SYLLABUS
(This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has
been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the convenience of the
reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please
note that, in the interests of brevity, portions of any opinion may not
have been summarized).
Maisonave v. The Newark Bears Professional Baseball Club, Inc. (A-59/60-04)
Argued February 14, 2005 -- Decided September 13, 2005
ZAZZALI, J., writing for a majority of the Court.
In this case in which the plaintiff was injured after being struck
by a foul ball at a baseball game, the Court considers whether the
owners and operators of baseball stadiums owe a duty of care to their
patrons to protect against such harm.
Plaintiff Louis Maisonave suffered a facial injury when a foul ball struck
him in the eye as he stood in the mezzanine at Riverfront Stadium,
home of minor league baseball team The Newark Bears. The mezzanine is an
open walking area exposed on one side to the baseball field. Vendors sell
food and beverages on that level and restrooms are located there. At the
time of the incident, vending carts dotted the mezzanine along both the first
and third base lines on the field-side of the mezzanine. Although netting protected
the seating area behind home plate and extended for some distance down both
base lines, the beverage cart that Maisonave was patronizing was beyond the protection
of the net. As he was talking with other people in the vending
line, Maisonave was struck with a batted ball in the right eye, causing
numerous fractures and other injuries.
Alleging negligence, Maisonave sued The Newark Bears Professional Baseball Club, Inc. and Gourmet
Dining Services, which provides food and beverage services to the stadium (hereinafter, the
Bears). The Bears moved for summary judgment. The trial judge granted the motion,
finding that the Bears had not breached their duty of care. In reaching
that conclusion, the trial judge relied on Schneider v. American Hockey & Ice
Skating Center, Inc.,
342 N.J. Super. 527, 533-34 (App. Div.), certif. denied,
170 N.J. 387 (2001), which set forth a two-pronged duty of care for stadium
owners and operators. Under Schneider, the operator must provide 1) protected seats sufficient
for those spectators who may be reasonably anticipated to desire them, and 2)
protection for the most dangerous sections of the standsa limited duty that ordinarily
may be satisfied by screened seats behind home plate in baseball and behind
the goals in hockey. Here, the trial court reasoned that the provision of
at least two vending carts close to home plate and behind the screening,
which Maisonave could have utilized, established that the Bears had not breached their
limited duty to him, therefore they were not liable as a matter of
law.
The Appellate Division reversed and remanded.
371 N.J. Super. 129, 134 (2004). The
panel found that the second component of Schneider, describing dangerous locations as home
plate in baseball and the goals in hockey, was not intended to be
exhaustive nor immutable. Instead, the panel determined that the measure of the duty
is due care under all circumstances.
HELD : An owner or operator of a stadium must provide protected seating to
those who would seek it on an ordinary basis and provide screening in
the most dangerous sections of the stands. The stands include the stairs providing
access to the seats as well as the areas immediately adjacent to the
stands dedicated solely to viewing the game. In respect of all other areas
of a stadium, the proper standard of care is the business invitee rule,
under which the owner or operator owes a duty of reasonable care to
guard against any dangerous conditions on the property that he or she either
knows about or should have discovered.
1. A landowner owes a duty of reasonable care to guard against any
dangerous condition on his or her property that the owner knows about or
should have discovered. The operator of a commercial recreational facility, like the operator
of any other business, has a general duty to exercise reasonable care for
the safety of its patrons. The limited duty rule, discussed by the Appellate
Division in Schneider, is an exception to general negligence principles and to the
business invitee standard of care in the commercial context. The rule establishes a
fact-specific standard of care for injuries caused by errant balls at baseball stadiums
by accounting for the open and obvious nature of the risk that batted
balls pose to fans. (Pp. 79).
2. After considering the law in other states and recognizing that the limited
duty rule fairly balances the practical and economic interest of owners and operators
with the safety and entertainment interests of the fans, the Court adopts the
Appellate Division's opinion in Schneider, to the extent that it holds that owners
and operators must offer sufficient protected seating to those who would seek it
on an ordinary basis and provide screening in the most dangerous sections of
the stands. The Court recognizes that owners and operators would face undue hardship
if forced to guarantee protection for all fans in the stands from every
fly ball and that most spectators willingly expose themselves to the risks posed
by flying balls and even actively engage in the game by trying to
catch foul balls. It would be unfair to hold owners and operators liable
for injuries to spectators in the stands when the potential danger of fly
balls is an inherent, expected, and even desired part of the baseball fan's
experience. (Pp. 914).
3. In the interest of clarity, the Court explains that the term "stands"
includes the stairs that fans ascend and descend to access their seats in
the stands. Similarly, areas immediately adjacent to the stands designated as "standing room
only" and dedicated solely to viewing the game, fall within the purview of
the limited duty rule. In contrast, multi-purpose areas, such as concourses and playground
areas, are outside the scope of the rule. The measure of the operator's
duty is due care under all the circumstances. Owners and operators must identify
the areas of the stadium that are the most dangerous and take preventive
steps to ensure fan safety to a reasonable extent. (Pp.1415).
3. In respect of areas other than the stands, the Court recognizes that
a different standard of care is appropriate, in part because of transformations in
the game of baseball that have enabled players to hit baseballs harder and
farther. Additionally, fans foreseeably and understandably let down their guard when they are
in other areas of the stadium. In the areas outside of the stands,
including concourses and mezzanines such as the one in this appeal, a commercial
sports facility is no different than any other commercial establishment and courts do
not hesitate to apply general negligence principles in virtually all other tort situations
and the specialized business invitee rule to commercial enterprises. To apply the limited
duty rule to the entire stadium would convert reasonable protection for owners to
immunity by virtually eliminating their liability for foreseeable, preventable injuries to their patrons
even when the fans are no longer engaged with the game. The Court
does not impose strict liability for owners in areas outside of the stands,
however. It simply applies traditional tort principles and concludes that the proper standard
of care for all other areas of the stadium is the business invitee
rule, which provides that a landowner owes a duty of reasonable care to
guard against any dangerous conditions on his or her property that the owner
either knows about or should have discovered. (Pp. 1520).
4. In summation, the limited duty rule will apply to injuries occurring in
the stands. Liability for injuries that occur in all other areas of the
stadium will be governed by traditional rules of negligence, specifically the business invitee
rule. (Pp. 2022).
