Court Opinion

ID: 9669813
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-24 03:09:35.773734+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:16:00.397470
License: Public Domain

*75Young, J.
We granted leave in this case to consider the appropriate standard of care for those involved in recreational activities. We conclude that coparticipants in recreational activities owe each other a duty not to act recklessly. Because the trial court properly concluded that plaintiff could not show that defendant violated this standard, we reverse the Court of Appeals and reinstate the trial court’s grant of summary disposition for defendant.
i
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
This case comes to us after a grant of summary disposition for defendant pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10), and therefore we must view the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.1 According to plaintiff, she was skating at the Berkley Ice Arena during an “open skating” period when defendant,2 then twelve years old, ran into her, knocking her down and causing serious injury to her knee. Plaintiff alleged in her complaint that defendant was skating backwards in a “careless, reckless, and negligent manner” at the time of the collision. In Oakland Circuit Court, plaintiff sued defendant Halley Mann, the city of Berkley (the owner of the rink), and an ice arena employee. The city of Berkley and the ice arena employee were eventually dismissed with prejudice by stipulation of the parties. Mann moved for summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10) on the grounds that *76“no negligent acts were carried out by the minor defendant,” and that Mann’s “touching of the Plaintiff while skating is foreseeable when skating at an ice arena with a number of other skaters as is to be expected.” The trial court granted summary disposition for defendant, finding that an ice rink “is inherently dangerous,” and that “defendant’s actions were not contrary to the rules governing skating.” Plaintiff appealed, and the Court of Appeals reversed, applying an “ordinary care” standard and finding a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether defendant was negligent.
For purposes of appeal, defendant admits that there is a question of fact regarding whether her conduct was negligent. Similarly, plaintiff has admitted that defendant’s conduct did not rise to the level of recklessness. Thus, the only question before this Court is which standard governs this case: If it is ordinary negligence, we must affirm the Court of Appeals and remand for trial; if it is recklessness, we must reverse the Court of Appeals and reinstate the trial court’s grant of summary disposition for defendant.
n
STANDARD OF REVIEW
MCR 2.116(C)(10) tests the factual support of a plaintiff’s claim. In deciding a motion pursuant to sub-rule (C)(10), the trial court considers the affidavits, pleadings, depositions, admissions, and other documentary evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party to determine whether a genuine issue of any material fact exists to warrant a trial. We *77review the trial court’s decision de novo. Spiek v Dep’t of Transportation, 456 Mich 331, 337; 572 NW2d 201 (1998); Chandler v Dowell Schlumberger, Inc, 456 Mich 395, 397; 572 NW2d 210 (1998).
m
the current state of the law
Before we begin our review of the law in this area, we must recognize the limitations of the scope of the case before us. First, there is no allegation that defendant intended the contact with plaintiff, or that she intended plaintiff’s injuries. Second, we are not asked to consider the liability of the owner or operator of the ice rink. Thus, our analysis is limited to a determination of the proper standard of care among coparticipants for unintentional conduct in recreational activities.
A. MICHIGAN LAW
We begin by reviewing the current state of Michigan law regarding the appropriate standard of care in the recreational activity context. In one of our older cases, Williams v Wood, 260 Mich 322; 244 NW 490 (1932), the plaintiff was injured while fishing. Apparently, the defendant tried to cast but instead hit the plaintiff in the head with the end of his rod, and, in so doing lodged a fish-hook in the plaintiff’s eye. The Court reviewed a number of earlier cases from Michigan and other jurisdictions dealing with various outdoor sports, and eventually concluded that the defendant’s liability was a question of “ordinary care”:
*78The general rule that may be deduced from the cases hereinbefore cited is that certain risks of accident attend all outdoor sports and recovery may be had only if an iivjury is the result of negligence that could and should have been avoided by the use of ordinary care. [Id. at 327.]
We note that the Court did not explain the relationship between the risks that “attend all outdoor sports” and a participant’s duty to coparticipants.
