Court Opinion

ID: 9900415
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-11-18 22:12:35.458281+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:21:05.247367
License: Public Domain

764                    July 6, 2023                 No. 344

         IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE
                 STATE OF OREGON

                    Nicole FIELDS,
                     an individual,
                   Plaintiff-Appellant,
                             v.
                 CITY OF NEWPORT,
            an Oregon municipal corporation;
            Spencer Nebel, an individual; and
             James Guenther, an individual,
                Defendants-Respondents.
              Lincoln County Circuit Court
                  20CV33573; A177242

  Marcia L. Buckley, Judge.
  Argued and submitted November 16, 2022.
   Jennifer L. Hunking argued the cause and filed the briefs
for appellant.
   Elizabeth A. Jones argued the cause for respondents.
Also on the brief was Kenneth S. Montoya.
  Before Shorr, Presiding Judge, and Mooney, Judge, and
Pagán, Judge.
  MOONEY, J.
  Reversed and remanded.
Cite as 326 Or App 764 (2023)   765
766                                             Fields v. City of Newport

           MOONEY, J.
          Plaintiff sustained injuries when she slipped
and fell on land owned by the City of Newport (the city).
Specifically, she fell on a wooden bridge that is a part of
the city’s “Ocean to Bay Trail” (the trail). She appeals from
a judgment dismissing her personal injury claim against
the city after the trial court granted summary judgment
in favor of the city on its recreational immunity defense.
Plaintiff assigns error to that ruling.1 She argues first that
there are issues of material fact concerning her use of the
city’s land, and that when the evidence is viewed in the light
most favorable to her, a jury could conclude that her pur-
pose was not principally recreational, and that her injuries
did not arise out of the recreational use of the city’s land,
defeating the city’s recreational immunity defense. She
argues second that ORS 105.688(1)(c) extends recreational
immunity only to unimproved access trails, and because the
city improved, designed, and maintained the trail for the
purpose of accessing the beach, the city is not entitled to
recreational immunity. We agree that issues of material fact
exist about plaintiff’s use of the trail and that the city was
not entitled to prevail on its recreational immunity defense
as a matter of law. We also agree that the Ocean to Bay
Trail is not an unimproved access trail entitled to immunity
under ORS 105.688(1)(c). But whether recreational immu-
nity otherwise applies to the trail as land adjacent to the
ocean shore under ORS 105.688(1)(a) depends on plaintiff’s
purpose in using the land and material issues of fact exist
on that question.2 We reverse and remand.
                    I. STANDARD OF REVIEW
         This is a civil case, and the parties have the right
to a jury trial. Or Const, Art I, § 17. A party against whom a

    1
      We reject without further discussion the city’s argument that plaintiff’s
assignment of error directed to the trial court’s granting of the city’s summary
judgment motion is ambiguous and, therefore, out of compliance with ORAP
5.45(2) and (3). The assignment of error is, in fact, in compliance with ORAP
5.45(2) and (3).
    2
      We conclude that to the extent the parties argue about plaintiff’s knowl-
edge of the slippery condition and about the city’s duty of care with respect to
plaintiff, genuine issues of material fact remain with respect to plaintiff’s negli-
gence claim.
Cite as 326 Or App 764 (2023)                             767

claim is asserted may nevertheless move for summary judg-
ment, but such a motion may be granted only when there is
no genuine issue of material fact, and the moving party is
entitled to prevail as a matter of law. ORCP 47 C. To avoid
summary judgment, the nonmoving party has the burden to
produce evidence on any issue raised by the moving party in
its motion as to which the nonmoving party would have the
burden of persuasion at trial. F. T. v. West Linn-Wilsonville
School Dist., 318 Or App 692, 694, 509 P3d 655, rev den, 370
Or 471 (2022). But the city asserts recreational immunity
as an affirmative defense on which it would have the bur-
den of persuasion at trial and, therefore, it bears the bur-
den on its summary judgment motion. We view the facts in
the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, plaintiff,
and we review the trial court’s decision to grant summary
judgment in the city’s favor, including its construction of the
recreational immunity statutes, for legal error. Stedman v.
Dept. of Forestry, 316 Or App 203, 204, 502 P3d 234 (2021).
We draw the pertinent facts from the record that was before
the trial court when it ruled on the summary judgment
motion, and we state them in accordance with our standard
of review.
                      II. THE FACTS
         Plaintiff fell while she was walking home from the
beach on the trail that she used to get to and from Agate
Beach. The trail is adjacent to Agate Beach, an ocean shore.
The city improved and now maintains the trail, which con-
sists of a series of connected walking surfaces, including
existing city sidewalks, packed gravel pathways, and wooden
bridges and boardwalks. The day she was injured, plaintiff
had walked on the path with her dogs and a friend in order
to reach Agate Beach, as she had done on other occasions.
Plaintiff and her friend socialized as they walked along the
trail going to and from the beach. Once there, they recreated
on the beach for a couple hours before beginning their walk
back home on the same trail. As they did so, they reached
a part of the trail that consisted of a wooden bridge, and as
plaintiff put her foot down on it, she noticed that the bridge
was slippery. Plaintiff immediately warned her friend that
the bridge was slippery, and then promptly fell. As a result
of the fall, plaintiff sustained a comminuted left distal tibia
768                                    Fields v. City of Newport