The judgment of the Appellate Division is AFFIRMED as modified, and the
matter is REMANDED to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
JUSTICE WALLACE, CONCURRING in the majority's result, would reject the limited duty rule
and apply traditional tort principles, including the business invitee rule, throughout the entire
baseball stadium.
JUSTICE RIVERA-SOTO, CONCURRING in part and DISSENTING in part, joined by JUSTICE LaVECCHIA,
agrees with the majority's decision to adopt the limited duty rule of Schneider
as the duty of care an owner/operator of a sports facility must meet
for the distinct peril of objects leaving the playing field. He would apply,
however, the same duty of care for the same peril irrespective of the
plaintiff's location when injured and adopt without modification the Appellate Division's analysis in
Schneider. He is of the belief that there should be one duty and
that the majority's creation of shifting duties of care for the same peril
is fraught with uncertainty and inconsistency.
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and JUSTICES LONG, and ALBIN join in JUSTICE ZAZZALI's opinion.
JUSTICE WALLACE filed a separate concurring opinion. JUSTICE RIVERA-SOTO filed a separate opinion,
concurring in part and dissenting in part, in which JUSTICE LaVECCHIA joins.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-59/
60 September Term 2004
LOUIS MAISONAVE and MYRNA MAISONAVE, his wife,
Plaintiffs-Respondents,
v.
THE NEWARK BEARS PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL CLUB, INC. and GOURMET DINING SERVICES,
Defendants-Appellants,
and
ABC CORP. (name being fictitious) and JOHN DOE (name being fictitious),
Defendants.
Argued February 14, 2005 Decided September 13, 2005
On certification to the Superior Court, Appellate Division, whose opinion is
reported at
371 N.J. Super. 129 (2004).
James J. Horan argued the cause for
appellant Gourmet Dining Services (Mautone & Horan, attorneys).
Timothy J. Schipske argued the cause for appellant The Newark Bears Professional Baseball
Club, Inc. (Rawle & Henderson, attorneys).
Frank DiGiovanni argued the cause for respondents (Kessler, DiGiovanni & Jesuele, attorneys).
JUSTICE ZAZZALI delivered the opinion of the Court.
The first recorded baseball game took place at the Elysian Fields in Hoboken
on June 19, 1846. Leonard Koppett, Koppetts Concise History of Major League Baseball
7 (2004). Since then, the game has become an integral part of our
American identity and has emerged as an ever-expanding business. George F. Will, Bunts
28 (1999) (The business of America is business, and so, of course, is
the national pastime.); see also Flood v. Kuhn,
407 U.S. 258, 282,
92 S. Ct. 2099, 2112,
32 L. Ed.2d 728, 743 (1972) (Professional baseball
is a business and is engaged in interstate commerce.). Between 1994 and 2001,
eight minor league stadiums opened in New Jersey alone. As an increasing number
of citizens flock to competitive baseball games, we confront difficult questions of tort
liability.
Here, a foul ball struck plaintiff in the face as he purchased a
beverage from a mobile vending cart on the concourse of a minor league
stadium. The Appellate Division reversed the trial courts grant of summary judgment in
favor of the stadium owners and operators, holding that the trial court erred
in finding that defendants had not violated their duty of care as a
matter of law.
In this appeal, we survey the law that has evolved concerning owner and
operator liability and examine the boundaries of the limited duty rule. In doing
so, we must accommodate the interests of both fans and owners. We hold
that the limited duty rule, which restricts the tort liability of owners, applies
in situations where an injury occurs in the stands. However, public policy and
fairness require application of traditional negligence principles in all other areas of the
stadium, including, but not limited to, concourses and mezzanine areas.
I.
Plaintiff Louis Maisonave suffered a facial injury when a foul ball struck him
in the eye as he stood on the mezzanine at Riverfront Stadium, home
field of minor league baseball team, The Newark Bears. The mezzanine is an
open walking area exposed on one side to the baseball field. Vendors sell
food and beverages on that level, and restrooms are located there. At the
time of the incident, the stadium used movable vending carts for the sale
of beverages because construction of the stadium had not yet been completed, and
the built-in concession stands were not operational. The carts dotted the mezzanine along
both the first and third base lines on the field-side of the mezzanine.
The vendors stood with their backs to the diamond while the patrons faced
it.
Plaintiff, who had watched the action at a railing on the first base
side of the field, walked about 100 feet to the closest vending cart.
Netting protects the seating area behind home plate and extends for some distance
down both base lines. The beverage cart that plaintiff patronized was on the
first base line, but beyond the protection of the net. In a written
statement, Maisonave described the moments before the incident:
I wasnt consciously aware of where the netting was or where it ended.
From the time I reached the vending cart,
I had not actually watched
the field; I was aware the game was being played by the crowd
reaction, but
I wasnt able to see the field . . . .
Standing at the beverage cart before I was hit I was not thinking
about the possibility of a foul ball coming at me. I didnt think
anything could happen to me there.
[(Emphasis added.)]
At his deposition, plaintiff described the incident:
Q. What were you doing during that five or ten minutes? Were you trying
to watch the game?
A. No, I was talking with some people on line.
* * *
Q. And did the vendors move?
A. Well, the vendor I know ducked kind of sideways because when they said
look out, the last thing I saw was her moving out of the
way and the ball coming.
Q.
You were not aware of this ball previous to that moment? In other
words, did you see the pitcher throw the ball at the batter?
Did
you see the batter swing at the ball?
A. No.
Q. Did you see the ball leave the bat?
A. Nothing, nothing.
[(Emphasis added.)]
The batted ball struck plaintiff in the right eye, causing numerous fractures and
persistent numbness in the area of the eye, drooping of the eye, problems
with his sinuses, and scarring.
Alleging negligence, plaintiff sued The Newark Bears Professional Baseball Club, Inc., which leases
Riverfront Stadium from the Essex County Improvement Authority, and defendant Gourmet Dining Services,
which provides food and beverage services to Riverfront Stadium. The trial court granted
summary judgment in favor of defendants, finding that they had not breached their
duty of care. In reaching that conclusion, the trial court relied on Schneider
v. American Hockey & Ice Skating Center, Inc.,
342 N.J. Super. 527, 533-34
(App. Div.), certif. denied,
170 N.J. 387 (2001), which set forth a two-pronged
duty of care for stadium owners and operators:
[F]irst, the operator must provide protected seating sufficient for those spectators who may
be reasonably anticipated to desire protected seats on an ordinary occasion, and second,
the operator must provide protection for spectators in the most dangerous section of
the stands. The second component of this limited duty ordinarily may be satisfied
by the operator providing screened seats behind home plate in baseball and behind
the goals in hockey.
