May, J.
Cynthia Welch was injured when a little league player who was taking practice swings struck her knee with a bat. She sued the player, Jordan Young; the player’s father and coach, Shawn Young; McCutcheon Youth Baseball League, Inc.; and Wea Township through Wea Summer Recreation and Wea Summer Recreation Center (“Wea defendants”). [Footnote omitted.] The Wea defendants and Shawn Young moved for summary judgment, which the court granted. [Footnote omitted.] Welch moved to correct error and her motion was denied.
Our Indiana Court has articulated a new rule for determining liability in cases like the one before us, and there are questions of fact as to where Jordan Young was when he was taking the practice swings and whether the game had started when Welch was injured. Thus, summary judgment was inappropriate under the new standard and we accordingly affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand. [Footnotes omitted.]
….
2. Breach of Duty
Both parties’ remaining arguments are premised on whether Welch was a “participant” in the little league game when she was injured, or was merely a “spectator.” At the time of the briefing, that distinction had implications for the duty of care owed to Welch. But our Indiana Supreme Court’s recent decision in Pfenning v. Lineman, 947 N.E.2d 392 (Ind. 2011), has changed how we assess negligence in this context.
In Pfenning, a golf outing was sponsored by a tavern and held at the Elks Country Club. Pfenning, then sixteen years old, attended at the invitation of her grandfather. She was driving a beverage cart on the cart path near the 18th hole when she was struck in the mouth by a golf ball. The ball was a low drive from the sixteenth tee, which was approximately eighty yards from where Pfenning was when she was struck. The drive traveled straight for approximately sixty to seventy yards, then hooked to the left. The golfer sought summary judgment on the ground he could not be liable for negligence when Pfenning was a coparticipant in the sporting event and her injuries resulted from an inherent risk of the sport.
The Pfenning Court summarized the “diverging approaches” this court had utilized in addressing “the concept of duty in golf liability cases.” Id. at 398. It addressed Parsons v. Arrowhead Golf, Inc., 874 N.E.2d 993 (Ind. Ct. App. 2007) (plaintiff golfer injured when he stepped from cart path onto the green); Bowman v. McNary, 853 N.E.2d 984 (Ind. Ct. App.2006) (plaintiff golfer injured when struck by club of another golfer taking practice swing); and Gyuriak v. Millice, 775 N.E.2d 391 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002) (golfer struck in head by another player’s errant tee shot), trans. denied. All three opinions concluded that a sports participant has no duty to exercise care to protect a co-participant from inherent risks of the sport. Pfenning, 947 N.E.2d at 399.
The Pfenning Court noted we have employed
differing rationales to support a no-duty rule when analyzing sports injury claims but [have] consistently analyzed the issue of duty by focusing primarily on the injured plaintiff’s actual or presumed venturousness in undertaking inherent risks of a sporting activity rather than on the actions of the athlete whose conduct causes the injury.
Id. at 400-01.
Similarly, the Court found “[s]ignificant variations” among decisions from other jurisdictions addressing liability for sports injuries. Id. at 403. In its survey of approaches from other jurisdictions, the Pfenning Court noted:
Two states, New Hampshire and Arizona, provide enhanced protection from liability for sports participants by focusing not on the element of duty but rather on breach of duty, finding that no breach of duty occurs from the ordinary activities of a sport. Allen v. Dover Co–Recreational Softball League,148 N.H. 407, 419–20, 807 A.2d 1274, 1285–86 (2002) (finding that defendants had a duty “to not create an unreasonable risk of injury,” that is, “not to act in an unreasonable manner that would increase or create a risk of injury outside the range of risks,” and that an inaccurate throw that strikes a base runner was “within the ordinary range of activity involved in playing softball which, even if negligent, cannot as a matter of law constitute unreasonable conduct under the circumstances”); Estes v. Tripson, 188 Ariz. 93, 95–96, 932 P.2d 1364, 1366–67 (Ariz. Ct. App. 1997) [holding a base runner who collided with a catcher did not increase the inherent risks faced by catcher and thus there is no breach of duty as a matter of law].
Id. at 402. [Footnote omitted.]