open shaft fracture and a comminuted fibular fracture. In
other words, her left leg was badly broken beneath the knee.
Members of the rescue team also fell “where [plaintiff] had
fallen” when they arrived, and they had difficulty getting
their all-terrain vehicle (ATV) to her because “[t]he tires
couldn’t get enough traction to go up the incline[ ]” of the
wooden bridge. The tires “would just slip.”
            III.   RECREATIONAL IMMUNITY
         We begin with a brief discussion of recreational
immunity. The public policy underlying recreational immu-
nity is set forth in ORS 105.676:
   “[I]t is the public policy of the State of Oregon to encourage
   owners of land to make their land available to the public
   for recreational purposes, * * * by limiting their liability
   toward persons entering thereon for such purposes * * *.”
We addressed that policy statement and related legislative
history in Landis v. Limbaugh, 282 Or App 284, 292-94, 385
P3d 1139 (2016), rev dismissed, 361 Or 351 (2017). We will
not repeat the details of that here, other than to highlight
that recreational immunity was established by the legisla-
ture as a “quid pro quo” policy. Id. at 294. Quid pro quo is
a Latin term that means “something given or received for
something else.” Webster’s Third New Int’l Dictionary 1865
(unabridged ed 2002). ORS 105.682 essentially “confers lim-
ited immunity on landowners that permit others to use their
land for ‘recreational purposes.’ ” Kelly v. Hochberg, 349 Or
267, 274, 243 P3d 62 (2010). The state confers limited immu-
nity in exchange for the public’s recreational use of land.
         There are two fundamental determinants that “give
rise to recreational immunity”: “the landowners’ permis-
sion to use and the public’s use[.]” Coleman v. Oregon Parks
and Recreation Dept., 347 Or 94, 101, 217 P3d 651 (2009).
The landowner’s permission to use must be without charge,
id. at 96, and the public’s use must be primarily for recre-
ation, ORS 105.682(1).
            IV. THE KEY STATUTORY PROVISIONS
         ORS 105.682(1) is the source of recreational immu-
nity, and it provides, as pertinent:
Cite as 326 Or App 764 (2023)                                 769

  “* * * [S]ubject to the provisions of ORS 105.688, an owner of
  land is not liable in contract or tort for any personal injury
  * * * that arises out of the use of the land for recreational
  purposes * * * when the owner of land * * * permits any per-
  son to use the land for recreational purposes * * *. The lim-
  itation on liability provided by this section applies if the
  principal purpose for entry upon the land is for recreational
  purposes * * * and is not affected if the injury * * * occurs
  while the person entering land is engaging in activities
  other than the use of the land for recreational purposes[.]”
         ORS 105.672(5) provides a nonexhaustive list of
activities that qualify as recreational:
      “ ‘Recreational purposes’ includes, but is not limited
  to, outdoor activities such as hunting, fishing, swimming,
  boating, camping, picnicking, hiking, nature study, outdoor
  educational activities, waterskiing, winter sports, viewing
  or enjoying historical, archaeological, scenic or scientific
  sites or volunteering for any public purpose project.”
        The immunity conferred by ORS 105.682(1) is made
expressly “subject to the provisions of ORS 105.688,” which
provides:
     “Except as specifically provided in ORS 105.672 to
  105.696, the immunities provided by ORS 105.682 apply to:
     “(a) All land, including but not limited to land adjacent
  or contiguous to any bodies of water, watercourses or the
  ocean shore as defined by ORS 390.605;
     “(b) All roads, bodies of water, watercourses, rights
  of way, buildings, fixtures and structures on the land
  described in paragraph (a) of this subsection;
     “(c) All paths, trails, roads, watercourses and other
  rights of way while being used by a person to reach land for
  recreational purposes * * * that are on land adjacent to the
  land that the person intends to use for recreational pur-
  poses * * *, and that have not been improved, designed or
  maintained for the specific purpose of providing access for
  recreational purposes * * *; and
     “(d) All machinery or equipment on the land described
  in paragraph (a) of this subsection.”
        The parties do not agree on the meaning of “rec-
reational purposes” under ORS 105.682. The city argues
770                                Fields v. City of Newport