[(Citations omitted.)]
The trial court reasoned that the provision of at least two vending carts
close to home plate and behind the screening, which plaintiff could have utilized,
established that defendants had not breached their limited duty to plaintiff and, therefore,
were not liable to plaintiff as a matter of law.
The Appellate Division reversed and remanded. Maisonave v. Newark Bears Profl Baseball Club,
Inc.,
371 N.J. Super. 129, 134 (2004). Citing Schneider, the panel agreed that
the operators of a commercial sports facility owe a limited duty to spectators.
Id. at 133 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). However, focusing on the
second part of the Schneider limited duty rule, the Appellate Division stated:
When we said that the second component [of Schneider] may be satisfied by
the operator providing screened seats behind home plate in baseball and behind the
goals in hockey[,] our identification of those locations was not intended to be
exhaustive nor immutable. Rather, the measure of that duty is due care under
all the circumstances.
[Ibid. (citations omitted).]
We granted certification on the separate applications of defendants.
182 N.J. 142 (2004).
For the reasons discussed below, we affirm and modify the decision of the
Appellate Division.
In our analysis, we consider general principles of tort liability, including the business
invitee rule and its application to commercial establishments. Next, we examine the limited
duty rule as an exception to the business invitee rule, its origins, its
application in New Jersey and other jurisdictions, and concerns about the rule. We
then determine whether we should adopt the limited duty rule, and if so,
to what extent it should apply to the stands and to other areas
of the stadium.
II.
A.
In
Hopkins v. Fox & Lazo Realtors, we held that a landowner owe[s]
a duty of reasonable care to guard against any dangerous conditions on his
or her property that the owner either knows about or should have discovered.
132 N.J. 426, 434 (1993) (citing
Handleman v. Cox,
39 N.J. 95 (1963);
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 343 (1969)). This is the standard of care generally
applied to business enterprises and is the default governing standard unless a more
specific rule applies. Although it applied the limited duty rule, our Appellate Division
recognized in
Schneider that the operator of a commercial recreational facility, like the
operator of any other business, has a general duty to exercise reasonable care
for the safety of its patrons. 342
N.J. Super. at 534.
B.
The limited duty rule is a specialized negligence standard that has protected stadium
owners and operators since the early days of modern baseball. For example, in
Crane v. Kansas City Baseball & Exhibition Co.,
153 S.W. 1076, 1078 (Mo.
Ct. App. 1913), the court held that stadium operators must offer protected seating
areas and that a spectator who chose an unprotected seat was contributorily negligent.
In
Quinn v. Recreation Park Assn,
46 P.2d 144, 146 (Cal. 1935), the
court held that [t]he duty imposed by law is performed when screened seats
are provided for as many as may be reasonably expected to call for
them on any ordinary occasion. (Citations omitted.) Since the early twentieth century, courts
have held that one of the natural risks assumed by spectators attending professional
games is that of being struck by batted or thrown balls.
Ibid. Even
a brief review of several early baseball cases reveals that many courts that
adopted the rule, or a version of it, based their decisions on two
facts: that the danger of errant balls was common knowledge and that spectators
sitting in unscreened seats assumed the risk of injury.
See, e.g.,
Brisson v.
Minneapolis Baseball & Athletic Assn,
240 N.W. 903 (Minn. 1932);
Kavafian v. Seattle
Baseball Assn,
181 P. 679 (Wash. 1919). Thus, the rule establishes a fact-specific
standard of care for injuries caused by errant balls at baseball stadiums by
accounting for the open and obvious nature of the risk that batted balls
pose to fans.
In
Schneider,
supra, our Appellate Division endorsed the limited duty rule, explaining that
stadium operators must provide protected seating sufficient for those spectators who may be
reasonably anticipated to desire protected seats on an ordinary occasion. 342
N.J. Super.
at 534 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Additionally, stadium operators must provide
protection for spectators in the most dangerous section of the stands.
Ibid. (internal
quotation marks and citation omitted).
C.
The scope of the duty that the owners and operators of baseball stadiums
owe their patrons is a question of first impression for this Court. However,
about one-half of the states have previously addressed this issue.
See footnote 1
Our research reveals
that eleven of those jurisdictions have adopted the limited duty rule.
See footnote 2
Some states
have not applied the rule and instead have adopted baseball-specific statutes.
See footnote 3
Finally, some
courts have applied traditional negligence principles, such as the business invitee rule or
comparative negligence.
See footnote 4
There is no gainsaying that the limited duty rule has its advocates. Many
believe [it] to be the better rule and adopt [that] definition of the
duty owed by an owner of a baseball field to provide protective screening
for its spectators.
Akins v. Glens Falls City Sch. Dist.,
424 N.E.2d 531,
533 (N.Y. 1981);
see also Lawson v. Salt Lake Trappers, Inc.,
901 P.2d 1013, 1015 (Utah 1995) (The [limited duty] rule insures that those spectators desiring
protection from foul balls will be accommodated and that seats in the most
dangerous area of the stadium will be safe. At the same time, [it]
recognizes baseball tradition and spectator preference by not requiring owners to screen the
entire stadium. (internal citations omitted)).
That said, there are concerns about the rule. For example, Chief Judge Cooke
of the New York Court of Appeals has identified its troubling aspects, describing
the standard as
an unfortunate exercise in judicial rule making in an area that should be
left to the jury. This attempt to precisely prescribe what steps the proprietor
of a baseball field must take to fulfill its duty of reasonable care
is unwarranted and unwise
. . . .
This rule of law denies recovery to injured spectators as effectively as the
old doctrines of assumption of the risk and contributory negligence ever did, and
uses a fundamentally similar rationale to do so.
[Akins, supra, 424 N.E.
2d at 535, 537 (Cooke, C.J., dissenting).]
