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Baseball Rule

In American tort law, the Baseball Rule[1] is an exculpatory clause applicable to baseball games with spectators; it holds that a baseball team or its sponsoring organization cannot be held liable for injuries suffered by a spectator struck by a foul ball batted into the stands, under most circumstances, as long as the team has offered some protected seating in the areas where foul balls are most likely to cause injuries. This is considered within the standard of reasonable care that teams owe to spectators, although in recent decades it has more often been characterized as a limited- or no-duty rule, and applied to ice hockey and golf as well. It is largely a matter of case law in state courts, although four states have codified it.

Backstop behind home plate at Petco Park, the San Diego Padres' home stadium. Under the Baseball Rule this is the minimum protection from foul ball injuries teams must provide.

The rule arose from a pair of 1910s decisions by the Missouri Court of Appeals, both considering suits filed by spectators at home games of the minor league Kansas City Blues. In the first, considered to be the case that established the rule, the court upheld a trial verdict against the plaintiff, holding that his decision to sit outside the netting the team had installed behind home plate constituted contributory negligence and assumption of risk on his part.[2] Conversely, in the second, decided a year later, the court upheld a verdict for a plaintiff who had been struck in the eye by a foul ball that passed through a hole in the netting between him and home plate.[3] Other state courts accepted those cases as precedent and used them to decide similar cases.

By the 1930s it was interpreted as requiring teams to erect protective screening over the stands behind home plate, a practice that had already become common in the late 19th century due to injuries from foul balls, which rose after an 1884 rule change allowed overhand pitching. Courts have seen it as balancing the team's duty of care toward spectators with the spectators' interest in having an unobstructed view of the game available and perhaps being able to take home a recovered foul ball as a souvenir. It has been held to apply in some other situations besides foul balls—when a player deliberately threw the ball into the stands as a souvenir, for instance—but not in others, such as errant pitches from a relief pitcher warming up in the bullpen, situations where multiple balls are in play (such as (formerly) batting practice), where struck spectators are not in the seating areas of the venue or where they may have been distracted by the team's mascot.

In the wake of some serious injuries caused by foul balls in Major League Baseball (MLB) parks in the 2010s, including the first foul-ball spectator death at an MLB game in almost 50 years,[4] there have been calls for the rule to be re-examined or abolished altogether, as more spectators are struck by a foul ball than players in the game are hit by a pitch.[5] While MLB has required all of its teams to extend their protective screens to cover the area to the far end of the dugout on either side of the field, critics note that it is no longer possible for spectators to choose to sit under those screens given that all seats in the venue are reserved for those who buy them, many for the entire season. Further, they say, balls are hit harder and spectators, who on average now sit closer to the field than they did in 1913, have more distractions. Two states' supreme courts have declined to adopt the rule, which has been criticized as a relic of the era before the adoption of comparative negligence; a widely read William and Mary Law Review article further argues that the Baseball Rule fails the law and economics standards of optimally allocated tort liability.[1]

History edit

Development of modern game edit

Professional baseball in the United States began in 1869. In those early years, there was little risk of injury from a ball hit into the stands. While seats were located as close as a few feet (1–2 m) from the foul lines, putting fans at risk of being hit by overthrown balls or lost bats,[6] there was less risk from batted balls. At the time, the rules required pitchers to not only deliver the ball underhand, but with their arms barely bent and from below the waist. In addition, batters could and did request the ball be pitched to a specific position over the plate.[7]

As a result, most games were dominated by offense, with fielding providing most defense, and games often ended with very high scores by modern standards. One or sometimes both teams exceeding 100 runs in a game was not unusual. Pitchers, some of whom had learned to throw the ball very fast even underhand, began to influence the game and drive down scores with the help of gradual rule changes that allowed the ball to be delivered from higher up, with the arm more cocked, making the first curveballs possible. Injuries in the stands from foul balls in the late 1870s earned the area behind home plate the nickname of "the slaughter pit"; the National League's Providence Grays became the first team to erect a protective screen over that section of their park in 1879.[7]

In 1884 the evolution to modern pitching was completed when overhand pitching was allowed. Consequently it became much harder for hitters to direct the ball into fair territory when they connected with it. More teams began erecting backstops, as they came to be called, similar to those the Grays had put up, but they were not always popular with fans. The Milwaukee Northwestern League team removed theirs after two weeks of fan complaints that they unduly obstructed their view of play.[7]

19th-century tort law edit

Fatalities from foul balls occurred in the late 19th and early 20th centuries; many of those struck and killed were children watching or otherwise in proximity to amateur games. In one unusual 1902 incident, a 20-year-old Ohio man watching a game was stabbed through the heart when a friend who was lending him a knife was struck by a foul ball as he did; after telling his friends he was not badly hurt, he began bleeding uncontrollably and died a few minutes later.[6] The Washington Star reported in 1888 that a man claiming to have been hit by a ball (whether batted or thrown was not clear) at a Washington Statesmen game the year before had filed suit; if he had, it did not result in a published opinion.[8]

Media reports from the era suggest that there were other lawsuits besides the 1888 Washington lawsuit against baseball teams over foul ball injuries around the turn of the century, but none were reported. They may have been disposed through settlement, trial or withdrawal. It has also been suggested that the law concerning torts brought by public invitees such as spectators at a baseball game was not seen as favorable to such suits.[9]

Up to the time of baseball's origins in the United States, common law treated those on private property not generally open to the public, like sporting venues, but on the property with the owner's permission, as licensees. The property owner owed them no other duty of care than to protect them from unforeseeable hazards incident to the conditions of the property. That standard would have likely precluded any suit over injuries from a foul ball as they were a foreseeable risk.[9]

However, in 1866 an English court's decision, Indermaur v. Dames, held that a landowner was indeed liable for damages from personally known hazards or hazards the landowner reasonably could have been expected to. Since the plaintiff was there for business reasons, to inspect a faulty gas regulator, when he fell through the defendant's floor and suffered injury, the Court of Common Pleas held he was not a licensee but a visitor or invitee, there to transact business mutually beneficial to both parties, a distinction recent cases had begun to recognize but not formalize.[10] The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court accepted Indermaur as precedent two years later in a similar case of a ship damaged by a submerged rock,[11] and it would eventually be so recognized by the courts of 26 states[12] and the U.S. Supreme Court.[13]

In 1883 the Massachusetts Supreme Court held that a patron of a place of public amusement was an invitee, and that the defendant, a dance hall, had a duty to maintain the premises safely.[14] Legal scholar Seymour Thompson wrote in a popular work on tort law that the duties of business owners towards invitees, or business visitors as they were now known, applied with "special force to ... establishments to which the public are invited in large numbers." As the 20th century dawned, courts had applied that principle to a wide variety of such businesses, including sports venues.[9]

However, despite a more favorable legal climate, there were no reported cases over foul ball injuries. Marquette law professor J.G. Hylton, in a history of the origins of the Baseball Rule, notes that the visitor principle had primarily decided cases where the issues with the property had existed prior to the plaintiff's entry on to it and thus a plaintiff could claim both that the defendant knew of the defect and he himself did not, whereas most spectators at a baseball game would have known that foul balls frequently entered the stands at high speed. There had not been many cases where the plaintiffs' knowledge of the possible risks was a factor.[9]