The Pfenning Court then rejected our “no duty” approach, finding it inconsistent with Indiana’s comparative fault system “and its explicit direction that ‘fault’ includes assumption of risk and incurred risk.” Id. at 403. It noted “such considerations of a plaintiff’s incurred risk, even if evaluated by an objective standard, cannot be used to support a finding of no duty in a negligence action.” Id. (citing Heck v. Robey, 659 N.E.2d 498, 505 (Ind. 1995), and Smith v. Baxter, 796 N.E.2d 242, 245 (Ind. 2003)). In contrast, it noted sports injury decisions from this court that have
employed consideration of the “inherent risks” of a sport to justify development of a no-duty rule. We view the evaluation of such inherent risks to be tantamount to an objective consideration of the risk of harm that a plaintiff undertakes and thus unsatisfactory because it violates the Comparative Fault Act and the precedent of this Court.
Id.
The Pfenning Court reaffirmed that “strong public policy considerations favor the encouragement of participation in athletic activities and the discouragement of excessive litigation of claims by persons who suffer injuries from participants’ conduct,” so sound policy reasons support enhanced protection against liability to co-participants in sports events. Id. “Athletic activity by its nature involves strenuous and often inexact and imprecise physical activity that may somewhat increase the normal risks attendant to the activities of ordinary life outside the sports arena, but this does not render unreasonable the ordinary conduct involved in such sporting activities.” Id.
To achieve these policy objectives consistently with statutory and case law, the Pfenning Court decided, we must look to “the element of breach of duty, which is determined by the reasonableness under the circumstances of the actions of the alleged tortfeasor.” Id. The Court noted breach of duty, because it involves an evaluation of reasonableness, is usually a question to be determined by the finder of fact in negligence cases. Id. However, it held:
in cases involving sports injuries, and in such cases only, we conclude that a limited new rule should apply acknowledging that reasonableness may be found by the court as a matter of law. As noted above, the sports participant engages in physical activity that is often inexact and imprecise and done in close proximity to others, thus creating an enhanced possibility of injury to others. The general nature of the conduct reasonable and appropriate for a participant in a particular sporting activity is usually commonly understood and subject to ascertainment as a matter of law.
Id. at 403-04. The Court articulated this rule: “in negligence claims against a participant in a sports activity, if the conduct of such participant is within the range of ordinary behavior of participants in the sport, the conduct is reasonable as a matter of law and does not constitute a breach of duty.” Id. at 404. As to the golfer’s errant drive that resulted in Pfenning’s injury, “such conduct is clearly within the range of ordinary behavior of golfers and thus is reasonable as a matter of law and does not establish the element of breach required for a negligence action.” Id.
After Pfenning, then, the analysis of an injury like that before us is based not on the status of the plaintiff as a participant or spectator, or her incurrence of risk. [Footnote omitted.] Rather, the analysis should address whether the conduct of the defendant is within the range of ordinary behavior of participants in the sport. Id. at 405. If it is, “the conduct is reasonable as a matter of law and does not constitute a breach of duty.” Id. at 404. Accordingly, our focus is not on whether Welch was a “participant” in the event, but on whether Jordan Young’s action — i.e., taking practice swings at the time and place of the injury — was within the range of ordinary behavior of participants in the sport. [Footnote omitted.] As there are genuine issues as to whether Jordan Young was inside or outside the baseball field and whether the injury happened before or during the game, that question could not be resolved on summary judgment.
Our Supreme Court offered little guidance in Pfenning as to the meaning of its new rule that “if the conduct of such participant [i.e., the alleged tortfeasor] is within the range of ordinary behavior of participants in the sport, the conduct is reasonable as a matter of law and does not constitute a breach of duty.” Id. at 404. However, other courts offer helpful insights. For example, the Supreme Court of New Jersey discussed the importance of examining the specific context of the recreational sport at issue:
In many recreational sports, softball included, some amount of physical contact is expected. Physical contact is an inherent or integral part of the game in many sports. The degree of physical contact allowed varies from sport to sport and even from one group of players to another. In addition, the physicality of sports is accompanied by a high level of emotional intensity[, which also varies] from sport to sport and from game to game.
Crawn v. Campo, 643 A.2d 600, 605 (N.J. 1994) (citations omitted).
The New Hampshire Supreme Court noted a number of factors that may help determine the reasonableness of behavior by participants, sponsors, and organizers of recreational athletics: (1) the nature of the sport involved; (2) the type of contest, i.e., amateur, high school, little league, pick-up, etc.; (3) the ages, physical characteristics, and skills of the participants; (4) the type of equipment involved; and (5) the rules, customs, and practices of the sport, including the types of contact and the level of violence generally accepted. Allen v. Dover Co–Recreational Softball League, 807 A.2d 1274, 1285–86 (N.H. 2002).