In 2002, when an errant puck struck and killed a thirteen-year-old girl attending
a National Hockey League game in Ohio, the media intensified its focus on
safety issues in both hockey arenas and baseball stadiums. See Phil Taylor, Death
of a Fan, Sports Illustrated, Apr. 1, 2002, at 59; Steve Politi, Spotlight
on Safety After Fan Death, Star-Ledger (Newark, N.J.), Mar. 21, 2002, at 33.
Since that time, some critics have described the limited duty rule as hopelessly
anachronistic, David Horton, Note, Rethinking Assumption of the Risk and Sports Spectators,
51
UCLA L. Rev. 339, 365 (2003), and have noted that stadium owners are
so insulated from legal responsibility that they are under little pressure to add
more protection for fans, id. at 344-45 (quoting Politi, supra).
III.
With the above case law and commentary as a backdrop, we consider whether
the limited duty rule should apply to stadiums, and, more specifically, to the
stands. In doing so we are mindful that [r]ecognition of a duty of
care, ultimately, rests on considerations of public policy and on notions of fairness.
Crawn v. Campo,
136 N.J. 494, 503 (1994).
As the Appellate Division aptly observed, [w]hile watching the game, either seated or
standing in an unprotected area, spectators reasonably may be expected to pay attention
and to look out for their own safety.
Maisonave,
supra, 371
N.J. Super.
at 134. It is the well-understood nature of the game that batted or
thrown baseballs can land in the stands. Indeed, most spectators prefer to sit
where they can have an unobstructed view of the game and are willing
to expose themselves to the risks posed by flying balls . . .
to obtain that view.
Schneider,
supra, 342
N.J. Super. at 534. Moreover, professional
baseball is a unique sport because fans actively engage in the game by
trying to catch foul balls. Fans often greet out-of-play baseballs with cheers as
they dive over walls and rows of seats, risking life and limb, for
the thrill of triumphantly claiming the errant ball.
Although it has drawn criticism, we are not prepared to say that the
rules time has come and passed. It would be unfair to hold owners
and operators liable for injuries to spectators in the stands when the potential
danger of fly balls is an inherent, expected, and even desired part of
the baseball fans experience. Moreover, owners and operators would face undue hardship if
forced to guarantee protection for all fans in the stands from every fly
ball. Because the limited duty rule fairly balances the practical and economic interests
of owners and operators with the safety and entertainment interests of the fans,
we adopt the Appellate Divisions opinion in
Schneider, to the extent that it
holds that owners and operators must offer sufficient protected seating to those who
would seek it on an ordinary basis and to provide screening in the
most dangerous sections of the stands.
In the interest of clarity, we note that the term stands includes the
stairs that fans ascend and descend to access their seats in the stands.
Similarly, areas immediately adjacent to the stands designated as standing room only, and
dedicated solely to viewing the game, fall within the purview of the limited
duty rule. In contrast, multi-purpose areas, such as concourses and playground areas, are
outside the scope of the rule, as discussed below.
Finally, as the Appellate Division recognized in its opinion below, the measure of
the operators duty is due care under all the circumstances under New Jerseys
interpretation of the limited duty rule.
Ibid. (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
We expect owners and operators -- who are in the best position to
determine which areas of the stadium are indeed the most dangerous -- to
identify those areas and take preventive steps to ensure fan safety to a
reasonable extent. For example, concerns arise in many areas of the stadium because
baseballs
hit into the unscreened seats are actually faster than those balls hit directly
behind the screened home plate area. . . . Traditionally, balls hit straight
back are hit with the bat coming underneath the ball, which takes off
some of the speed. In contrast, line drive fouls (most frequently right down
the foul lines) are normally hit flush, and send the ball at a
higher velocity down the line and into the stands.
[Gil Fried, Baseball Spectators Assumption of Risk: Is It Fair or Foul?, 13
Marq. Sports L. Rev. 39, 58 (2002) (internal citation omitted).]
Thus, owners and operators must reassess whether there is a sufficient amount of
protected seating available in the most dangerous locations for those that might reasonably
expect to obtain such seats. Ibid.
IV.
We now must decide whether the limited duty rule should apply to areas
other than the stands. To assist our analysis, we examine the developing law,
principles of fairness, and related considerations.
See Crawn,
supra, 136
N.J. at 503
(Recognition of a duty of care, ultimately, rests on considerations of public policy
and on notions of fairness.).
A.
Some jurisdictions, as noted above, have applied common law principles, rather than the
limited duty rule, to resolve litigation between fans injured in the stands and
stadium owners and operators. It appears that Pennsylvania is the only jurisdiction that
has addressed the factually distinct issue of an injury to a patron in
an area of the stadium other than the stands. In
Jones v. Three
Rivers Management Corp.,
394 A.2d 546 (Pa. 1978), the plaintiff was injured by
a batted ball as she walked along the stadium concourse with her back
to the playing field. Recognizing that a different standard of care might apply
in the situation before it, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania framed the issue
as whether [plaintiffs] case is governed by the no duty rule applicable to
common, frequent and expected risks of baseball or by the ordinary rules applicable
to all other risks which may be present in a baseball stadium.
Id.
at 551. The court held that trial court had erred in applying the
no duty rule in that circumstance,
id. at 552, and concluded that [i]t
was for the jury to determine the question of appellees negligence,
id. at
553.
Like Pennsylvania, we recognize that a different standard of care may be appropriate
for areas of the stadium outside of the stands. We have held that
New Jersey tolerates immunities only for important reasons of public policy and in
relatively exceptional situations, and therefore strongly endorses a standard of care based on
ordinary negligence.
Crawn,
supra, 136
N.J. at 502. Thus, in considering the appropriate
standard of care for areas of the stadium other than the stands, and
in harmonizing the interests of fans and owners, the nature of risks[] and
considerations of public policy and fairness . . . must inform our determination.
Id. at 503.
B.
Applying principles of fairness, as
Crawn requires us to do, we recognize that,
since the birth of the baseball rule, both sports and tort law have
undergone massive transformations. Horton,
supra,
51
UCLA L. Rev. at 343. While the
baseball event has been evolving, tort law has shifted from a
caveat emptor
approach to one that generally requires defendants to assume more responsibility.
Id. at
365. As a consequence, there is a pragmatic difficulty [in] applying an old
rule to a sport that has changed tremendously in the last seventy years.