This Court visited a related issue in Felgner v Anderson, 375 Mich 23; 133 NW2d 136 (1965). In Feigner, one duck hunter shot another accidentally. The injured hunter sued the shooter for negligence. At trial, the defendant requested that the jury be instructed regarding “assumption of risk.” Id. at 29. The defendant argued that, by engaging in the activity of hunting, the plaintiff had assumed the risk of being shot accidentally and, therefore, that the defendant should not be held liable for the plaintiff’s injuries. The trial court refused to so instruct the jury, and the defendant appealed. This Court then held that the “assumption of risk” doctrine did not apply in most negligence actions, concluding instead that it should only be applied in cases in which an employment relationship existed between the parties. Id. at 55-56. Importantly, before Feigner, the assumption of risk doctrine was available to defendants in ordinary negligence actions. Waltanen v Wiitala, 361 Mich 504; 105 NW2d 400 (1960). After Feigner abolished assumption of the risk in this context, some of the published cases began to move away from the “ordinary care” standard.
In Overall v Kadella, 138 Mich App 351; 361 NW2d 352 (1984), on which the trial court relied, the plaintiff was injured when the defendant struck him during *79a fight that occurred after an amateur hockey game. The defendant asserted that participants in a hockey game should not be able to sue for injuries incurred during the game, arguing volenti non fit injuria.3 The Court rejected this argument, concluding:
Participation in a game involves a manifestation of consent to those bodily contacts which are permitted by the rules of the game. Restatement Torts, 2d, § 50, comment b. However, there is general agreement that an intentional act causing injury, which goes beyond what is ordinarily permissible, is an assault and battery for which recovery may be had. 4 Am Jur 2d, Amusements and Exhibitions, § 86, p 211. [Id. at 357.]
Defendant cites Overall for the proposition that a plaintiff involved in a sport may not sue for injuries caused by conduct that is merely negligent. While some of the language in Overall tends to support defendant’s position, Overall involved an intentional act, and, to the extent it suggested a standard for nonintentional acts, it did so only in dicta.
The dicta from Overall became a holding in Higgins v Pfeiffer, 215 Mich App 423; 546 NW2d 645 (1996). The plaintiff in Higgins was injured by an errant baseball. Before a game, a pitcher and catcher on the plaintiff’s team were warming up by throwing *80a baseball back and forth. The plaintiff was sitting in the dugout, and the pitcher was throwing toward the dugout. On one particular throw, the ball sailed over the catcher’s head and struck the plaintiff in the eye. The plaintiff sued, and the trial court granted summary disposition for the coach, the pitcher, and the catcher. The Court of Appeals affirmed in a two-to-one decision, with the majority concluding that a participant in a sporting activity “consents] to the risk of injury inherent in the contest . . . .” Id. at 425.4
Another Court of Appeals case, decided only weeks before Higgins, took a different tack. In Schmidt v Youngs, 215 Mich App 222; 544 NW2d 743 (1996), the plaintiff was injured when he was struck by a golf ball. Contrary to the custom of staying behind the ball of the person who is about to hit, the plaintiff had positioned himself some thirty yards in front and to the right of the point where defendant was to play his ball. The defendant shanked the ball and hit the plaintiff. The Court of Appeals affirmed summary disposition for the defendant, quoting Am Jur 2d:
“A person who engages in the game of golf is not an insurer of the safety of others, and he is only required to exercise ordinary care for the safety of persons reasonably within the range of danger.
“Generally, one who is about to strike a golf ball must, in the exercise of ordinary care, give an adequate and timely notice to those who are unaware of his intention to play and who may be endangered by the play. Conversely, there is no duty to give advance warning to persons who are on *81contiguous holes or fairways, and not in the line of play, if danger to them is not reasonably to be anticipated. Also, where the person injured was in a place where he should have been reasonably safe, and he was aware of the player’s intention to play the ball, an oral or audible warning would have been superfluous and is therefore unnecessary.” [4 Am Jur 2d, Amusements and Exhibitions, § 87, pp 211-212 (1995 interim pamphlet).] [215 Mich App 225.]
Although it affirmed summary disposition for the defendant, the Court in Schmidt applied an ordinary care standard. In doing so, the Court posited that, while one may consent to the inherent risks of being a spectator or participant in a sport, “one does not ordinarily consent to another’s negligence.” Id. at 228.
On the basis of a review of the published cases in Michigan, there seems to be general agreement that participants in recreational activities are not liable for every mishap that results in injury, and that certain risks inhere in all such activities. Our older opinions generally applied an ordinary care standard. However, the more recent cases from the Court of Appeals appear to be divided regarding the level of duty, or the standard of care, owed to coparticipants.