A defendant may be held liable for “creating or countenancing risks other than risks inherent in the sport, or for increasing inherent risks, and in any event will be held liable for recklessly or intentionally injurious conduct totally outside the range of ordinary activity involved in the sport.” Id. (quoting Foronda ex rel. Estate of Foronda v. Hawaii Int’l Boxing Club, 25 P.3d 826, 841 (Haw. Ct. App. 2001)) (emphasis added). A defendant, however, may not be held liable for negligent, or even reckless or intentional, injurious conduct unless that conduct is outside the range of ordinary activity involved in the sport. Id. To demonstrate the importance of that context, the Foronda court noted “the very acme of achievement for a boxer is to so batter the opponent as to induce a temporary coma –otherwise known as a knockout.” Id.
Allen involved a softball player who was hit in the head by an errantly thrown softball during a co-recreational, slow-pitch softball tournament. The Court affirmed dismissal of the lawsuit, applying the factors it stated above. It noted participation in a softball game generally gives rise to the risk that a player may be struck by a ball that has been hit by a batter or thrown by a fielder. All of the players, including Allen, were adults. The ball used when Allen was injured was designed for use in games played by women, single sex and coed teams, teenage girls and ten- to twelve-year-old boys. The Court noted, “[w]hen fielding the ball . . . a fielder has a duty to not act unreasonably. In other words, the fielder has a duty to not act in a manner outside the range of the ordinary activity involved in playing softball.” 807 A.2d at 1286. As “reasonable fielders commonly make errant throws,” a fielder cannot be held liable for errant throws that reasonably flow from participation. Id.
In Estes, another decision our Supreme Court cited in Pfenning, Estes was a participant in company softball game. She was playing catcher and was injured when Tripson, a baserunner for the opposing team, accidentally stepped on and broke her leg while trying to score. The court noted Tripson ran the bases in an “ordinary and typical” manner. 932 P.2d at 1367. Estes did not assert Tripson intentionally or recklessly stepped on her leg, nor did she contest the assertion by observers that Tripson tried to avoid her leg. Estes asserted only that Tripson could have avoided her leg and his failure to do so was negligent.
The Estes court disagreed and affirmed summary judgment for Tripson:
Although we ordinarily leave questions of negligence or unreasonable risk to juries to decide, the courts retain authority to set “outer limits.” It is appropriate to do so here. There is no evidence that Tripson did anything as a baserunner to increase or exacerbate the inherent risks that Estes faced as a catcher in a softball game. As a baserunner intent on scoring, Tripson simply did not act negligently — did not breach a duty of reasonable care under the circumstances — in failing to perceive or make minute adjustments in his course that might have avoided contact with a catcher attempting to tag him out. To hold otherwise would unreasonably chill participation in recreational sports.
Id. (citation omitted).
Welch notes that in another little league in which Jordan Young participated, a batter that was warming up outside the dugout “typically would either be taking cuts outside the dugout with a parent’s supervision or another assistant coach.” (App. at 40-41.) She alleges the purpose of that supervision was “to make sure that the other kids aren’t wandering . . . into harm’s way.” [Footnote omitted.] (Id. at 40.) In the little league where Welch was injured, the players were told that if they are “swinging a bat, to know what their surroundings are, know who is around you, because you don’t know who is going to be around you when you were swinging a bat.” (Id. at 45.)
We have found no decisions specifically addressing injuries caused by a baseball batter taking warmup swings, but in Phares v. Carr, 122 Ind. App 597, 106 N.E.2d 242 (1952), we addressed a situation where a golfer injured someone while taking practice swings away from the tee. In Phares, we reversed a directed verdict for the golfer and driving range owner. The golfer stepped out of a shelter, selected a golf club, and took a full swing, striking and injuring Phares, who was walking past. The shelter, from which an attendant leased balls and clubs, was near the south end of a space between a parking area and the tees. There were benches and chairs in other parts of the open grassy space for the convenience of customers and spectators.
At the time of the injury, Phares was crossing the open space from her parked car to join friends who were already at the tees. She had never played golf and had visited the driving range only once before as a spectator. The golfer’s back was to her and she did not see the club in his hands as she tried to pass him. There were stones and rough places on the ground, and she was watching them immediately before she was struck. The driving range owner said he was “always having trouble with people swinging clubs off the tees” but he didn’t know what he could do about it. Id. at 601, 106 N.E.2d at 244. There were no warning signs on the premises, and no instructions regarding swinging clubs off the tees.