Id. at 365-66. Thus, [s]ports viewership has significantly changed over the years, but
most courts have yet to embrace this change. Fried,
supra, 13
Marq. Sports.
L. Rev. at 54. Because the beauty of common law is the ability
to adapt to the times[,]
ibid., we now consider whether our rule requires
refinement.
Transformations in tort law and the game of baseball suggest boundaries to the
limited duty rule. Specifically, new training techniques and technologies have made play faster
and players stronger. Horton,
supra,
51
UCLA L. Rev. at 343-44. Ballparks now
present a sensory overload of distractions. Tom Verducci,
Safety Squeeze,
Sports Illustrated, Apr.
1, 2002, at 64. The limited duty rule does not accommodate all of
the activities that are part of todays game, nor does it take into
account that players can hit baseballs harder and farther.
The validity of the baseball rule diminishes in the context of injuries that
occur in stadium areas other than the stands. Fans foreseeably and understandably let
down their guard when they are in other areas of the stadium. Once
the fan has disengaged him- or herself from the activity on the field
and has left the stands, that individual is no longer trying to catch
foul balls or even necessarily watching the game. It is all harmless fun
-- until that one foul ball comes screaming at the wrong time and
in the wrong place. Fried,
supra, 13
Marq. Sports L. Rev. at 57.
The fact that [c]hildren and seniors are an important part of minor league
games, Verducci,
supra, at 64, underscores our concern.
Nothing about the game of baseball distinguishes it from other businesses in a
way that justifies preferential treatment for stadium owners and operators for injuries that
occur outside of the stands. Indeed, in areas outside of the stands, including
concourses and mezzanines such as the one in this appeal, a commercial sports
facility is no different than any other commercial establishment, and we do not
hesitate to apply general negligence principles in virtually all other tort situations and
the specialized business invitee rule to commercial enterprises. As the Appellate Division noted
in addressing this appeal,
[t]he defendants are engaged in a commercial venture which by its nature induces
spectators to let down their guard. They have a concomitant duty to exercise
reasonable care to protect them during such
times of heightened vulnerability. The imposition
of a duty under these circumstances . . . is not only fair
but reasonable.
[Maisonave, supra, 371 N.J. Super. at 134 (emphasis added).]
We agree with that analysis and conclude that times of heightened vulnerability include
all situations in which a patron is no longer in the stands.
C.
Because principles of fairness, and by implication public policy, support the application of
traditional tort concepts to areas outside of the stands, we will not expand
the scope of the baseball rule past its logical and appropriate borders, that
is, the stands.
Cf. Crawn,
supra, 136
N.J. at 503. To apply the
baseball rule to the entire stadium would convert reasonable protection for owners to
immunity by virtually eliminating their liability for foreseeable, preventable injuries to their patrons
even when the fans are no longer engaged with the game. The wisdom
of eschewing such blanket rules where negligence is concerned is obvious.
Akins,
supra,
424
N.E.
2d at 536 (Cooke, C.J., dissenting).
We do not impose strict liability for owners in areas outside of the
stands; such a bright-line rule would impose an onerous burden on owners and
operators. We simply apply traditional tort principles and conclude that the proper standard
of care for all other areas of the stadium is the business invitee
rule, which provides that a landowner owe[s] a duty of reasonable care to
guard against any dangerous conditions on his or her property that the owner
either knows about or should have discovered.
Hopkins,
supra, 132
N.J. at 434.
D.
Regrettably, the dissent misapplies basic concepts of tort law, focusing as it does
on some notion that the plaintiffs geographic location when injured,
post at ___
(slip op. at 4), is an improper premise in the duty calculus. That
notion is especially odd in light of the dissents adoption of the limited
duty rule for the geographic location of the entire stadium. Our differences, rhetoric
aside, seem only to be about the
scope of the geographic area to
which the limited duty rule applies.
The limited duty rule is an exception to general negligence principles, and more
particularly, to the application of the business invitee standard of care in the
commercial context. The dissent apparently prefers not to consider public policy and fairness
concepts if the result is to hold the owner of the commercial enterprise
responsible for its negligence when it does not adequately protect its business invitees,
at least outside of the spectator seating areas. But, the Court is required
by its common law precedents to examine the owners duty in those circumstances,
and to consider which of the parties is best able to bear the
burden of foreseeable harm within the stadium.
See Carter Lincoln-Mercury, Inc. v. EMAR
Group, Inc.,
135 N.J. 182, 194 (1994) (holding that relationship between plaintiff and
tortfeasor, nature of risk, and ability and opportunity to exercise care are relevant
concerns to imposition of duty);
see, e.g.,
Bd. of Educ. of City of
Clifton v. Grace Corp.,
258 N.J. Super. 94, 113 (stating that public interest
dictates that cost of defective construction should be borne by party who created
danger and who is in better economic position to bear the loss rather
than by victim). In the dissents view, clearly, a decision tethered in either
law or proper public policy,
post at ___ (slip op. at 10), would
relieve the stadium owner, who is in the best position to protect its
patrons, of any responsibility anywhere on its business premises regardless of its negligence.
This we decline to do.
V.
To recapitulate, the limited duty rule, as set forth above and in
Schneider,
will apply to injuries occurring in the stands. However, traditional rules of negligence,
specifically the business invitee rule, will govern owner and operator liability for injuries
that occur in all other areas of the stadium. That adjustment of the
ground rules is a fair and appropriate accommodation of the competing interests.
We remand this matter to the trial court for application of the standard
we have set forth in this opinion to all future proceedings in this
matter. The judgment of the Appellate Division is affirmed as modified.
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and JUSTICES LONG and ALBIN join in JUSTICE ZAZZALIs opinion.
JUSTICE WALLACE filed a separate concurring opinion. JUSTICE RIVERA-SOTO filed a separate opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part, in which JUSTICE LaVECCHIA joins.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-59/
60 September Term 2004
LOUIS MAISONAVE and MYRNA MAISONAVE, his wife,
Plaintiffs-Respondents,
v.
THE NEWARK BEARS PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL CLUB, INC. and GOURMET DINING SERVICES,
Defendants-Appellants,
and
ABC CORP. (name being fictitious) and JOHN DOE (name being fictitious),
Defendants.
JUSTICE WALLACE, JR., concurring.
