Marcie Normandin v. Encanto Adventures
Marcie Normandin v. Encanto Adventures
Opinion
¶1 We consider whether Arizona's recreational use statute, A.R.S. § 33-1551, immunizes Encanto Adventures LLC ("Encanto") from liability in a simple negligence action for injuries Marcie Normandin, a recreational user, sustained after falling in Encanto Park. We hold that Encanto is not a "manager" of land used for recreational purposes and therefore it is not immune from liability under the statute.
I.
¶2 Encanto operates an amusement park in an area of Encanto Park known as Picnic Island. In 1991, the City of Phoenix (the "City") and Encanto's predecessor executed a concessionaire agreement (the "Agreement") to establish the amusement park wherein the City licensed certain exclusive rights to construct, maintain, and operate children's rides within a fenced-in area of Picnic Island known as Enchanted Island. The Agreement also allowed Encanto's predecessor to use an unfenced portion of Picnic Island adjacent to Enchanted Island known as the "piñata area."
¶3 There is no dispute that the Agreement governs Encanto's relationship with the City. Encanto's owner testified in a deposition that for twenty-five years, pursuant to the Agreement, he maintained Picnic Island, including the piñata area, by patrolling, maintaining, inspecting, preparing, and grooming the grounds. Although Encanto has been responsible for the piñata area's maintenance, it does not have exclusive rights to use the piñata area, nor does it otherwise control public access to it.
¶4 Normandin paid Encanto $287 for a "Pete's Package" to host her daughter's first birthday party at Enchanted Island. Pete's Package included all-day-ride wristbands for partygoers, as well as tables and a four-hour pavilion reservation. Although Encanto allowed customers to bring a piñata to their party if they broke it outside the fenced-in Enchanted Park, the package agreement explicitly stated that Encanto would not provide a piñata for the party and that no portion of Normandin's payment would be refunded if she declined to participate in a piñata activity.
¶5 Normandin brought a piñata to the party and Encanto accommodated her, as it did its other customers, by directing her to the public piñata area adjacent to the fenced-in Enchanted Park. An Encanto employee also led Normandin to the piñata area, hung the piñata for her from a tree outfitted for such purpose, and raised and lowered the piñata as the partygoers tried to break it.
¶6 While walking through the piñata area, Normandin fell, breaking her ankle and injuring her arm. She alleged she fell because she stepped into a sprinkler-head divot or depression covered by grass. In her complaint, Normandin pleaded a single count of premises liability, a simple negligence claim, against the City and Encanto. Encanto and the City moved for summary judgment based on the recreational use immunity provided by § 33-1551(A). The trial court granted the motions.
¶7 The court of appeals affirmed the trial court's summary judgment in favor of the City and Encanto, concluding that (1) Encanto is immune as a "manager" under § 33-1551(A) ; (2) Normandin was a "recreational user" under § 33-1551(A) ; (3) the statute does not violate the anti-abrogation clause of
article 18, section 6 of the Arizona Constitution (as applied to Encanto); (4) the statute does not violate the equal privileges and immunities clause of article 2, section 13 of the Arizona Constitution (as applied to Encanto); and (5) the statute is not an unconstitutional special law as applied to managers of defined land in compliance with article 4, part 2, section 19(13), (20) of the Arizona Constitution.
See generally
Normandin v. Encanto Adventures LLC
,
¶8 We granted review because the scope of immunity under § 33-1551 presents a recurring issue of statewide importance. We have jurisdiction pursuant to article 6, section 5(3) of the Arizona Constitution. Because we resolve this case on the dispositive issue of Encanto's status as a "manager" under the statute, we need not address Normandin's other statutory and constitutional arguments.
See, e.g.
,
Hayes v. Cont'l Ins. Co.
,
II.
¶9 "We review the interpretation of a statute de novo."
Glazer v. State
,
¶10 Arizona's recreational use statute, § 33-1551(A), provides:
A public or private owner, easement holder, lessee, tenant, manager or occupant of premises is not liable to a recreational or educational user except on a showing that the owner, easement holder, lessee, tenant, manager or occupant was guilty of wilful, malicious or grossly negligent conduct that was a direct cause of the injury to the recreational or educational user.