B. THE LAW IN OTHER JURISDICTIONS
Other jurisdictions have generally taken one of two approaches to this issue. In a few states, ordinary care continues to be the standard. See Auckenthaler v Grundmeyer, 110 Nev 682; 877 P2d 1039 (1994); Lestina v West Bend Mut Ins Co, 176 Wis 2d 901; 501 NW2d 28 (1993).5 In the majority of other jurisdic*82tions, however, the courts have adopted a “reckless or intentional conduct” or a “wilful and wanton or intentional misconduct” standard. See, e.g., Jaworski v Kiernan, 241 Conn 399, 408; 696 A2d 332 (1997) (adopting a “reckless or intentional conduct” standard in a case involving a coed recreational soccer game); Hoke v Cullinan, 914 SW2d 335, 337 (Ky, 1995) (adopting a “reckless disregard for the safety of other[s]” standard in a case involving a person hit by a ball between points in a tennis match); Crawn v Campo, 136 NJ 494, 497; 643 A2d 600 (1994) (adopting a “reckless or intentional” standard in a case involving a pickup softball game); Hathaway v Tascosa Country Club, Inc, 846 SW2d 614, 616 (Tex App, 1993) (adopting a “reckless or intentional” standard in a case involving a golfer struck by another golfer’s ball); Knight v Jewett, 3 Cal 4th 296, 302; 11 Cal Rptr 2d 2; 834 P2d 696 (1992) (adopting a “reckless or intentional” standard in a case involving an injury suffered in a touch football game); Marchetti v Kalish, 53 Ohio St 3d 95; 559 NE2d 699 (1990) (adopting a “reckless or intentional” standard in a case involving children playing “kick the can”); Gauvin v Clark, 404 Mass 450, 454; 537 NE2d 94 (1989) (adopting a “reckless disregard of safety” standard in a case involving a college hockey game); Turcotte v Fell, 68 NY2d 432; 510 NYS2d 49; 502 NE2d 964 (1986) (adopting a “reckless or intentional” standard in a case involving a professional jockey injured in a fall during a thoroughbred horse race); Ross v Clouser, 637 SW2d 11, 14 (Mo, 1982) (adopting a “reckless disregard for the safety of the other player” standard in a case involv*83ing a slow-pitch, church league softball game).6
The cases adopting a recklessness standard have recognized different reasons for departing from the ordinary negligence standard. Some courts have held that a participant “assumes the risk” of the activity: “We hold that where individuals engage in recreational or sports activities, they assume the ordinary risks of the activity and cannot recover for any injury unless it can be shown that the other participant’s actions were either ‘reckless’ or ‘intentional’ . . . .” Marchetti, supra, 53 Ohio St 3d 100. In states where assumption of the risk has been abolished, some courts have held that a participant “consents” to conduct normally associated with the activity:
Traditionally, the participant’s conduct was conveniently analyzed in terms of the defensive doctrine of assumption of risk. With the enactment of the comparative negligence statute, however, assumption of risk is no longer an absolute defense. Thus, it has become necessary, and quite proper, when measuring a defendant’s duty to a plaintiff to consider the risks assumed by the plaintiff. The shift in analysis is proper because the “doctrine [of assumption of risk] deserves no separate existence (except for express assumption of risk) and is simply a confusing way of stating *84certain no-duty rules.” Accordingly, the analysis of care owed to plaintiff in the professional sporting event by a coparticipant and by the proprietor of the facility in which it takes place must be evaluated by considering the risks plaintiff assumed when he elected to participate in the event and how those assumed risks qualified defendants’ duty to him.
The risk assumed has been defined a number of ways but in its most basic sense it “means that the plaintiff, in advance, has given his . . . consent to relieve the defendant of an obligation of conduct toward him, and to take his chances of injury from a known risk arising from what the defendant is to do or leave undone. The situation is then the same as where the plaintiff consents to the infliction of what would otherwise be an intentional tort, except that the consent is to run the risk of unintended injury. . . . The result is that the defendant is relieved of legal duty to the plaintiff; and being under no duty, he cannot be charged with negligence.”
* * *
As a general rule, participants properly may be held to have consented, by their participation, to those injury-causing events which are known, apparent or reasonably foreseeable consequences of the participation. [Turcotte, supra, 68 NY2d 437-439 (citations omitted).]
Finally, courts have almost universally recognized a policy rationale for an elevated standard of care. Courts have recognized that a fear of litigation could alter the nature of recreational activities and sports: “Fear of civil liability stemming from negligent acts occurring in an athletic event could curtail the proper fervor with which the game should be played and discourage individual participation . . . .” Ross, supra, 637 SW2d 14.