I concur with the result in the majority opinion that traditional negligence principles
apply to plaintiffs injury in the concourse of a baseball stadium. However, because
I agree with the comment that the limited duty rule is hopelessly anachronistic,
David Horton, Comment, Rethinking Assumption of Risk and Sports Spectators,
51 UCLA L.
Rev. 339, 365 (2003), I write separately.
Whether it is called the limited duty rule or the baseball rule, and
I use those terms interchangeably, this appeal presents this Court with the opportunity
to evaluate the public policy underlying stadium owner and operator liability. I would
reject the limited duty rule and apply traditional tort principles throughout the entire
baseball stadium.
I.
This Court must first decide whether a duty of care exists in this
specific circumstance. As we restated in
Crawn v. Campo,
136 N.J. 494, 503
(1994), [t]he imposition of a duty is the conclusion of a rather complex
analysis that considers the relationship of the parties, the nature of the risk-that
is, its foreseeability and severity-and the impact the imposition of a duty would
have on public policy. (quoting
Dunphy v. Gregor,
136 N.J. 99, 108 (1994)).
When the court determines that a duty exists and liability will be extended,
it draws judicial lines based on fairness and policy.
Kelly v. Gwinnell,
96 N.J. 538, 544 (1984).
A.
As the majority opinion explains, the limited duty rule is a two-prong test
used to defin[e] the duty of a stadium owner to provide protected seats
for its patrons. Gil Fried and Robin Ammon,
Baseball Spectators Assumption of Risk:
Is It Fair or Foul?, 13
Marq. Sports L. Rev. 39, 44 (2002).
Under the first prong of that test, the stadium owner and operator must
provide protected seating sufficient for those spectators who may be reasonably anticipated to
desire protected seats on an ordinary occasion, and under the second prong the
stadium owner and operator must provide protection for spectators in the most dangerous
section of the stands.
Schneider v. Am. Hockey & Ice Skating Ctr., Inc.,
342 N.J. Super. 527, 533-34 (App. Div.)(quoting
Akins v. Glens Falls City Sch.
Dist.,
424 N.E.2d 531, 533 (N.Y. 1981)),
certif. denied,
170 N.J. 387 (2001).
The limited duty rule suggests that the area behind home plate is the
most dangerous section of the stadium and requires the most protection. But, as
the majority opinion makes clear, the area behind home plate is not the
only dangerous section of a stadium. In fact,
[t]he best seats are the worst. A spot behind or next to a
dugout gives a baseball fan the opportunity to . . . dodge potentially
lethal projectiles whizzing at more than 100 [miles per hour]. Unprotected by netting,
such seats are among the most dangerous in sports.
* * *
[N]o more dangerous seats exist than the ones behind and near the third
base dugout when two righthanded power pitchers are starting. The lineups are usually
loaded with lefthanded hitters who are likely to swing late at fastballs, whistling
foul balls into the stands. Fans in those danger zones need to pay
attention to each pitch as closely as the third baseman does.
Such seats are particularly dangerous for parents with infants (babies should not even
be allowed there), children (how many elementary school kids are riveted to each
pitch for a three-hour game?) and the elderly (slowed reaction time makes them
vulnerable). Children and seniors are an important part of minor league and spring
training games, typically held in small ballparks in which even the premium seats
are affordable. The risk, however, is enormous for even the most athletic onlookers.
In 1992 California Angels pitcher Matt Keough was hit in the right temple
and nearly killed by a line drive while seated in the dugout of
Scottsdale Stadium in Arizona. A fence was installed in front of the dugout
for the safety of the players and staff.
[Tom Verducci, Safety Squeeze, Sports Illustrated, Apr. 1, 2002, at 64.]
B.
In my view, fairness and policy dictate that we treat owners and operators
of commercial sports facilities the same as we treat other commercial property owners.
Therefore, I would apply the business invitee rule, under which the stadium owner
and operator would owe a duty to conduct a reasonable inspection to discover
latent dangerous conditions, and the stadium owner and operator would have a duty
to guard against any dangerous conditions . . . that the owner either
knows about or should have discovered.
Parks v. Rogers,
176 N.J. 491, 497-98
n.3 (2003)(quoting
Hopkins v. Fox & Lazo Realtors,
132 N.J. 426, 434 (1993)).
Moreover, under certain conditions the landowner has a duty to protect business visitors
from foreseeable criminal acts.
Clohesy v. Food Circus Supermarkets, Inc.,
149 N.J. 496,
516-17 (1997) (holding landowner had duty to provide security in parking lot to
protect its invitees from criminal acts of third parties). There is nothing about
the game of professional baseball that distinguishes it from other businesses that would
justify preferential treatment for stadium owners and operators regarding their liability to patrons
in the stands. I can find no reasonable justification for applying a lesser
standard for stadium owners and operators.
We often look to the Restatement for guidance in declaration of the common
law. According to the Restatement (Third) of Torts, in addressing the relationship of
assumption of risk and defendants negligence,
[a] plaintiff who is actually aware of a reasonable risk and voluntarily undertakes
it, as when a parent tries to rescue a child from a fire,
is not negligent. The parent may, however, be negligent for other reasons, such
as the manner of the rescue. When a plaintiff is negligent, the plaintiffs
awareness of a risk is relevant to the plaintiffs degree of responsibility. See
§ 8.
Whether the defendant reasonably believes that the plaintiff is aware of a risk
and voluntarily undertakes it may be relevant to whether the defendant acted reasonably.
The defendant might reasonably have relied on the plaintiff to avoid the known
risk, or other policy considerations may dictate that the defendant has no duty
or a limited duty to the plaintiff. See § 2, Comment j; Restatement Second,
Torts § 282. Whether the plaintiff is aware of a risk and voluntarily assumes
it may also be relevant to whether the plaintiffs conduct is a superseding
cause. See Restatement Second, Torts § 442. Comparative responsibility may affect what constitutes a
superseding cause, but that issue is beyond the scope of this Restatement.
[Restatement (Third) of Torts; Apportionment of Liab. § 3 cmt. c (2000).]
Illustration number six of section three of the Restatement specifically addresses the sports
stadium scenario and provides that:
A attends a baseball game at Bs ballpark. A sits in a portion
of the stands beyond the point where the screen prevents balls from entering
the seats. A is aware that balls occasionally are hit into the stands.