Encanto's sole claim to immunity under § 33-1551(A) rests on its asserted status as a "manager" of the piñata area at the time of Normandin's fall. This claim is unavailing. We are unpersuaded by Encanto's reasoning that its mere maintenance of the piñata area qualifies it as a "manager" under § 33-1551(A), and we also find the court of appeals' reliance on a dictionary definition of "manager" insufficient to discern its proper statutory meaning.
Normandin
,
¶11 We first examine the text of the statute to determine the meaning of "manager."
See, e.g.
,
Wilks v. Manobianco
,
¶12 Section 33-1551 does not define "manager," but it provides a critical contextual clue as to the term's meaning. Notably, every other person or entity granted recreational use immunity under § 33-1551(A) -"public or private [land] owner, easement holder, lessee, tenant, ... or occupant of premises"-possesses a measure of authority and control over access to property in which that person or entity holds an interest.
See
Ward
,
¶13 Because the text alone is not dispositive, we also consider the purpose of the statute to assess its meaning. We recognized in
Ward
that the recreational use statute's purpose is "to encourage landowners and others to open lands to recreational users and to continue to keep the lands open."
Ward
,
¶14 Here, Encanto's expansive definition of "manager," like the State's proposed definition of "occupant" in
Ward
, fails to advance the purpose of the recreational use statute because Encanto does not have the authority to open, or for that matter to close, the piñata area for recreational use.
See
Stramka v. Salt River Recreation, Inc.
,
¶15 The legislative history of § 33-1551 bolsters our conclusion that Encanto's broad definition of "manager" is incongruent with the text and purpose of the statute. The term was added to the statute in 2011 to clarify that immunity applies to "managers" just as it applies to "landowners" and "lessees." Ariz. State Senate Fact Sheet for S.B. 1229, 50th Leg., 1st Reg. Sess. (Apr. 14, 2011)
(stating that the amendment "[c]larifies that tenants and managers of public and private land are among those landowners and lessees that are not liable to a recreational or educational user who engages in prescribed activities on their premises"). The 2011 amendments also modified the statutory definition of "recreational user" to include "persons engaging in off-highway vehicle, off-road recreational motor vehicle, all-terrain vehicle, other outdoor recreational pursuits and operation of aircraft" (each of which often occur on state land) and clarified that the State Land Department's issuance of recreational permits or "off-highway vehicle indicia" to recreational users for such purposes did not impact the statute's immunity provisions.
¶16 Here, applying our definition of "manager," we conclude that Encanto does not qualify as such under the recreational use statute. Encanto contends that it is a "manager" because it patrols, maintains, inspects, prepares, and grooms the piñata area. But Encanto's relationship with the City belies Encanto's claim to any managerial status; it merely maintains the piñata area and pays the City as part of its concession. It is also clear from paragraph 41 of the Agreement that Encanto is an independent contractor-a licensee and not a lessee-and the parties have no other relationship beyond the contours of the Agreement. Indeed, "manager" is never mentioned in the Agreement. More importantly, although Encanto is required to maintain the premises, including the piñata area, as noted above, it lacks any authority to open or close the piñata area for recreational use. The City, not Encanto, has this authority. Finally, if Encanto's broader definition of "manager" were correct, any independent contractor (e.g., landscaper, sprinkler repairer, tree-trimmer, or groundskeeper) would be a "manager," thus enlarging the class of persons granted immunity beyond the purpose of the statute.
III.
¶17 The text, purpose, and legislative history of § 33-1551, our decision in Ward , and our imperative to narrowly construe the statute, support our conclusion that a person or entity does not qualify as a "manager" in the absence of authority to open or close land for recreational use. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court's summary judgment in favor of Encanto and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We vacate paragraphs 1 and 11 through 42 of the court of appeals' opinion pertaining to Encanto but leave intact the part of the opinion affirming summary judgment for the City of Phoenix.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Marcie NORMANDIN, Plaintiff/Appellant, v. ENCANTO ADVENTURES, LLC, Et Al., Defendants/Appellees.
- Cited By
- 22 cases
- Status
- Published