Also, at the time, American courts recognized assumption of risk and contributory negligence, when proven, as absolute bars to any recovery by a plaintiff. "If [they] knew of the dangers of foul balls and chose to sit in an unprotected seat," Hylton writes, "then he or she opened himself up to the charge that his or her own negligence ... had contributed to his or her injury." He also speculates that the dominant cultural ethos of rugged individualism during the Gilded Age and early Progressive Era may have led injured spectators to fault themselves, and only themselves, for their injury.[a][9]

The earliest reported lawsuit over injuries from a batted baseball was filed during the first decade of the 20th century. A man watching a horse race at an Iowa agricultural fair was hit by a foul ball from a baseball game being played on the track's infield. He sued the directors of the fair; in 1907 the state's Supreme Court held that the directors were not liable since their organization's purpose was to promote agriculture and the baseball game was not part of that, thus they could not be expected to have knowledge of the risks it posed and there was no nonfeasance.[15]

The following year, Michigan's Supreme Court took judicial notice, in a case brought by a patron injured by a foul ball from a nearby game while dancing at a resort, of the inherent risks of watching a baseball game and that every spectator assumed them by choosing to watch:

It is knowledge common to all that in these games [of baseball] hard balls are thrown and batted with great swiftness; that they are liable to be muffed or batted or thrown outside the lines of the diamond, and visitors standing in position that may be reached by such balls have voluntarily placed themselves there with knowledge of the situation, and may be held to assume the risk.[16]

Establishment of the Baseball Rule edit

Crane v. Kansas City Baseball & Exhibition Co. edit

Crane v.
Kansas City Baseball & Exhibition Co.
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals, Kansas City Division
Decided17 February 1913 (1913-02-17)
Citation(s)153 S.W. 1076
Case history
Appealed fromJackson County Circuit Court
Case opinions
Baseball team had duty to spectators to provide some seats screened from foul balls at games but not to screen all seats; spectator who chose to sit in unprotected seats when protected ones were available was contributorily negligent to his own injury by a foul ball and could not recover.
Trial court upheld.
Decision byJohnson
Keywords

In 1913, an appellate court for the first time heard a case against a baseball team arising from a foul ball injury incurred by a paying spectator at the game.[17] Three years earlier, Samuel Crane had gone to a home game of the Kansas City Blues, an American Association class AA minor league team, at Association Park in Kansas City, Missouri. At the ticket counter, he had the choice of a seat in the bleachers, beyond the outfield fence, for 25¢ ($10 in today's dollars[18]) or in the grandstand, next to the infield, for twice that price. In either area, all seats were general admission; Crane could sit wherever he wanted if a space was available.[2]

By that time protective screens had been installed in every baseball park where the game was played professionally. At minimum they covered the area immediately behind home plate; the screen at Association Park extended as far as first and third base on either foul line, roughly 90 feet (27 m) from home. Crane decided to sit in an area beyond the screen, and at some point during the game was struck by a foul ball and injured; the details are not known.[2]

Crane later filed suit in Jackson County Circuit Court,[19] arguing that the Blues had been negligent and seeking $100 in damages ($3,000 in today's dollars[18]) plus court costs; their duty of reasonable care to him required that they screen off all the grandstand seats. He and the team stipulated to the facts of the case and agreed to try it as a question of law. The trial court held for the team; Crane appealed.[2]

The Kansas City Division of the Missouri Court of Appeals affirmed the judgement. Citing the Michigan Supreme Court's 1908 dictum, it held that Crane had assumed the risks of watching a baseball game when he chose to attend. Since given a choice between protected and unprotected seats, Crane chose the latter (for the unobstructed view, the court speculated), there was contributory negligence on his part and the team was not liable. "One invited to a place who is offered a choice of two positions one of which is less safe than the other cannot be said to be in the exercise of reasonable care if, with full knowledge of the risks and dangers, he chooses the more dangerous place", wrote Judge W.O. Jackson. "That is a fundamental rule of the law of negligence."[2]

Almost a century later, Hylton observed that despite Crane's failure to win his case, the court's decision did impose two requirements on teams. While they avoided a requirement they screen off all seats and end the practice of offering standing room only attendance behind the outfield fence to latecomers at sold-out games, both of which would have likely reduced attendance, the court did hold that teams owed a duty of reasonable care to fans, which specifically meant that they should offer at least some protected seating. "This responsibility could not be shirked," Hylton wrote, "and it did not matter either if the patron knew of the danger before attending or was informed of it upon entering the park."[20]

Edling v. Kansas City Baseball & Exhibition Co. edit

Edling
v. Kansas City Baseball & Exhibition Co.
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals, Kansas City Division
Decided1 June 1914 (1914-06-01)
Citation(s)168 S.W. 908
Case history
Appealed fromJackson County Circuit Court
Case opinions
Baseball team was negligent in not properly maintaining screen that kept foul balls from entering section of stands; spectator injured when foul passed through a hole in the screen was not contributorily negligent for not being able to avoid ball's path.
Trial court upheld.
Decision byJ. Johnson
Keywords

Within a year another case of a fan injured by a foul ball at a Blues game came before the same court, allowing it to apply and clarify the rule. The circumstances of this case were markedly different, and the court found for the plaintiff, one Edling.[3]

In 1911, Charles Edling, like Crane, went to a Blues home game. He, too, paid the higher price for a grandstand seat, but unlike Crane chose to sit behind the netting, halfway up the stands from the field level, on almost a line with home plate and the pitcher's mound so he could see pitches curve. During the game, Edling lost sight of one of the many foul balls until it struck him in the eye, having passed through a square-foot (930 cm2) hole in the netting. The injuries were serious, including a broken nose as well as the eye damage, and Edling filed suit, demanding $3,500 ($110,000 in today's dollars[18]) plus court costs.[3]

Since there was a factual dispute as to the condition of the screen—the team claimed it was new and in perfect condition, while fans who had attended other games testified that it had had many holes which had gone unrepaired for a long time—the case was heard by a jury. The team mounted two other defenses: that even in perfect condition a screen unobtrusive enough to not detract from spectators' enjoyment of the game could not also be strong enough to stop all foul balls, and that Edling had also been contributorily negligent by failing to keep track of the ball that had hit him after it had been hit (to that, Edling's lawyer responded that if the Blues' players had kept their eyes on the ball as well as the team's lawyers said Edling should have, the team would have had a much better season[b]).[3]

The jury found for Edling and the Blues appealed. In response to the team's claim that the jury should not have heard the testimony about the condition of the screen, the appeals court relied on Crane to hold that by purposely sitting behind the screen, Edling could reasonably assume he was safe from foul balls. "It was the duty of defendant to keep the screen free from defects, and if it [did not], the jury could properly infer that it ... was guilty of negligence."[3]