In Phares we did not apply a breach of duty analysis, as did the Pfenning Court, but instead addressed whether the doctrine of assumed risk applied. Under that doctrine “the proprietor of an athletic field or golf course is not liable for damages sustained by participants or spectators by reason of injuries which are reasonably incidental to the particular athletic events.” Id. at 602, 106 N.E.2d 242, 244 (emphasis added). The Phares determination the injury might not have been “reasonably incidental to the particular athletic events” offers guidance as to the application of the Pfenning standard that the conduct of the defendant be within the range of ordinary behavior of participants in the sport.
We noted Phares’ injury did not result from participation in an athletic event by either the golfer or Phares – it was the result of the golfer’s negligence when both he and Phares were outside the area provided for active participation in the sport. Id. at 602, 106 N.E.2d at 244. The evidence regarding the general character of such driving ranges was that most people at driving ranges are novices. Many people are hurt each year by clubs swung off the tees. “Several (ranges) have signs warning: ‘Don’t swing clubs off the tees’ and, in most cases, they are so fenced off that you could not swing off the tees if you wanted to.” Id. at 601, 106 N.E.2d at 244.
As the trial court was not to weigh the evidence but to consider only the evidence favorable to Phares, and to determine therefrom whether there was any substantial evidence of probative value on each element of Phares’ case, the directed verdict for the defendants was error. Id.
We acknowledge the Pfenning “limited new rule . . . that reasonableness may be found by the court as a matter of law,” so that “in negligence claims against a participant in a sports activity, if the conduct of such participant is within the range of ordinary behavior of participants in the sport, the conduct is reasonable as a matter of law and does not constitute a breach of duty.” 947 N.E.2d at 404. But in the case before us we are faced with factual issues about “the conduct of [the] participant” that preclude our determination whether, as a matter of law, his conduct was “within the range of ordinary behavior of participants in the sport.” Id.
Specifically, there are fact issues as to whether the injury took place on the field or outside the playing area, and whether the game was underway or had not yet started. As we cannot be certain from the designated evidence before us whether Welch was injured before or during the game and whether she and Jordan Young were inside the ball field or outside it in an area where spectators normally are present, we cannot determine as a matter of law whether Jordan Young’s behavior while taking warmup swings was within the range of ordinary behavior of participants in little league baseball.
As to Jordan Young’s location when Welch was injured, Welch presented evidence she was about five or ten feet from the dugout and outside the fenced playing area, in a place where spectators commonly sat. Shawn Young testified people would “walk back and forth from that area” to the concession stand or to the seats behind home plate. (App. at 51.)
Welch testified she was hit “[a]s [she] was passing out gum,” and she was “outside the field behind the fence that surrounds the field in the area where the spectator’s [sic] walk and those with their own chairs sit.” (App. at 75.) But Jordan Young testified that when she was passing out gum she was standing at “the door to the dugout . . . sort of right in the threshold.” (Id. at 61.) The trial court found Welch “incurred the risk of injury when she stood in the area between the dugout and the opening in the fence.” (Id. at 19) (emphasis added).
Welch testified the game had not yet started. But Shawn Young testified when Welch was hit, Jordan Young was the on-deck batter, the assistant coaches were “out in their base assignments, first and third,” (id.), and Shawn Young was “doing [his] coaching duties.” (Id. at 47.) Specifically, Shawn Young testified:
A. I kept book.
Q. Meaning balls and strikes – –
A. Correct.
Q. — and hits and the whole thing?
A. Right. Yeah.
(Id.) Jordan Young testified his father was in front of the dugout “giving signals.” (Id. at 54.) He testified that after the incident, he took his turn at bat and finished playing the game. From the testimony that Jordan Young was “on deck,” the assistant coaches were at their positions at first and third base, the coach was giving signals and recording balls, strikes, and hits, and Jordan Young took his turn at bat after the incident, a trier of fact could infer the game must have been underway when Welch was hit.
The record before us presents issues of fact that will likely have a bearing on whether Jordan Young’s conduct when Welch was injured was within the range of ordinary behavior of participants in little league baseball. We must therefore reverse summary judgment for Young and remand.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part and remanded.
BAKER, J., and NAJAM, J., concur