One might well conclude that something is terribly wrong with a society in which the most commonly-accepted *85aspects of play—a traditional source of a community’s conviviality and cohesion—spurs litigation. The heightened recklessness standard recognizes a commonsense distinction between excessively harmful conduct and the more routine rough-and-tumble of sports that should occur freely on the playing fields and should not be second-guessed in courtrooms. [Crawn, supra, 136 NJ 508.]
Courts have also recognized the potential flood of litigation that might result from the use of an ordinary negligence standard:
If simple negligence were adopted as the standard of care, every punter with whom contact is made, every midfielder high sticked, every basketball player fouled, every batter struck by a pitch, and every hockey player tripped would have the ingredients for a lawsuit if injury resulted. When the number of athletic events taking place . . . over the course of a year is considered, there exists the potential for a surfeit of lawsuits when it becomes known that simple negligence, based on an inadvertent violation of a contest rule, will suffice as a ground for recovery for an athletic injury. This should not be encouraged. [Jaworski, supra, 241 Conn 409-410.]
IV
ANALYSIS
We note that the Legislature has yet to modify the common law of torts regarding recreational activities, except in two narrow areas not at issue here.7 Thus, the development of this area of the law, for now, is up to the courts. Const 1963, art 3, § 7; Placek v Ster*86ling Heights, 405 Mich 638, 656-657; 275 NW2d 511 (1979).
A. THE NATURE OF RECREATIONAL ACTIVITIES
In developing the common law in this area, we must recognize the everyday reality of participation in recreational activities. A person who engages in a recreational activity is temporarily adopting a set of rules that define that particular pastime or sport. In many instances, the person is also suspending the rules that normally govern everyday life. For example, it would be a breach of etiquette, and possibly the law, to battle with other shoppers for a particularly juicy orange in the grocery store, while it is quite within the rules of basketball to battle for a rebound. Some might find certain sports, such as boxing or football, too rough for their own tastes. However, our society recognizes that there are benefits to recreational activity, and we permit individuals to agree to rules and conduct that would otherwise be prohibited.
There are myriad ways to describe the legal effect of voluntarily participating in a recreational activity. The act of stepping onto the field of play may be described as “consent to the inherent risks of the activity,” or a participant’s knowledge of the rules of a game may be described as “notice” sufficient to discharge the other participants’ duty of care.8 Similarly, participants’ mutual agreement to play a game may be *87described as an “implied contract” between all the participants, or a voluntary participant could be described as “assuming the risks” inherent in the sport. No matter what terms are used, the basic premise is the same: When people engage in a recreational activity, they have voluntarily subjected themselves to certain risks inherent in that activity. When one of those risks results in injury, the participant has no ground for complaint. Justice Cardozo made this point quite eloquently in a case involving a young man injured on a ride at an amusement park:
One who takes part in such a sport accepts the dangers that inhere in it so far as they are obvious and necessary, just as a fencer accepts the risk of a thrust by his antagonist or a spectator at a ball game the chance of contact with the ball. The antics of the clown are not the paces of the cloistered cleric. The rough and boisterous joke, the horseplay of the crowd, evokes its own guffaws, but they are not the pleasures of tranquillity. The plaintiff was not seeking a retreat for meditation. Visitors were tumbling about the belt to the merriment of onlookers when he made his choice to join them. He took the chance of a like fate, with whatever damage to his body might ensue from such a fall. The timorous may stay at home.
* * *
Nothing happened to the plaintiff except what common experience tells us may happen at any time as the consequence of a sudden fall. Many a skater or a horseman can rehearse a tale of equal woe. . . . One might as well say that a skating rink should be abandoned because skaters sometimes fall. [Murphy v Steeplechase Amusement Co, 250 NY 479, 482-483; 166 NE 173 (1929) (citations omitted).]
Justice Cardozo’s observations apply just as well to the conduct of coparticipants in a recreational activity as they do to the conduct of a person enjoying an *88amusement park ride. Indeed, while most of the cited cases have addressed “contact” sports or team sports, Justice Cardozo’s comments help illustrate that the same general analysis applies to noncontact and individual recreational activities, hi all these activities, there are foreseeable, built-in risks of harm.
In Hathaway, supra, the Texas Court of Appeals faced a similar issue regarding the difference between contact sports and other activities when it addressed golfers’ duties to each other. Before Hathaway, Texas had recognized a “reckless or intentional” standard of care for “competitive contact sports.” Connell v Payne, 814 SW2d 486, 489 (Tex App, 1991). The Hathaway court extended this standard to golf, explaining:
While the genteel game of golf can hardly be described as a “competitive contact sport,” we believe the reckless and intentional standard is every bit as appropriate to conduct on the links as it is to conduct on the polo field.
* * *
Acts that would be negligent if performed on a city street or in a backyard are not negligent in the context of a game where a risk of inadvertent harm is built into the sport.
As those persons who play golf well know, “shanking the ball is a foreseeable and not uncommon occurrence.” “The same is true of hooking, slicing, pushing, or pulling a golf shot.” Because of the great likelihood of these unintended and offline shots, it can indeed be said that the risk of being inadvertently hit by a ball struck by another competitor is built into the game of golf. . . . Many bad shots carry the ball to the right or the left of an intended line of play. Golfers playing to the right or left of that line will of course be endangered by such shots. “This risk all golf players must accept.” [Id. at 616-617 (citations omitted).]
*89The risks on an ice rink are no less obvious than those on a golf course. One cannot ice skate without ice, and the very nature of ice—that it is both hard and slippery—builds some risk into skating. In addition, an “open skate” invites those of various ages and abilities onto the ice to learn, to practice, to exercise, or simply to enjoy skating. When one combines the nature of ice with the relative proximity of skaters of various abilities, a degree of risk is readily apparent: Some skaters will be unable to control their progress and will either bump into other skaters, or fall. All skaters thus take the chance that they will fall themselves, that they will be bumped by another skater, or that they will trip over a skater who has fallen.
B. ADOPTION OF THE RECKLESS MISCONDUCT STANDARD
With these realities in mind, we join the majority of jurisdictions and adopt reckless misconduct as the minimum standard of care for coparticipants in recreational activities. We believe that this standard most accurately reflects the actual expectations of participants in recreational activities. As will be discussed in more detail below, we believe that participants in recreational activities do not expect to sue or be sued for mere carelessness. A recklessness standard also encourages vigorous participation in recreational activities, while still providing protection from egregious conduct. Finally, this standard lends itself to common-sense application by both judges and juries.9
*90C. APPLICATION OF THE LAW
Applying a recklessness standard in this case, we conclude that summary disposition was properly granted to defendant. Although plaintiff used the word “reckless” in her complaint, a review of the pleadings, depositions, and other documentary evidence reveals that plaintiff merely contends that defendant was skating backward without keeping a proper lookout behind her. These allegations amount to, at most, carelessness or ordinary negligence.10 Thus, the trial court properly granted summary disposition for defendant.
v
RESPONSE TO THE CONCURRENCE
Whatever else we disagree upon, those in the concurrence do agree that defendant’s conduct in this case is not actionable. The fundamental difference between the two opinions turns on the standard of care each believes should apply to this and cases of like kind. As stated above, we believe that a recklessness standard most nearly comports with the expectations of participants in recreational activities. While reasonable people can differ on this issue, in rejecting our standard, the concurrence purports to apply an ordinary negligence standard. In fact, it does not.
Among this Court’s prime concerns must be the obligation to create common-law rales that create *91certainty and predictability in the law. We believe that the standard we adopt is consistent with our existing jurisprudence and lends itself to easy, common-sense application. On the other hand, the concurrence offers a bowdlerization of our traditional negligence standard that we believe would be exceedingly difficult to apply.
The instant case provides a prime illustration of our point: As noted in the statement of facts, defendant concedes that questions of fact exist regarding whether her conduct was negligent. Even without this admission, it seems readily apparent that questions of fact abound under a negligence standard. All agree that defendant was permitted to skate backward at an open skate, but, as the concurrence acknowledges, an ordinary negligence standard required defendant to maintain a lookout in order to avoid running into other skaters. Here, defendant says she kept a lookout, but admits that she still bumped into plaintiff and knocked her down. Under these circumstances, could not reasonable jurors conclude that defendant failed to maintain a sufficient lookout? Surely, the question whether defendant’s conduct was sufficiently careful under an ordinary negligence standard presents a question of material fact. Yet the concurrence declares, as a matter of law, that defendant’s conduct was not negligent. The concurrence can only reach that point by ignoring the appropriate standard of review pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10), which requires us to draw inferences in favor of plaintiff, and by ignoring defendant’s admission that questions of fact exist regarding whether her conduct was negligent. We find it hard to reconcile the concurrence’s position with the facts of this case and traditional negli*92gence law, and we are not persuaded that the concurrence’s position comers the market on common sense.