"We must also ignore the suggestion that [screening capable of blocking all foul balls would be too hard to see through]", the court said. Evidence at trial, it explained, had shown that a mesh of chicken wire similar to that used at Association Park could stop any batted ball with minimal impact on spectators' view, when properly maintained. Citing Edling's attorney's comment, the court also agreed it was not Edling's responsibility to avoid injury by keeping track of the ball at all times. "The uncertainty in the direction, speed and force of a batted ball is one of the interesting and exciting features of the game," the court observed, "and frequently it is difficult for even a trained eye to follow the course of the ball."[c][3]

Hylton reads Edling as contractualizing the relationship between team and spectator in the area of foul ball risk and protection. By screening off some of the seats, a team implicitly guaranteed to the spectators who chose to sit behind the screen that it would be in sufficient condition to protect them from foul ball injuries, unless (as the team claimed Edling had) they knowingly remained in front of a defective portion. "While not obligated to screen every seat in the park", he comments, "the team was obligated not only to provide protected seats for fans who desired them but also to maintain those seats in a reasonable manner."[22]

Precedence and evolution edit

Crane became precedent outside Missouri before Edling was even heard there. Later in 1913, the Minnesota Supreme Court considered a case, like Crane's, brought by a spectator who had chosen to sit in an unprotected area of the stands and been injured by a foul ball. The plaintiff, a woman who was attending a baseball game for the first time ever on Ladies' Day, had won in the lower courts, but the state's highest court overturned the verdict, citing the case's similarities to Crane and quoting from that opinion extensively. Unlike Crane, the plaintiff argued that she had had no familiarity with the game and thus should at least have been warned about the possibility of injury from a foul ball, but the court did not distinguish her case from Crane's on that basis.[d][24][22]

Washington's Supreme Court relied on Crane in 1919 to reverse an earlier case in which it had allowed an injured spectator to proceed with his suit. The circumstances were similar—the plaintiff had chosen to sit in unprotected seating where protected seats had been available—but the plaintiff in Kavafian v. Seattle Baseball Club Association had initially argued that the team's negligence lay in having changed its mind about where to put screening, as Kavafian's seat was located in an area of the stadium originally intended to have it. Per Crane, the court again found that as long as the team had made some protected seats available a spectator who chose not to sit there assumed all the risk.[25][22]

In 1929 the Supreme Court in neighboring Oregon was confronted with a first-impression variation on the foul-ball injury. A man who had attended a game in Portland four years earlier and sat near the edge of a 150-foot (46 m) screen was nevertheless struck and permanently injured by a foul ball that curved behind it. At trial he had prevailed and been awarded $3,000 ($50,000 in today's dollars[18]), which was upheld on appeal. However, the state Supreme Court held that such an unusual trajectory for a foul ball was so unforeseeable that the team could not reasonably be expected to protect spectators from a ball so hit and vacated the award.[26][23]

 
Gus Suhr, the only Major League batter ever sued over a foul ball injury

Joan Quinn, a San Francisco teenager who attended a 1929 game of the Pacific Coast League's Seals at Recreation Park, asked to be seated behind the screen but was told by the usher that none were available at that time, so she sat in an unprotected seat expecting the usher would find a protected one. A foul ball hit by Gus Suhr struck and injured her.[27] She sued not only the club but Suhr,[28] the first reported instance in which a plaintiff named a batter as a defendant[e] in addition to the team in a foul ball tort, arguing that since she had requested a protected seat she had not voluntarily assumed the risk of the injury that befell her.[27]

At trial the judge granted the team's motion for a directed verdict in their favor after Quinn presented her case. On appeal the court took note that while protected seats were available elsewhere in the grandstand, she had nonetheless insisted on sitting near first base, and upheld the ruling, saying that she had temporarily assumed the risk. The California Supreme Court agreed and saw fit to reprint the entire appellate opinion.[27]

A 1930 incident concerned a ball hit fairly, though not during the actual game. The plaintiff went to a game in New Orleans and bought a ticket to the bleachers, 158 feet (48 m) from home plate and protected by a five-foot-high (1.5 m) screen at field level. While walking to his seat before the game, he was hit by a ball from batting practice, to which he had not paid attention, and his jaw was broken. The following year the Louisiana Supreme Court upheld a judgement for the team, finding the case fundamentally similar to Crane, with the plaintiff's inattention to the game similarly constituting contributory negligence and the team having satisfied its duty as the grandstand was already properly screened.[30][31]

Grimes v. American League Baseball Club edit

Grimes v.
American League Baseball Club
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
Decided5 February 1935 (1935-02-05)
Citation(s)78 S.W.2d 520
Case history
Appealed fromSt. Louis Circuit Court
Court membership
Judges sittingBennick, Hostetler, Becker, McCullen
Case opinions
Construction of temporary benches at baseball park from which foul ball bounced and injured spectator increased risk of injury; park was thus in breach of its duty of reasonable care.
Decision byBennick
Keywords

In one unusual case, also from Missouri, a court did hold that a plaintiff sitting in unprotected seating could recover. On the last day of the St. Louis Browns' 1931 season at Sportsman's Park, Violet Grimes attended, with a date, and chose to sit near third base at field level, well outside the area screened behind home plate. To accommodate extra crowds expected for that year's World Series, in which the Cardinals, who shared the park with the Browns, were hosting the first two games against the Philadelphia Athletics starting the next day, temporary wooden seats had been built and added, extending 15 feet (4.6 m) into the field. In the second game of a doubleheader with the Chicago White Sox a foul ball ricocheted off the railing on the temporary seating and into Grimes' eye.[32]

Grimes prevailed at trial and was awarded $5,000 by the jury ($96,200 in today's dollars[18]). The Browns appealed; the court upheld the verdict, noting that the 60-foot (18 m) distance between the foul lines and the stands existed for a reason and that the temporary seating (closed to spectators that day) distinguished the case from Crane and the others like it in that it was not an ordinary part of games at the park. "[P]laintiff was subjected," the court wrote, "not only to the usual and ordinary perils of the game when played under its usual and ordinary conditions ... but also to an unusual and extraordinary hazard which had concededly been put in the park to meet unusual conditions and which was not even designed or intended to serve a purpose at the game plaintiff was attending."[33]

Brisson v. Minneapolis Baseball & Athletic Association edit

Brisson v.
Minneapolis Baseball & Athletic Association
CourtMinnesota Supreme Court
Decided18 March 1932 (1932-03-18)
Citation(s)240 N.W. 903, 185 Minn. 507
Case opinions
Baseball team owes spectators reasonable care in protecting them from foul balls; standard is met by screening seats behind home plate and making enough available to accommodate reasonable demand for protected seats
Decision byCharles Loring
Keywords

Overall, in the two decades after Crane courts in six more states would rely on it as precedent and reaffirm that reliance;[34] by the 1930s it was seen as a seminal case in the area of landowner liability, specifically the liability of sporting venue operators.[35] The most significant of those cases came from the latter line when the Minnesota Supreme Court heard Brisson v. Minneapolis Baseball & Athletic Association in 1932. It settled two questions Crane and the courts that relied on it had not.[36]