The fact that A knew balls are occasionally hit into the stands does
not constitute assumption of risk. The fact that A knew balls occasionally are
hit into the stands is relevant in evaluating whether A acted reasonably by
engaging in particular types of conduct while sitting in the stands (sitting in
the stands would not itself constitute unreasonable conduct). If the factfinder concludes that
A did not act reasonably under the circumstances, As knowledge of the risk
is relevant to the percentage of responsibility the factfinder assigns to A. See
§ 8. If B could reasonably assume that A and other fans are aware
that balls are occasionally hit into the stands, this fact is also relevant
to whether B acted reasonably in relying on A to watch out for
balls instead of constructing a screen or providing warnings.
[Id. at cmt. c, illus. 6.]
Accordingly, I would follow the Restatement and apply the business invitee rule and
comparative negligence principles to assess liability for injuries caused at a baseball stadium.
A trier of fact should consider all of the circumstances to determine whether
the owner and operator have breached their duty of care to the plaintiff.
That view does not impose a requirement on owners and operators to guarantee
protection for all fans[.] Ante at ___ (slip op. at 13). Instead, the
application of traditional tort principles, such as comparative negligence, will adequately even out
the playing field for both sides. See Restatement, supra. Simply stated, if the
elements of the business invitee rule are present, then the injured fan should
have the opportunity to seek redress and a jury should decide whether the
owner and operator of the stadium should bear any responsibility for that injury.
C.
This Court has faced many challenges in the past and, when the occasion
warranted, changed the common law for the better. Our tort law has shifted
from a contributory negligence perspective to a comparative negligence assessment. Yet, the limited
duty rule does not reflect that change because it is still based on
the outdated assumption of risk doctrine. Although the majority recognizes that the beauty
of common law is the ability to adapt to the times, a
nte at
____ (slip op. at 17), the Courts decision to adopt the limited duty
rule in the stands represents a missed opportunity to correct a shortcoming in
our law.
In this matter of first impression for this Court, we should mark new
ground. [W]isdom too often never comes, and so one ought not to reject
it merely because it comes late.
State v. Intl Fedn of Profl &
Technical Engrs, Local 195,
169 N.J. 505, 539 (2001)(citations and quotations omitted). The
time is ripe for this Court to reject the limited duty rule and
to apply traditional business invitee tort principles to professional stadium owners and operators.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-59/
60 September Term 2004
LOUIS MAISONAVE and MYRNA MAISONAVE, his wife,
Plaintiffs-Respondents,
v.
THE NEWARK BEARS PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL CLUB, INC. and GOURMET DINING SERVICES,
Defendants-Appellants,
and
ABC CORP. (name being fictitious) and JOHN DOE (name being fictitious),
Defendants.
JUSTICE RIVERA-SOTO, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
This appeal requires that we address what duty, if any, a baseball stadium
operator or its concessionaires owe patrons with respect to a peril unique to
sports facilities: objects leaving the playing field that strike and injure patrons. On
summary judgment, the trial court held that the limited duty rule set forth
in Schneider v. Am. Hockey & Ice Skating Ctr., Inc.,
342 N.J. Super. 527 (App. Div.), certif. denied,
170 N.J. 387 (2001), barred the causes of
action pressed here. Accepting the trial courts articulation of the limited duty rule,
the Appellate Division nonetheless created an exception to the limited duty rule for
those patrons who have left their seats and are in the process of
placing orders or reaching for money or accepting the purchases or striking up
conversations with others [in] line . . . . Maisonave v. Newark Bears
Profl Baseball Club, Inc.,
371 N.J. Super. 129, 134 (App. Div. 2004). Focusing
on whether a patron is a spectator and distinguishing those instances when the
patron/spectator is no longer paying attention to the sporting contest and is otherwise
engaged in one of the sports arenas commercial venture[s] which by its nature
induces spectators to let down their guard, the panel held that the baseball
stadium operator and its concessionaires have a concomitant duty to exercise reasonable care
to protect [the inattentive spectators] during such times of heightened vulnerability. Ibid.
Sustaining, but modifying, the Appellate Divisions reasoning, a majority of this Court now
adopt[s] the Appellate Divisions opinion in Schneider, to the extent that it holds
that owners and operators must offer sufficient protected seating to those who would
seek it on an ordinary basis and to provide screening in the most
dangerous sections of the stands. Ante, ___ N.J. ___ (2005) (slip op. at
13-14). The majority then defines the area where the limited duty rule applies
-- the stands -- to
include[] the stairs that fans ascend and descend to access their seats in
the stands. Similarly, areas immediately adjacent to the stands designated as standing room
only, and dedicated solely to viewing the game, fall within the purview of
the limited duty rule. In contrast, multi-purpose areas, such as concourses and playground
areas, are outside the scope of the rule, . . . .
[Ante, ___ N.J. ___ (2005) (slip op. at 14).]
Relying on Crawn v. Campo,
136 N.J. 494, 503 (1994) for the proposition
that [r]ecognition of a duty of care, ultimately, rests on considerations of public
policy and on notions of fairness, ante, ___ N.J. ___ (2005) (slip op.
at 12, 15), the majority distinguishes between the areas within a sports facility
where the duty of care of the owner/operator is defined by the limited
duty rule and those areas of the stadium outside of the stands, ante,
___ N.J. ___ (2005) (slip op. at 16), where the duty of care
of the owner/operator is the business invitee rule, which provides that a landowner
owe[s] a duty of reasonable care to guard against any dangerous condition on
his or her property that the owner either knows about or should have
discovered. Ante, ___ N.J. ___ (2005) (slip op. at 20) (citing Hopkins v.
Fox & Lazo Realtors,
132 N.J. 426, 434 (1993)).
Insofar as the majority adopts the limited duty rule of Schneider v. Am.
Hockey & Ice Skating Ctr., Inc. as the duty of care an owner/operator
of a sports facility must meet for the distinct peril of objects leaving
the playing field, I concur with the majoritys conclusion. However, to the extent
the majority creates a hybrid duty of care for exactly the peril addressed
by the limited duty rule -- a hybrid duty of care that hinges
solely on where a plaintiffs volitional acts take him or her and is
independent of any act by the party ultimately held liable -- I respectfully
dissent. I would apply the same duty of care (the limited duty rule)
for the same peril (objects leaving the playing field) irrespective of the plaintiffs
location when injured.