Ignoring the foregoing problem, the concurrence attempts to support its hybrid negligence standard by suggesting that participants who conduct themselves within the rules of the game are not subject to liability under its proposed standard.11 Post at 105-106. It is proposed that breaches of “formal or informal rules regarding safety” should be actionable, id. at 104, but apparently breaches of other rules should not. We think this endeavor to draw a distinction between “safety rules” (which apparently are inviolate) and non-safety rules (which apparently may be disregarded with legal impunity) attempts to draw a fruitless distinction that even participants themselves do not, and probably cannot, draw.12 The concurrence’s revised formulation of the conventional negligence standard would lead to profound doctrinal confusion, and more, rather than fewer, ancillary disputes.13 *93More to the point, what direction would the concurrence’s standard give to our beleaguered trial judges who are required to referee such questions in the crucible of litigation? We think the answer is “precious little.”
Let us consider real-world examples to test whether the concurrence has presented a workable standard. In the case of soccer, which is officially a “non-contact” sport, where would the concurrence draw the “negligence line” if a participant is injured when she is fouled? Is a minor foul actionable? Is a foul that draws a “yellow card” actionable? Or would the concurrence find the foul actionable if it results in a “red card”? Similarly, in hockey, is a player who receives a two-minute penalty for slashing liable for any injuries caused by his rule violation, or is he even liable for the type of foul that results in a major misconduct penalty? Presumably, the concurrence would not preclude liability where a referee missed a foul, but what about a case where the referee saw the activity and concluded that no rule violation was committed? May a jury look beyond that decision and overturn it?
*94Surely all who participate in recreational activities do so with the hope that they will not be injured by the clumsiness or over-exuberant play of their coparticipants. However, we suspect that reasonable participants recognize that skill levels and play styles vary, and that an occasional injury is a foreseeable and natural part of being involved in recreational activities, however the “informal and formal rules” are structured and enforced.
Thus, we question whether participants in recreational activities make the kind of fine, Philadelphia lawyer-like distinctions regarding rules and their violation that the concurrence would use as the touchstone of liability. We doubt it. When a player steps on the field, she must recognize that an injury may occur, but she does not know whether she will be injured, or whether she will inadvertently injure another player. We do not believe that a player expects an injury, even if it results from a rule violation, to give rise to liability. Instead, we think it more likely that players participate with the expectation that no liability will arise unless a participant’s actions exceed the normal bounds of conduct associated with the activity.
Consequently, we believe that the Une of liability for recreational activities should be drawn at recklessness. Recklessness is a term with a recognized legal meaning and, more importantly, is a term susceptible of a common-sense understanding and apphcation by judges, attorneys, and jurors alike in the myriad recreational activities that might become the backdrop of Utigation. Just as important, our standard more nearly comports with the common-sense understanding that participants in these activities bring to *95them. While the concurrence may disagree whether we have accurately assessed participant expectations, we think that our standard has the significant value of providing an explicit, easy to apply rule of jurisprudence. The concurrence has failed to present a sounder, clearer alternative standard.
VI
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, we conclude that coparticipants in a recreational activity owe each other a duty not to act recklessly. Because the trial court properly concluded that plaintiff could not show that defendant violated this standard, summary disposition was proper. Thus, we reverse the Court of Appeals decision and reinstate the grant of summary disposition for defendant.
Weaver, C.J., and Taylor and Corrigan, JJ., concurred with Young, J.