Brisson alleged that he had intended to sit in the protected area, but found all the seats there filled. So he sat instead in an unprotected seat, where like the other plaintiffs he was hit by a foul ball and injured. He argued that Crane required the team to ensure that protected seats were available for any spectator who wanted one; thus, the lack of availability of such seats negated any assumption of risk on his part.[37][36]

A verdict in the plaintiff's favor, too, was appealed again to the state's highest court and overturned, as the justices believed that reasonable care did not require making unprotected seats available for anyone who wanted them. What it did require was that teams make a reasonable amount of such seats available as to satisfy the typical demand for them, and that the "most dangerous" area of the stands be so screened. While the Minnesota Supreme Court did not specify any part of the stands at a baseball game, later courts more explicitly stated this to be the seats behind home plate, which had already been screened at most baseball parks since the 1880s.[36]

Mid-20th century evolution edit

In 1942, when deciding Hudson v. Kansas City Baseball Club, which held that a plaintiff asserting that he had believed that a reserved seat he bought a ticket for was protected was not sufficiently different from other cases as to warrant an exception to the rule, the Missouri Supreme Court noted that Crane and Edling "have become leading cases throughout the country" in torts related to foul ball injuries.[38]

The following year a spectator struck in the abdomen by a foul at a 1941 Columbus Red Birds game, one of the earliest to be played at night, argued that the team should have provided sufficient illumination for those in unprotected seating, as he was that night, to be able to see the ball should it come into the stands, appealed the directed verdict for the team. The Ohio Court of Appeals divided, with two of the three judges declining to distinguish night games. "If the risk was greater due to the fact that it was a night game played under artificial lights, by the same token the plaintiff was under greater obligation to protect himself by seeking a position of safety behind screens." The dissenting judge argued that that was a factual question a jury should have been allowed to decide, saying "it would be a dangerous policy for the law to pronounce a principle of immunity to ball clubs against ordinary care as related to the construction of its stands or the location or the placing of equipment which has to do with the safety of its patrons."[39]

An appeals court in neighboring Indiana later that year also declined to distinguish an injury resulting from a fellow spectator's attempt to throw the foul back on the field, holding that that too was part of the game. "The danger of a ball thrown by a spectator toward the playing field while play is in session seems to us to be an ordinary hazard of the game" wrote the court in Emhardt v. Perry Stadium, noting also that the plaintiff had testified she and her husband had regularly attended games at the park for four years prior to the 1937 incident. It affirmed summary judgement for the defendant team and park.[40]

Since Brisson had specified the terms under which teams needed to provide screening, plaintiffs seeking to recover began basing their challenges on their lack of knowledge of the risks. These cases generally involved women who had accompanied their husbands or sons to the ballpark. The first such case had been decided the year before, when a Texas appeals court heard Keys v. Alamo City Baseball Co.. Keys had taken her son to a Texas League game in San Antonio, where they both sat in unprotected seats far from the backstop. During the fifth or sixth inning, she was struck in the chest by a foul ball her son had ducked while she had been talking to a friend seated several rows behind her.[41]

To overcome the team's assumption of risk defense, she argued that she was not that familiar with the game, having only attended one other baseball contest several years earlier. While it found the team partially negligent in that the usher who had directed her and her son to the seats did not warn them there was no protection there from foul balls, the court disagreed with claim of ignorance of the hazard, noting that the record showed that her son, aged 14, had gone to other games at the park and often played or threw baseballs in and around the home, suggesting "he was a baseball 'fan', as is nearly every normal American boy." Even if Keys had not taken note of this, the court added, she had been at the game for long enough to see, as her son had pointed out to her, that quite a few foul balls go into the stands.[41]

In yet another case from Kansas City, brought by a woman who moved with her son to unprotected seats at a 1947 game on the usher's apparent assurance that they were safe only to be hospitalized after the ensuing injury, the Missouri Supreme Court called the dangers of being struck by a foul ball "open and obvious to any one who possesses normal powers of observation. A knowledge of the rules or strategy of the game is not necessary to a realization of such hazard."[42][f]

Schentzel v. Philadelphia National League Club edit

Schentzel v.
Philadelphia National League Club
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
Decided14 April 1953 (1953-04-14)
Citation(s)173 Pa. Superior Ct. 179
Case history
Appealed fromPa. Court of Common Pleas for Philadelphia County
Court membership
Judges sittingRhodes, Hirt, Reno, Dithrich, Ross, Arnold and Gunther
Case opinions
Judicial notice taken of risk of foul ball injury at baseball games being common knowledge, even where plaintiff claims little interest in the sport. Trial court reversed.
Decision byRoss
Keywords

A Pennsylvania Superior Court panel echoed Keys in 1953's Schentzel v. Philadelphia National League Club when it overturned a jury verdict in favor of a woman who had gone with her husband to see a Philadelphia Phillies doubleheader at Shibe Park in 1949. The couple had driven to Philadelphia from Allentown and arrived late, at the start of the first game's seventh inning. They had been assured by the ticket seller that their seats, in the upper deck, were behind the screen. When they found out that they were not, rather somewhat displaced towards first base, they resolved to see if they could exchange their tickets for a pair to seats that were, but due to crowds in the aisle, they chose to wait until that trip could be made more easily. Roughly two minutes afterwards, 10 minutes after they arrived, the woman was injured by a foul ball.[43]

Schentzel made the novel argument that teams should install extra screening on Ladies' Days, such as the one she had attended, since many women were admitted for free and it could not be expected that most of them would be familiar with the game. But as in the Texas case, the Pennsylvania court did not find it plausible at that time that the plaintiff could be ignorant of the fact that foul balls went into the stands, her testimony that the game was the first she had ever attended and the minimal amount of time she and her husband had been at the game notwithstanding. Starting from the premise that she was a middle-aged woman of normal intelligence, the court reiterated the holding of Keys in this regard:

Consequently, she must be presumed to have been cognizant of the "neighborhood knowledge" with which individuals living in organized society are normally equipped. We think the frequency with which foul balls go astray, alight in the grandstand or field, and are sometimes caught and retained by onlookers at baseball games is a matter of such common everyday practical knowledge as to be a subject of judicial notice. It strains our collective imagination to visualize the situation of the wife of a man obviously interested in the game, whose children view the games on the home television set, and who lives in a metropolitan community, so far removed from that knowledge as not to be chargeable with it.[44]

First major league foul ball death edit

In 1970, for the first time, a spectator died of injuries from a foul ball at a major league game.[g] Alan Fish, 14, went to the Los Angeles Dodgers May 16 home game at Dodger Stadium against the San Francisco Giants with other boys from his recreational program and the program director, where they sat in the second row at field level along the first base line. A Manny Mota foul hit Fish on the back of the head, above his ear, in the bottom of the third.[45]

Fish initially lost consciousness, but regained it after a minute and appeared to have recovered completely by the end of the game. However, on his ride home he began experiencing dizziness, and by the time he returned his parents took him to three hospitals in order to find one that would treat him. His condition deteriorated and surgery could not be done; Fish died after being taken off life support three days later.[45]