that plaintiff’s principal purpose in using the trail was
recreational and that the city is, therefore, entitled to rec-
reational immunity from legal liability for her injuries.
Plaintiff argues that she was using the trail primarily to
gain access to Agate Beach. She likens the “activity of cross-
ing a parcel of land, [which] by itself, is not a recreational
purpose[,]” Liberty v. State Dept. of Transportation, 342 Or
11, 22, 148 P3d 909 (2006), to the activity of walking and
argues that because recreation was not her primary pur-
pose on the trail, ORS 105.682(1) simply does not apply and
the city is not entitled to immunity.
         The city argues further that ORS 105.688(1)(a)
expressly extends immunity to it because the trail on which
plaintiff was injured is, without dispute, situated on “land
adjacent or contiguous to * * * the ocean shore,” and that
she was using that land for recreational purposes. Plaintiff
counters that ORS 105.688(1)(c) limits ORS 105.688(1)(a) by
applying immunity only to unimproved trails that are adja-
cent to the ocean shore. The city argues that ORS 105.688
(1)(c) does not limit ORS 105.688(1)(a), that subsection (1)
(c) was added to extend immunity to nonrecreational access
trails, and that even if it is not entitled to immunity under
subsection (1)(c), it is entitled to immunity under subsection
(1)(a).
        The trial court found that “[p]laintiff was walk-
ing her dog on a trail to the beach with a friend, a recre-
ational purpose,” and that “[t]he provisions of ORS 105.676
(Recreational Use Immunity) apply[ ]” to immunize the city
from any liability to plaintiff for the injuries that she sus-
tained while on the trail.
                      V.   ANALYSIS
         We begin with ORS 105.682(1) because that is the
statutory source of recreational immunity. It immunizes
landowners who have made their land available for public
recreational use from liability for any injury that “arises
out of the use of the land for recreational purposes.” ORS
105.682(1). ORS 105.688(1)(a), which further defines the
scope of immunity granted under ORS 105.682, extends that
grant of immunity to “land, including but not limited to land
Cite as 326 Or App 764 (2023)                               771

adjacent or contiguous to any bodies of water, watercourses
or the ocean shore[.]” There is no dispute that the city’s trail
qualifies as “land adjacent or contiguous to * * * the ocean
shore.” The focus of the parties’ arguments on summary
judgment centered first on the question of whether there
was evidence that plaintiff’s principal purpose in using
the trail was recreational. At a minimum, for ORS 105.682
and ORS 105.688(1)(a) to apply, there must be evidence that
plaintiff’s injuries arose out of her use of the trail for recre-
ational purposes.
         The trial court concluded that plaintiff was using
the city’s trail for a recreational purpose because she was
walking her dogs to the beach with a friend, and therefore,
the city was entitled to recreational immunity. Plaintiff
argues that walking to the beach is not a recreational
purpose within the meaning of the recreational immunity
statutes. The city disagrees and points to plaintiff’s testi-
mony that she and her friend would often “meet up and take
[plaintiff’s] dogs for a walk or go on a hike on the beach” and
that the purpose of such walks was “exercise[,] friendship[,
and] socializing.”
         Determining whether there is a genuine issue
about plaintiff’s principal purpose in using the city’s trail
puts the meaning of “recreational purpose” squarely before
us. That, in turn, raises a question of statutory construction
requiring us to turn to the methodology set forth in PGE v.
Bureau of Labor and Industries, 317 Or 606, 611, 859 P2d
1143 (1993), and State v. Gaines, 346 Or 160, 171-72, 206
P3d 1042 (2009). In using that methodology, we review the
text and context of the recreational immunity statutes, as
well as any relevant legislative history and helpful canons
of construction. Hathaway v. B & J Property Investments,
Inc., 325 Or App 648, 654, ___ P3d ___ (2023). Our objective
is to ascertain the meaning of the statutory provisions most
likely intended by the legislature that adopted them. State
v. Cloutier, 351 Or 68, 75, 261 P3d 1234 (2011).
        ORS 105.672(5) does not exhaustively define “rec-
reational purposes,” but it does provide a nonexclusive list
of “outdoor activities” that would qualify as such. Plaintiff
notes that “walking” and “dog walking” are not expressly
772                                 Fields v. City of Newport

