recreational activities that typically or foreseeably involve physical
    contact between coparticipants. To the contrary, a person operating a motorized
    recreation vehicle does not reasonably expect or anticipate the risk of physical
    contact, nor is such risk an obvious or necessary danger inherent to its normal
    operation. The Ritchie-Gamester Court did not contemplate injuries that occur as
    a result of physical contact between two such vehicles. This distinction is
    dispositive. We decline to adopt defendant’s speculative conclusion that our
    Supreme Court intended that a recklessness standard of care apply with regard to
    the operation of motorized recreation vehicles simply because they are usually
    used for recreational purposes. The operation of motor vehicles, including ORVs,
    is not governed by the “rules of the game,” but by the law. [Id. at 636-637.]
    In this case, the trial court apparently did not consider Van Guilder. Instead, it concluded
    that the Ritchie-Gamester reasoning applies “in the same way that it did to the [Benejam]
    spectator case.” The court opined that plaintiff is knowledgeable about snowmobiles generally
    and snowmobile competitions specifically, and that “[t]he possibility that a snowmobile may
    leave the race course is an inherent risk in snowmobile competitions, of which spectators are
    aware.” The court noted that “more than a few spectators” prefer to be “close to the action” and
    close to the race course “in unobstructed and uninsulated contact with the sport,” and also noted
    that a more protected observation point was made available to spectators at the bottom of the hill.
    Finally, the court opined that application of a limited duty would “avoid unduly restricting
    people in the enjoyment of watching competitive snowmobile competitions by limiting a
    potentially debilitating threat of litigation.”
    The trial court’s holding is an overextension of the analysis in Benejam and is not
    consistent with the Ritchie-Gamester analysis in Van Guilder. The trial court’s reasoning is
    flawed because it equates the risk of being struck down by a driverless snowmobile at a
    snowmobile race with that of objects leaving the field at a baseball game. However, the Benejam
    Court was careful to discuss the “inherent risk”—of which fans are aware—“of objects leaving
    the playing field” “as a natural result of play.” Benejam, 246 Mich App at 651-653. As a natural
    consequence of the game of baseball, objects leave the field; balls are struck, and they often
    leave the boundaries of the field, in an attempt to score runs. Conversely, a rider becoming
    dismounted from a snowmobile during a snowmobile race is not a natural consequence of the
    race because riders do not routinely dismount their snowmobiles in an attempt to win.
    Therefore, the risk of being struck by a driverless, runaway snowmobile is not an “inherent risk”
    that occurs as a “natural result” of the race. Id. at 651, 653. Furthermore, the Benejam Court
    ascribed significant weight to the “inherent value” in allowing most baseball stadium seats to
    remain unprotected because baseball spectators generally desire to be intimately involved with
    the game and hope to come in contact with a souvenir baseball from the field. Benejam, 246
    -4-
    Mich App at 651-653. To a certain extent, baseball spectators welcome the risk they undertake
    while attending a baseball game, while spectators of snowmobile races cannot be said to openly
    welcome the risk of coming into contact with a driverless, runaway snowmobile.
    In summary, Benejam is inapposite to the circumstances of this case because plaintiff’s
    injury was not a natural consequence of spectating at a snowmobile race, and because his injury
    did not arise from an occurrence that a snowmobile racing fan reasonably anticipates or
    welcomes to any extent. A person observing a snowmobile racing event “does not reasonably
    expect or anticipate the risk of physical contact,” nor is the risk of being struck by a driverless,
    runaway snowmobile an “obvious or necessary danger” inherent in the competitive operation of
    snowmobiles. Van Guilder, 248 Mich App at 636.
    Finally, defendant argues that MCL 324.82126(8) supports the assertion that plaintiff’s
    proximity to the snowmobile race should have made him aware “that a runaway snowmobile
    could strike any person within a restricted area” and, accordingly, that a limited duty should
    apply. The statute pertinently provides:
    Each person who participates in the sport of snowmobiling accepts the
    risks associated with that sport insofar as the dangers are obvious and inherent.
    Those risks include, but are not limited to, injuries to persons or property that can
    result from variations in terrain; surface or subsurface snow or ice conditions;
    bare spots; rocks, trees, and other forms of natural growth or debris; and collisions
    with signs, fences, or other snowmobiles or snow-grooming equipment. Those
    risks do not include injuries to persons or property that can result from the use of
    a snowmobile by another person in a careless or negligent manner likely to
    endanger person or property. [MCL 324.82126(8) (emphasis supplied).]
    The language of MCL 324.82126(8) does not support defendant’s position. Beyond the
    statute’s applicability to persons “who participate[] in the sport of snowmobiling,” and
    plaintiff’s status as a spectator, its language supports our conclusion that the applicable standard
    with respect to a spectator is ordinary care. The statute enumerates certain risks that are inherent
    in the activity of riding snowmobiles and obvious to those who participate in that activity, e.g.,
    ice conditions and bare spots, and clearly indicates that such risks do not include injuries
    resulting from another’s negligent or careless use of a snowmobile. The statute thus recognizes a
    negligence standard. See Van Guilder, 248 Mich App at 636-639.
    Reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We do not
    retain jurisdiction.
    /s/ William B. Murphy
    /s/ David H. Sawyer
    /s/ Brock A. Swartzle
    -5-