The Fishes brought suit against the Dodgers, the medical facilities and the first physician to see their son, asking $1 million in damages. They alleged the team had been negligent in designing and operating the stadium, and along with the other defendants had been negligent in treating Alan. The trial judge disallowed the first count against the Dodgers, and before trial the Fishes dropped suit against the medical facilities. When it finally came to trial in 1973, the jury initially deadlocked, but after the judge pressured them to keep deliberating, they found for the defendants.[45] Three years later an appeals court reversed the trial court on the grounds of a jury instruction that should have been given but was not.[46]

1970s-80s: Comparative negligence edit

With plaintiffs now effectively denied the opportunity to recover based on their own level of knowledge of the game, lawyers began adding the claim that teams were negligent in failing to warn spectators about the dangers of foul balls. Many states had reformed their tort laws, with courts and/or legislatures embracing the newer doctrine of comparative negligence, assumption of risk and contributory negligence, the pillars of the Baseball Rule in Crane, were no longer absolute defenses and a plaintiff whose own negligence had contributed to their injury could still recover, albeit less than what they had demanded, as long as they were found to be less than 50 percent at fault.[47]

These cases left the Baseball Rule intact; courts in California, New York and Texas wrote influential rulings declining to revisit it, although not without some skepticism, and an outright dissent in New York. These favorable verdicts notwithstanding, teams did begin to take some steps to warn fans of the danger from foul balls. Waivers were printed on the back of tickets,[48] and teams began having announcements read over the park's public address system reminding fans to stay alert at any time balls were in use on the field, not just during play.[49]

In declining to revisit the Baseball Rule without contributory negligence and assumption of risk as absolute defenses to suits over foul ball injuries, courts revised the duty of care owed by teams to spectators. Crane had stated that it arose out of reasonable care,[2] but the decisions of the 1980s held that a team owed either a limited duty or no duty at all to spectators beyond that established by the Baseball Rule.[50]

Akins v. Glens Falls City School District edit

Akins v.
Glens Falls City School District
 
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
Decided18 June 1981 (1981-06-18)
Citation(s)53 N.Y.2d 325, 441 N.Y.S.2d 644
Case history
Appealed fromAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York
Court membership
Judges sittingCooke, Gabrielli, Jones, Wachtler, Jasen, Fuschberg, Meyer
Case opinions
Rule that baseball teams must provide some protected seating areas to be immune from liability over foul ball injuries to spectators is adequate under comparative negligence
Decision byJasen
ConcurrenceGabrielli, Jones, Wachtler
Concur/dissentFuschberg, Meyer
DissentCooke

In 1981's Akins v. Glens Falls City School District, the New York Court of Appeals, the highest court of a state that had been one of the first to adopt comparative negligence, heard the first case challenging the Baseball Rule under that doctrine.[51]

Five years earlier, Akins had attended one of her son's high school baseball games. Arriving after it had started, she chose to watch, standing since there were no seating facilities available, behind a three-foot-high (1 m) chainlink fence that ran from the backstop along the third base line, approximately 60 feet (18 m) from the plate. Within 10 minutes, a foul ball hit her in the eye, causing permanent injury.[52]

At trial, she asked $250,000 ($805,000 in today's dollars[18]) alleging the school district could have put wings equal in height to the backstop's 24 feet (7.3 m) to both bases at minimal cost; the jury found the school district liable and awarded her $100,000, finding her only 35 percent liable for her injury. A five-judge panel of the state's Appellate Division divided narrowly in upholding her appeal, with the dissenting justices arguing that Akins had not proved the school district negligent, and the case went to the Court of Appeals. The judges there also divided narrowly, reversing the appeals court.[52]

Judge Matthew J. Jasen's majority opinion held that the standard set by Brisson almost half a century earlier—screening behind the plate at least and protected seating available for the number of spectators who could reasonably be expected to want it—still applied. Since that had been provided, the school district had met the duty of reasonable care (which was now required of New York landowners regardless of the category of visitor) and was not liable; Jasen did not think the court needed, given that holding, to reconsider the Baseball Rule under comparative negligence.[52]

The court's chief judge, Lawrence H. Cooke, wrote the dissent. He and his two colleagues accused the majority of usurping the jury's task. "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 ... [it] has in effect undertaken the task of prescribing the size, shape and location of backstops and other protective devices." Cooke noted that the jury in the case had heard testimony that it was relatively inexpensive to add those wings to the backstop and that they were common in the area, that school district officials knew that fouls went over the fence but posted no signs warning of them, and that the batter who had hit the foul in a varsity high school contest was a powerful enough hitter to have made it to the major leagues by the time the Court of Appeals heard the case. Lastly he charged that the majority had, by refusing to consider comparative negligence in this case, effectively negated it as a concept.[53]

Rudnick v. Golden West Broadcasters edit

Rudnick v. Golden West Broadcasters
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeals, 4th District, Division 3
Decided31 May 1984 (1984-05-31)
Citation(s)156 Cal.App.3d 793, 202 Cal. Rptr. 900
Case opinions
While baseball rule limiting teams' liability in foul ball injuries to spectators remains intact under comparative negligence, whether defendant provided adequate protected seating to meet rule's conditions is a triable issue of fact

Three years later, an appeals court in another comparative negligence state, California, considered a foul ball case in that light. Loretta Rudnick, after being struck and injured by a foul ball at a California Angels game, brought suit against the team. While she had been sitting in an unprotected area of Anaheim Stadium near first base, she argued that that was no longer a valid defense for the team, since under comparative negligence her stated lack of familiarity with baseball and consequent assumption that all seats were safe made her responsibility a triable issue of fact. After presenting her case, the trial court had granted the Angels' motion for summary judgement.[54]

The appeals court reversed, but only because it felt the Angels' motion had not met the standard for summary judgement. In asserting that 2,300 protected seats were available, the motion neglected in the court's opinion to note that that number was but a tenth of the crowd the team typically drew, nor did it make any effort to show how that was a reasonable amount to have available, especially when most of those seats were reserved for season ticket holders. The rest of its opinion went on to reassert the validity of the Baseball Rule, as recognized by the state's Supreme Court in Quinn a half-century earlier, in the comparative negligence environment, allowing in the process that "[t]he law has traditionally treated the national pastime in a sui generis manner" For spectators, it concluded, "the chance to apprehend a misdirected baseball is as much a part of the game as the seventh inning stretch or peanuts and Cracker Jack."[54]

A concurring justice agreed that the Angels had not satisfied the requirement of demonstrating that no issue of fact existed, but took issue with the majority's reaffirmation of the Baseball Rule. "They find, quite remarkably, that Quinn ... is still a beacon of enlightened tort law." He cited the many changes made to baseball since 1935 as parallel to changes in tort law. Baseball had indeed gotten sui generis treatment from the law, he agreed, but "there is absolutely no support to suggest it is above the law and insulated from the duty and liabilities imposed on others. Say it ain't so, Joe!"[54]