included on the list of “recreational purposes.” Hiking is
included, but according to plaintiff, using the trail to get to
the beach is not the same as hiking on the trail. The use of
the nonspecific term “outdoor activities” in ORS 105.672(5)
to describe the term “recreational purposes” along with an
exemplary list of more specific activities such as “hiking,”
leads us to construe that provision to refer only to other,
nonlisted items of the same kind under the principle of ejus-
dem generis. Liberty, 342 Or at 20.
         The nonlisted item here, walking, like the non-
listed item in Liberty, crossing parcel A to get to parcel B,
can take place outdoors and, thus, has that trait in com-
mon with the listed activities. The listed activities also
have in common the trait that they “are recreational in and
of themselves.” Id. But walking may or may not be recre-
ational. The term “walk” as a verb commonly means “to
move along on foot: advance by steps” and “to come or go on
foot without hesitation or without ceremony—usually used
with a following adverb or preposition.” Webster’s at 2571
(unabridged ed 2002). “Walk” as a noun generally means
“an act or instance of going on foot especially for exercise or
pleasure” and an “accustomed place of walking.” Id. Thus,
walking can be a mode of conveyance by which one moves
from point A to point B, and walking might also be an activ-
ity that is itself recreational, like taking a walk solely for
the enjoyment of doing so. One might be accompanied by
a dog on either type of walk. Ejusdem generis, as a contex-
tual canon, leads us to conclude that “walking” does not fit
with the list of “recreational purposes” in ORS 105.672(5)
because it may or may not be recreational, depending on the
circumstances.
         Given the record before the trial court, viewed in
the light most favorable to plaintiff, there remains an issue
of material fact as to whether plaintiff’s principal purpose
in walking on the city’s trail was recreational or whether
it was simply to go to and from the beach. Plaintiff argues
that, regardless, any immunity to which the city might be
entitled under ORS 105.682 and ORS 105.688(1)(a) is elim-
inated by ORS 105.688(1)(c). In other words, plaintiff reads
subsection (1)(c) as limiting ORS 105.688(1)(a) by applying
Cite as 326 Or App 764 (2023)                             773

immunity only to unimproved trails that are adjacent to
the ocean shore, and she reasons that because the trail at
issue here is an improved trail, immunity does not apply.
The city urges that subsection (1)(c) was added to ORS
105.688 to extend immunity to nonrecreational trails, in
direct response to Liberty, and that it should not be read as
reducing the immunity already conferred by ORS 105.682
and ORS 105.688(1)(a). We agree with the city on that
point.
         The question whether ORS 105.688(1)(c) limits, or
eliminates, recreational immunity applicable to the city’s
trail again requires us to construe the recreational immu-
nity statutes, and we do so employing the usual method of
statutory construction that we have already described. ORS
105.682(1) expressly subjects recreational immunity to the
provisions of ORS 105.688. ORS 105.688(1)(a) “extend[s] the
immunity conferred by ORS 105.682 to adjacent or contig-
uous land that is used to gain access to waters where the
injured party intended to recreate.” Liberty, 342 Or at 19.
The parties agree that the city’s trail is on land “adjacent or
contiguous to” the ocean shore.
         Notwithstanding the broadly inclusive language of
ORS 105.688(1)(a), the Supreme Court held that “crossing
one person’s land to gain access to another person’s land
to recreate there” does not itself constitute a recreational
purpose and, therefore, does not entitle the owner of the
land crossed to immunity under ORS 105.682. Id. It rein-
forced that holding in Kelly, but distinguished the facts from
Liberty, and held that “plaintiff’s ride on the BLM road was
not a means of accessing recreation—the card game—but
rather his activity of riding to collect the cards was part and
parcel of the recreational purpose itself.” 349 Or at 275. The
upshot is that because “[t]he activity of crossing a parcel of
land, by itself, is not a recreational purpose,” Liberty, 342
Or at 21-22, parcels of land so crossed did not qualify under
Liberty for recreational immunity.
        The legislature added subsection (1)(c) to ORS
105.688 in 2009 in response to the Supreme Court’s deci-
sion in Liberty, specifically to extend immunity to land-
owners who allow people to cross their land to access other
774                                 Fields v. City of Newport