I.
A.
I start from the self-evident proposition that a sports facility is different from
any other commercial establishment. As the majority itself acknowledges in the context of
this case, professional baseball is a unique sport because fans actively engage in
the game by trying to catch foul balls. Fans often greet out-of-play baseballs
with cheers as they dive over walls and rows of seats, risking life
and limb, for the thrill of triumphantly claiming the errant ball.
Ante, ___
N.J. ___ (2005) (slip op. at 13). Given the peril of objects leaving
the playing field that is unique to sports facilities, I embrace the limited
duty rule as a reasonable and reasoned accommodation of societys conflicting interests. In
Schneider v. Am. Hockey & Ice Skating Ctr., Inc.,
342 N.J. Super. 527,
583-84 (App. Div.),
certif. denied,
170 N.J. 387 (2001), Judge Skillman traced the
development of the duty owed by sports facilities to patrons as follows:
There are some cases which hold that the operator of a sports facility
has no duty to provide spectators with protection from flying balls or pucks,
because a person who attends a sporting event assumes the risks inherent in
watching the sport. However, the more commonly accepted rule is that a sports
facility has a limited duty of care to protect spectators from flying balls
or pucks. Some cases hold that this limited duty may be satisfied by
simply affording spectators the opportunity to purchase a ticket in an area that
is protected by netting or plexiglass. However, what has come to be recognized
as the prevailing rule is that a sports facility operators limited duty of
care has two components: first, the operator must provide protected seating sufficient for
those spectators who may be reasonably anticipated to desire protected seats on an
ordinary occasion, and second, the operator must provide protection for spectators in the
most dangerous section of the stands. The second component of this limited duty
ordinarily may be satisfied by the operator providing screened seats behind home plate
in baseball and behind the goals in hockey.
Although the operator of a commercial recreational facility, like the operator of any
other business, has a general duty to exercise reasonable care for the safety
of its patrons, the measure of that duty is due care under all
the circumstances. The critical circumstance that determines the scope of the duty of
an operator of a baseball field or hockey rink is that most spectators
prefer to sit where they can have an unobstructed view of the game
and are willing to expose themselves to the risks posed by flying balls
or pucks to obtain that view. Consequently, it is not unreasonable to accommodate
this preference, so long as the sports facility operator provides sufficient screened seats
for those spectators who may be reasonably expected to request protected seats and
also screens any seats that pose an unduly high risk of injury from
flying balls or pucks.
[(citations omitted).]
I cannot improve on, and therefore adopt, Judge Skillmans excellent analysis and would
hold that, in respect of the peril of objects leaving the playing field,
the operator of a sports facility has a two-part limited duty of care:
to provide protective seating in a quantity sufficient to satisfy reasonable demand, and
to protect patrons in those areas of the stadium which are most dangerous.
I would also hold, consistent with Judge Skillmans conclusions, that the latter requirement
is, in large part, satisfied by the operator providing screened seats behind home
plate in baseball. . . .
Ibid.
B.
If we are to be consistent in our adoption of the limited duty
rule as the standard of care owed by a stadium owner/operator to its
patrons, our analysis must be defined and circumscribed by it. The limited duty
rule does not immunize a stadium owner/operator from liability to persons injured by
objects leaving the playing field. On the contrary, the limited duty rule crystallizes
the duty a stadium owner/operator owes in respect of the specific peril of
objects leaving the playing field: to provide sufficient screened seats so as to
satisfy the demand therefor, and to screen those areas of the stadium where
there is an unduly high risk of injury from objects leaving the playing
field. We analyze the application of the limited duty rule in stages.
We first inquire whether the plaintiff sought protected seating. If he did so
and, while so seated, was injured by an object leaving the playing field,
the question that must be addressed is whether the stadium owner/operator provided sufficient
protected seating to satisfy demand. If so, then the stadium owner/operator has satisfied
his duty of care and no breach of duty -- and, hence, no
liability -- would flow. However, if plaintiff requested protected seating and the stadium
owner/operator failed to provide sufficient protected seating so as to satisfy the demand
therefor, and if plaintiff was then injured as a result of an object
leaving the playing field, then a breach of duty and resultant civil liability
follow.
When, as here, a plaintiff is not injured while seated in a protected
area, the focus of the inquiry under the limited duty rule shifts to
whether the plaintiffs location when injured as a result of an object leaving
the playing field was one that carried an unduly high risk of injury
from objects leaving the playing field. If so, and if the stadium owner/operator
did not screen that area, then the standard of care of the limited
duty rule has been breached and liability follows. However, if the plaintiffs location
when injured as a result of an object leaving the playing field was
not one that carried an unduly high risk of injury from objects leaving
the playing field or was otherwise screened, then the standard of care of
the limited duty rule has not been breached and no liability should follow.
An application of these principles to this case leads to the conclusion that
plaintiff has failed to demonstrate that his location when injured as a result
of a batted ball leaving the playing field was one that carried an
unduly high risk of injury from objects leaving the playing field. Indeed, the
only proof adduced by plaintiff here was of his own injury; there was
no proof of any other injuries at that location arising from objects leaving
the playing field. Thus, if we apply the limited duty rule as it
is generally understood - and as the majority adopts it before limiting its
application -- plaintiffs claim must fail.
II.
Reasoning that a fair and appropriate accommodation of the competing interests requires that
the application of the
Schneider limited duty rule be circumscribed to only those
injuries suffered from objects leaving the playing field while the plaintiff is located
in the stands,
ante, ___
N.J. ___ (2005) (slip op. at 20), the
majority instead adopts a hybrid standard of care for the same peril: if
a plaintiff is located in the stands when injured by an object leaving
the playing field, then the duty of care owed is that of the
limited duty rule; if, however, the plaintiff is located within the stadium but
other than in the stands when injured by an object leaving the playing
field, then the duty of care owed is of reasonable care to guard
against any dangerous conditions on his or her property that the owner either
knows about or should have discovered.
Ante, ___
N.J. ___ (2005) (slip op.
at 20) (citing
Hopkins v. Fox & Lazo Realtors,
132 N.J. 426, 434
(1993)). Accord