Friedman v. Houston Sports Association edit

Friedman v.
Houston Sports Association
CourtTexas Courts of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1987 (1987-03-05)
Citation(s)731 S.W.2d 572
Court membership
Judges sittingDunn, Sam Bass and Cohen
Case opinions
Comparative negligence does not create a duty for baseball teams to warn spectators of possibility of injuries from foul balls
Decision byDunn
ConcurrenceCohen

Three years after Rudnick, a Texas appeals court likewise rejected the notion that the move to comparative negligence required reassessing the Baseball Rule. After an 11-year-old girl had been struck in the face by a foul while sitting near first base at a 1978 Houston Astros game, she and her father were awarded $180,000 in actual and punitive damages, which the judge then set aside on a defense motion.[47] In affirming, the appeals court first reiterated the holding from Keys that it would be "absurd, and no doubt ... resented by many patrons"[55] to expect a baseball team to individually warn everyone entering the park of the dangers from foul balls leaving the field of play. It then rejected the argument that the state's recent move to comparative negligence required it to reconsider the Baseball Rule, noting that neither New York nor California had, either. "Comparative negligence does not create a duty," it wrote.[47]

Like Akins and Rudnick, the decision came with some skepticism. A concurring justice noted that while he agreed with the decision since Friedman had been accompanied by her father, he was troubled by the court's willingness to discard the jury's findings that her father had not himself been negligent. He speculated that there would be situations in which a duty to warn could be found, perhaps if a young child entered the venue unsupervised, even though his or her parents might be held negligent for allowing that.[56]

1990s–present: Reconsideration edit

In 1992 appeals courts in Chicago, hearing the cases of two spectators who had been injured at games of both of the city's MLB teams, showed less deference to the Baseball Rule than courts previously had. The state legislature responded by codifying the rule into statute.[57] In the 21st century, courts in Idaho, Indiana, and New Mexico declined to adopt it, although in the latter instance that state's Supreme Court overruled the decision.[58]

Coronel v. Chicago White Sox edit

Coronel v. Chicago White Sox
CourtIllinois Appellate Court
DecidedMay 19, 1992 (1992-05-19)
Citation(s)595 N.E.2d 45, 230 Ill. App.3d 734, 171 Ill.Dec. 917
Case history
Appealed fromCook County Circuit Court
Court membership
Judges sittingScariano, Hartman, DiVito
Case opinions
Whether baseball team had adequate protected seats available, and whether spectator injured by foul ball was adequately warned by team given distractions at game is a triable issue of fact for jury even if dangers of such injury are open and obvious
Decision byScariano

Blanca Coronel's lawsuit against the White Sox had little to distinguish it from other cases in the Baseball Rule line. She had gone to Comiskey Park in 1986 to attend her first Sox game, where she sat behind the plate, five rows from the field and three seats outside the edge of the backstop. In the sixth inning, she reached down for some popcorn and when she looked up, a foul ball struck her in the face and broke her jaw. The trial court hearing her suit granted summary judgement for the team, and she appealed, arguing the team's duties to her rested on questions of triable fact.[59]

Unlike its predecessors in the other large states, however, the Illinois Appellate Court declined to reaffirm the Baseball Rule. Justice Anthony Scariano reviewed other cases, from Illinois and other states, including Wells and Akins, to conclude that "we cannot accept the suggestion advanced by the Sox that it should be they and not the jury who should determine the adequacy of the protection afforded its fans at a baseball game." The Sox' backstop, he pointed out, was only 39.7 feet (12.1 m) wide, narrower than the one at the high school game in Akins, and a jury thus could consider whether that was sufficient protection.[60]

Scariano also rejected the team's argument that it owed Coronel no duty to warn her of the hazards of foul balls beyond the language on the ticket and a warning on the scoreboard during the game.[61] Illinois case law since the state's move to comparative negligence had held that even in the case of "open and obvious" dangers like foul balls landowners might still be found to have a duty to warn. One of the factors that might trigger that duty was the possibility that a visitor might have his or her attention diverted in a way that increased their risk of injury from the hazard,[62] This Scariano saw as an especially apt point for baseball spectators:

For it is common knowledge that at major league baseball games the attention of the spectators is frequently diverted, for example, by large numbers of vendors who purvey a variety of food and drink which the fans consume on the premises while the game is in progress, as plaintiff was doing in the instant case. It is to be expected, then, that in the process of purchasing and consuming such items, the fans' distraction from the game is bound to occur.

The court remanded the case so a jury could decide the questions of fact.[61]

Yates v. Chicago National League Baseball Club edit

Yates v.
Chicago National League Baseball Club
CourtIllinois Appellate Court, 1st Dist., 1st Div.
DecidedApril 6, 1992 (1992-04-06)
Citation(s)595 N.E.2d 570, 230 Ill. App.3d 472, 172 Ill.Dec. 209
Case history
Appealed fromCook County Circuit Court
Court membership
Judges sittingO'Connor, Campbell and Manning
Case opinions
Waiver language printed on rear of baseball ticket is insufficient for contractual assumption of risk defense against negligence claim over spectator's foul ball injury
Decision byO'Connor

Around the same time, a different division of the same Illinois appellate court heard Yates v. Chicago National League Ball Club, a suit against the Cubs over a Leon Durham foul ball that struck the plaintiff in the face at Wrigley Field in 1983, ending his own baseball career and causing vision problems that persisted over the pendency of the case. A jury had found for him and the Cubs appealed.[63]

The Cubs' appeal was primarily based on evidentiary issues at the trial. Most relevant to the Baseball Rule, the appeals court ruled that Yates did not have to introduce evidence that the amount of seats protected by the backstop was adequate to meet demand, as Coronel had narrowed a plaintiff's burden of proof to simply whether the screen was adequate protection without regard to the demand for seats behind them, and, contrary to one of the Cubs' other grounds for appeal, the jury could consider that question.[64]

The appeals court also rejected the Cubs' argument that the ticket waiver created a contractual assumption of risk. Other Illinois case law had held that a contractual assumption of risk required that the plaintiff have assented to the agreement; this could not be so, the trial court had ruled, because "the print was so small that it was not legibly reproduced on the photocopy submitted to the trial court."[65]

New Mexico: Crespin and Edward edit

Edward v. City of Albuquerque
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 3, 2010 (2010-09-03)
Citation(s)241 P.3d 1086, 148 N.M. 646, 2010-NMSC-043
Case history
Appealed fromNew Mexico Court of Appeals
Court membership
Judges sittingUnanimous
Case opinions
Limited-duty rule for baseball teams regarding injuries to spectators from foul balls adequately balances their interests
Decision byChávez

The New Mexico Court of Appeals became the first court to explicitly reject the Baseball Rule in 2009's Crespin v Albuquerque Baseball Club. The Crespins' four-year-old son's skull was fractured by a ball hit into the stands during batting practice while the family was enjoying a pregame picnic, in an area with tables behind the outfield fence, for local Little Leaguers served by the minor league Albuquerque Isotopes.[h] They sued the Isotopes, the city of Albuquerque as stadium owner, batter Dave Matranga, then with the New Orleans Zephyrs, and the Zephyrs' parent team, the Houston Astros, for whom Matranga had played in the majors.[67]