land where they plan to recreate. Audio Recording, Senate
Committee on Rules, HB 2003, June 8, 2009, at 2:03 (state-
ment of Rep Judy Stiegler), https://olis.oregonlegislature.gov
(accessed June 12, 2023). Plaintiff does not dispute that, but
she argues that ORS 105.688(1)(c), “operates as an excep-
tion to ORS 105.688(1)(a)” because, by its terms, subsection
(1)(c) extends immunity only to “paths, trails, roads, water-
courses and other rights of way * * * that have not been
improved, designed or maintained for the specific purpose
of providing access for recreational purposes[.]” The city
counters that subsection (1)(c) does not limit the immu-
nity that trail owners already enjoy under subsection (1)(a).
Subsection (1)(c), according to the city, simply extends immu-
nity to nonrecreational trails.
         ORS 105.688(1)(c) was the legislature’s answer to
Liberty. It extended immunity to trails and paths used to
reach other land for recreational purposes. In doing so, it
expressly limited its application to trails that “have not been
improved, designed or maintained for the specific purpose
of providing access for recreational purposes.” To simplify,
ORS 105.688(1)(c) extends recreational immunity to own-
ers of unimproved, nonrecreational trails and other rights
of way. The legislative history is devoid of discussion about
why subsection (1)(c) is limited in that way, but the absence
of discussion is not surprising given the clear language of
the provision.
         ORS 105.688(1)(c) extends immunity to unim-
proved, nonrecreational access trails that, under Liberty,
would not have qualified for recreational immunity. It is
worth mentioning that limiting the immunity conferred by
ORS 105.688(1)(c) to unimproved land is consistent with the
quid pro quo exchange that justified recreational immunity
in the first place—immunity conferred on the landowner in
exchange for making land available for public recreational
use. Once a landowner affirmatively undertakes to improve
his property, the concepts of reasonable care and foresee-
ability shift, likely increasing the landowner’s correspond-
ing level of responsibility and increasing the value of immu-
nity to that landowner. One might reasonably expect the
legislature to revisit the quid pro quo arrangement when
Cite as 326 Or App 764 (2023)                              775

the value exchanged on either side changes in a meaningful
way.
         Here, the city’s trail is land adjacent to the ocean
shore, and ORS 105.688(1)(a) expressly applies recreational
immunity to it as such, for injuries that arise out of its rec-
reational use. That was and is true, notwithstanding the
Supreme Court’s decision in Liberty. Liberty clarified only
that when a person crosses land solely to gain access to other
land on which the person intends to recreate, recreational
immunity does not apply because using land to access other
land is not a recreational purpose. When the legislature
added ORS 105.688(1)(c), it did so to immunize owners of
trails, paths, and other rights of way from liability when
they allow such property to be used to access recreational
land even though the act of gaining access over their prop-
erty is not itself recreational. In other words, it extended
recreational immunity to landowners who would not qualify
for immunity after Liberty because their land is not made
available for recreational purposes.
         We do not perceive a conflict between ORS 105.688
(1)(a) and (1)(c). If plaintiff’s injuries arose out of her rec-
reational use of the trail, and her principal purpose in
using the trail was recreational, then ORS 105.682 and
ORS 105.688(1)(a) would confer immunity on the city for
those injuries. If her purpose was not recreational, but was
instead to access the beach, then the question would be
whether ORS 105.688(1)(c) nevertheless confers immunity
on the city for her injuries. But because there is no dispute
that the trail was improved and maintained to provide
access to Agate Beach, ORS 105.688(1)(c) would not confer
recreational immunity on the city. There are genuine issues
about whether plaintiff’s principal purpose was recreational,
and whether her injuries arose out of such recreational use.
If a jury determines that plaintiff’s purpose in using the
trail was not recreational, but was instead to access Agate
Beach for recreational purposes, then her injuries would
necessarily not have arisen from a recreational purpose,
and recreational immunity would not apply. Because the
trail on which plaintiff fell was an improved trail within
the meaning of ORS 105.688(1)(c), the city’s entitlement to
776                               Fields v. City of Newport

recreational immunity depends on the resolution of those
factual issues by a jury. The city was not entitled to pre-
vail as a matter of law on summary judgment, and the trial
court therefore erred in granting the city’s motion.
        Reversed and remanded.