 Kammer Asphalt Paving Co v East China Twp Schools, 443 Mich 176, 179; 504 NW2d 635 (1993).

 We will use the term “defendant” to refer to defendant Halley Mann.

 Translated literally, this Latin phrase means “to a willing person a wrong is not done.” Garner, Dictionary of Modem Legal Usage (2d ed) (New York: Oxford Univ Press, 1995), p 921. This maxim is probably most accurately categorized as an expression of the “assumption of risk” doctrine. See Reedy v Goodin, 285 Mich 614, 620; 281 NW 377 (1938), overruled in part in Felgner, supra. In the most obvious example, a boxer would not be permitted to recover for injuries caused by blows landed within the rules of the boxing match. See, i.e., McAdams v Windham, 208 Ala 492; 94 So 742 (1922). It is questionable whether this maxim retains any meaning in this state in light of this Court’s abolition of the assumption of the risk doctrine in Felgner.

 Defendant relies on Higgins for exactly this proposition. However, as the dissenting judge pointed out, the majority relied on out-of-state cases, because there was no Michigan precedent for the majority position. We also note that the majority seemed to ignore the fact that this Court had already articulated an “ordinary care” standard in Williams, supra.

 See also Estes v Tripson, 188 Ariz 93; 932 P2d 1364 (Ariz App, 1997) (applying a “reasonable care” standard on the ground that the Arizona Constitution prohibited adoption of a higher standard).

 A few states have limited application of this standard to “contact” sports. See, e.g., Zurla v Hydel, 289 Ill App 3d 215, 216-217; 224 Ill Dec 166; 681 NE2d 148 (1997) (In Illinois, a “wilful and wanton” standard applies to contact sports, including soccer and recreational softball, but a “simple negligence” standard applies to golf); Dotzler v Tuttle, 234 Neb 176; 449 NW2d 774 (1990) (finding liability for conduct that is “either willful or with a reckless disregard for the safety of the other player” in contact sports such as basketball); Kabella v Bouschelle, 100 NM 461, 463; 672 P2d 290 (NM App, 1983) (adopting a “reckless or wilful conduct” standard for contact sports in a case involving an informal tackle footbaU game). See also Jaworski, supra, 241 Conn 412, and Knight, supra, 3 Cal 4th 320, n 7 (both adopting a “reckless or intentional” standard, but recognizing that some activities, such as golf, might warrant a different standard).

 See the Roller Skating Safety Act, MCL 445.1721 et seq.; MSA 18.485(1) et seq., and the Ski Area Safety Act, MCL 408.321 et seq.; MSA 18.483(1) et seq.

 See Felgner, supra at 36 (“If after such notice plaintiff ... is injured, defendant is not liable, not because plaintiff assumed the risk of injury, but, rather, because defendant discharged his duty towards plaintiff by the giving of notice”).

 We recognize that we have stated this standard broadly as applying to all “recreational activities.” However, the precise scope of this rule is best established by allowing it to emerge on a case-by-case basis, so that we might carefully consider the application of the recklessness standard in various factual contexts.

 Indeed, plaintiff conceded that defendant’s actions did not rise to the level of reckless misconduct. As the California Supreme Court has noted, conduct within the range of the ordinary activity involved in the sport can hardly be termed reckless. Knight, supra, 3 Cal 4th 319-321.

 Interestingly, the concurrence accuses us of implicitly overruling Felgner, supra, and reviving assumption of the risk because we recognize that participants consent to certain conduct that would otherwise be negligent. Post at 97-98. We find this odd, as the concurrence also recognizes that participants consent to conduct that might otherwise be negligent. The only difference we can discern is that the concurrence believes that such consent is strictly limited to conduct within the formal or informal rules regarding safety, id. at 104, while we believe that the consent is somewhat broader.

 What, for example, is an informal safety rule? Who makes such a rule, and how do we determine when it actually exists or when it is violated?

 The concurrence makes light of our concern over the effect of increased litigation on recreational activities. While it is difficult to quantify such an effect, we see clear evidence that litigation can exact a toll on what most would consider valuable social activities. See “Litigation League,” by Creighton Hale, The Wall Street Journal, February 13, 1995 (briefly describing some of the effects of litigation on Little League base*93ball); “The Price of Free Work is Rising, Nonprofits Find,” by John Gallagher, The Detroit Free Press, December 4, 1997 (noting that Girl Scouts in metro Detroit must sell 36,000 boxes of cookies each year just to pay for liability insurance).
Our duty is to adopt rules that balance the need to ensure that victims of tortious injury have a remedy without creating a harbor for trivial suits, or destructive levels of litigation that will inhibit important social activity. While reasonable minds can differ regarding how best to strike that balance, we believe that the concurrence standard would provoke litigation on questions like “what are the informal safety rules in football?” and “must a plaintiff provide expert testimony in order to establish a breach of a safety rule?” As a matter of policy, we believe that the citizens of this state are better served by a standard that avoids proliferation and reduces the complexity of such litigation.