The trial court granted summary judgement to all defendants. On appeal, the court affirmed it for the Astros and Matranga, since he had hit the ball fairly as baseball players are supposed to do (in a game, the court noted, the hit would have been a home run) and thus the Astros, for whom Matranga had once played, had trained him properly and neither he nor they could have been held negligent. But it reversed the judgement against the team and city.[67]

"This case presents the first opportunity for a New Mexico appellate court to consider whether to carve out an exception to the usual tort doctrines for the sport of baseball." The court declined, finding the rule inconsistent with comparative negligence. "Under our present tort system, we discern no public policy reason to justify bestowing immunity on the business of baseball." It remanded the case to the trial court so the jury could decide, among other issues, whether the Isotopes were negligent in failing to warn the picnickers that batting practice was about to begin.[68]

The following year the state's Supreme Court overruled the appeals court, in a decision renamed Edward v. City of Albuquerque. "[W]e believe that a limited-duty rule", Chief Justice Edward L. Chávez wrote for a unanimous court, "albeit not the one argued for by defendants, is warranted by sound policy considerations." After a lengthy review of previous case law from in and out of state, he called the rule "symmetrical" in that while spectators had to exercise ordinary care to avoid injury from batted balls, while teams had a duty not to increase the risks. Chávez sought to balance the team's duties with the interest of spectators in catching a foul ball. He did, however, affirm the appeals court's denial of summary judgement, saying the city and team had not sufficiently established the facts to support it.[58]

Rountree v. Boise Baseball Club edit

Rountree v. Boise Baseball Club
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 2013 (2013-02-23)
Citation(s)296 P.3d 373, 154 Idaho 167
Court membership
Judges sittingBurdick, Eismann, J. Jones, W. Jones and Horton
Case opinions
No valid public policy reason exists for adopting limited-duty "baseball rule" in cases of spectators injured by foul balls
Decision byJ. Jones

In 2013's Rountree v. Boise Baseball Club, Idaho's Supreme Court rejected the Baseball Rule. The plaintiff had been hit while eating in Memorial Stadium at a 2008 Boise Hawks game. The trial court had held that only the state legislature could adopt it, which Justice Jim Jones wrote for a unanimous court, was incorrect. But while the court could adopt it, he continued, "[w]e find no compelling public policy requiring us to do so."[69]

The court, Jones conceded, had earlier adopted the fireman's rule, limiting the liability of landowners for injuries suffered by responding emergency personnel on their property. But that recognized "the fundamental link between firefighters confronting danger and sustaining consequent injuries." Jones did not see any similar reason the public had to expose itself to foul ball injuries to watch baseball. The opinion also rejected the defendants claim that implied primary assumption of risk was a valid defense in the case.[69]

South Shore Baseball LLC v. DeJesus edit

South Shore Baseball LLC v. DeJesus
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 27, 2014 (2014-06-27)
Citation(s)11 N.E.3d 903
Case history
Appealed fromIndiana Court of Appeals
Court membership
Judges sittingDickson, Massa, Rucker, David, Rush
Case opinions
Adoption of rule limiting duty of baseball teams to spectators injured by foul balls is properly left to the legislature
Decision byMassa

The year after Rountree, the Indiana Supreme Court also declined to adopt the Baseball Rule, even as it held for the defendant team on the facts of the case. South Shore Baseball LLC v. DeJesus had been brought by a woman struck in the face by a pop-up foul on the opening day of the 2009 Gary SouthShore RailCats season at U.S. Steel Yard. She had been sitting just outside the screening, heard the foul and looked up to see it in time for it to strike her in the face, breaking several bones and blinding her in the left eye.[70]

At trial, the team's motion for summary judgement was denied, then reversed on appeal. While DeJesus had argued that the netting should have extended further, she had testified that she had been to many RailCats games, that she was aware of the hazards of foul balls and had heard a warning to that effect over the stadium's public address system. She appealed to the state Supreme Court, which affirmed. "This undisputed evidence shows DeJesus was not relying on the netting to protect her from the danger of foul balls," wrote Justice Mark Massa for a unanimous court.[71]

The court had also been asked, in an amicus curiae brief filed by the Indianapolis Indians, the Pittsburgh Pirates triple-A minor league team in the state, to formally adopt the Baseball Rule, which it said the state had already done 70 years earlier in Emhardt. Massa responded with a baseball metaphor: "Although we appreciate a well-turned double play, we will take this particular pitch." Emhardt's holding had contained the essence of the rule, he agreed, but it was rooted in the legal doctrines the state had abandoned in favor of comparative negligence. "We do not find it instructive here."[72]

Massa agreed that "[b]aseball undoubtedly occupies a special place in American life and culture", quoting praise for the sport from a 1911 decision of the court, but "[n]evertheless, we are not convinced that any sport, even our national pastime, merits its own special rule of liability." If that was a decision the state should make, it was the state legislature's prerogative, he concluded.[72]

Exceptions edit

Injury to non-spectating bystander edit

Courts have strictly adhered to the Baseball Rule, but they have almost always limited its applicability to spectators watching the game or walking through viewing areas, holding that only that activity gives rise to the assumed risk of foul ball injury. The first plaintiff to recover after Edling was a young Wisconsin girl who was hit in the face while her mother was adjusting her dress along a highway about 90 feet (27 m) from a baseball diamond at a park operated by the local trolley company; the family was not watching the game. "There can be no serious claim that the respondent was guilty of contributory negligence, as she was on the highway and entirely ignorant of her danger", the Wisconsin Supreme Court held in 1925 as it affirmed a $2,000 ($33,000 in today's dollars[18])[28] jury verdict in her favor.[73]

Batting practice edit

Another 1925 case from the Midwest addressed an injury arising from batting practice, resulting in a change in procedure for that aspect of the pregame. The plaintiff in Cincinnati Base Ball Co. v. Eno was attending a Cincinnati Reds twi-night doubleheader four years earlier with her father; during batting practice between the games, which at the time consisted of several groups of players scattered around the field, she and her father went closer to the field for a look at the players practicing there, just 15–25 feet (4.6–7.6 m) away,[74] a foul broke her jaw. The Ohio Supreme Court affirmed an appellate ruling that reversed the trial court's directed verdict for the team, distinguishing the case from Crane and its progeny by noting that multiple balls were in play during batting practice and spectators could not reasonably be expected to keep track of all of them.[75][i] As a result of the case, the Reds and other professional teams began holding batting practice with only one batter at a time, swinging from home plate.[j][79]

Lost bats edit

The Baseball Rule has not been extended to cover injuries from lost bats that go into the stands. In 1938 a California appeals court considered the case of Martha Ratcliff, who had been walking down the aisle to her protected seat at a San Diego Padres Pacific Coast League game during batting practice when struck by a player's bat, which had slipped from his grip 80 feet (24 m) away. She prevailed at trial and was awarded $2,000 by the jury, a verdict sustained on appeal, since the evidence showed that bats had gone into the stands before and the court held that "[i]t was a question for the jury whether such an accident as this could have been reasonably anticipated and we think the evidence is sufficient to sustain their finding upon that question."[80]

Thrown balls edit

Maytnier v. Rush edit

Maytnier v. Rush
CourtIllinois Appellate Court
DecidedMarch 6, 1967 (1967-03-06)
Citation(s)80 Ill. App.2d 336, 225 N.E.2d 83
Case history
Appealed fromCook County Circuit Court
Court membership
Judges sittingBryant, Burke, Lyons,
Case opinions
Injury from errantly thrown baseball is sufficiently different from one caused by foul ball as for sufficiency of protection against risk to be a triable question of fact; usual immunity from liability for baseball teams does not apply.
Decision byLyons

A ball errantly thrown into the stands as a consequence of a pitcher's warmup during the game, rather than batted, also was beyond the scope of the rule.[k] In 1957, David Maytnier, 13, went to a Cubs doubleheader at Wrigley Field, where he got a front-row ticket that he had requested be as close to the Cubs' dugout as possible; he wound up being seated about 10 or 15 seats further away from the plate than the dugout. The seat was thus close to the bullpen, where a wild pitch by reliever Bob Rush struck Maytnier in the face during the sixth inning of the second game.[82]

Maytnier's father sued both Rush and the Cubs; testimony at trial revealed that the former, who had been having problems with his pitching that season, had been experimenting with a new pitch which in that particular instance, 6-foot-3-inch (1.91 m) bullpen catcher Gordon Massa testified, had been above him and to his left, beyond his ability to catch when standing. The jury found for Maytnier against the team but for Rush against him.[82]

Both Maytnier and the Cubs appealed. His appeal against the Rush verdict was dismissed as untimely.[83] The Cubs' appeal made several arguments including all the previous Baseball Rule cases from Illinois and other states. The court distinguished them all from the instant case; instead it was more persuaded by Eno and Ratcliff:

The facts here in issue evidence an entirely different situation in which the plaintiff was struck by a ball, not in play in the game, coming from his left at a time when the spectators' attentions were focused on the ball actually in play in the game, to plaintiff's right ... The case at bar presents factual circumstances quite different from those held applicable to the general rules concerning nonliability of ball park owners to spectators. This court cannot say, therefore, that defendant Chicago Cubs has not breached a duty as a matter of law.[84]

The case had thus been properly submitted to the jury, and the appeals court therefore declined to disturb it.[85]

Possibly as a consequence of Maytnier, baseball venues at all levels banned players from playing pepper, a warmup exercise (sometimes played as an informal game in itself) in which a batter bats balls to several fielders nearby, due to the risk of similar injuries to spectators, since it was often played on the side of the field before games. This is often indicated with signs. Teams have also moved bullpens off the field to enclosed areas behind the back fence.[86]

Loughran v. The Phillies edit

Loughran v. The Phillies
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 23, 2005 (2005-11-23)
Citation(s)888 A.2d 872
Case history
Appealed fromPhiladelphia County Court of Common Pleas
Court membership
Judges sittingMusmanno, Bender, Olszewski
Case opinions
Limited-duty rule for baseball teams bars recovery for injury from ball thrown into stands as souvenir by player, since it was a routine aspect of game even if not necessary for play
Decision byOlszewski
DissentBender

In contrast to Maytnier, injuries resulting from a ball deliberately thrown into the stands by a player as a souvenir were held beyond recovery under the Baseball Rule in a 2005 Pennsylvania case. Jeremy Loughran sued the team and outfielder Marlon Byrd after he was hit in the face and concussed by a ball thrown into the stands by Byrd after making the last out of an inning during a 2003 game. The trial court granted Byrd and the team summary judgement, and Loughran appealed.[87]

Three of the four judges on the Superior Court panel affirmed the trial court. They rejected Loughran's argument that Byrd's throw was not a customary part of the game and thus outside the scope of the risk he assumed in attending it. In so determining, "we cannot be limited to the rigid standards of the Major League Baseball rule book; we must instead consider the actual everyday goings on that occur both on and off the baseball diamond" the court wrote. "[B]oth outfielders and infielders routinely toss caught balls to fans at the end of an inning" which, indeed, had occurred 20 times that night, two of which landed near Loughran, before he was injured.[88]

Justice John Bender dissented, arguing that the majority should have distinguished between an accidental throw into the stands and Byrd's "gratuitous" toss, completely unnecessary to the game. "Apparently, in the majority's view, a thrown ball is a thrown ball" he wrote. "I am unwilling to accept the premise that simply because the custom is commonplace, the commonality of the custom provides blanket immunity from the way it is carried out." Players throwing last-out balls into the stands as a gift to fans had a duty to exercise reasonable care in doing so, he reiterated.[89]

Spectators away from seating area edit

Jones v. Three Rivers Management Corporation edit

Jones v.
Three Rivers Management Corporation
CourtPennsylvania Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 18, 1978 (1978-11-18)
Citation(s)483 Pa. 75, 394 A.2d 546
Case history
Appealed fromSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
Court membership
Judges sittingEagen, O'Brien, Roberts, Nix, Manderino, Larsen
Case opinions
Rule limiting liability of baseball teams for foul ball injuries applies only when spectators are injured while in seating areas; plaintiff injured while walking on stadium concourse was not incurring ordinary risks of watching game
Decision byRoberts

On July 16, 1970, the day the Pittsburgh Pirates played their first home game at Three Rivers Stadium, Evelyn Jones was walking one of the stadium's interior concourses before the game. There were openings that looked out over the field; during the course of her walk, she looked through some but did not stop to do so for long. Near right field, unaware that batting practice had begun, she turned to go to a concession stand for food, and as she did was struck in the eye by a batted ball.[90]

At trial, a jury found for Jones against the Pirates and its subsidiary that managed the stadium, awarding her $125,000. The Superior Court panel that heard the appeal reversed both, but divided on the management company's liability. Jones appealed that decision to the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania.[90]

"Movies must be seen in a darkened room, roller coasters must accelerate and decelerate rapidly and players will bat balls into the grandstand", Justice Samuel J. Roberts wrote for a unanimous court, referring to other state tort precedents concerning inherent risks at places of amusement as well as the Baseball Rule, which he characterized as "no-duty". "But even in a 'place of amusement' not every risk is reasonably expected." He noted that the openings and archways overlooking the field near where Jones was hit were architectural choices not essential to playing baseball, and thus the jury was properly charged with deciding whether the Pirates were negligent in operating the stadium with them. Their verdict was sustained; the Baseball Rule was held to apply only to those spectators in the seating area.[91]

Maisonave v. Newark Bears edit

Maisonave v. Newark Bears
CourtNew Jersey Supreme Court
Citation(s)881 A.2d 700, 185 N.J. 70
Court membership
Judges sittingPoritz, Long, Zazzali, Albin, Wallace, LaVecchia, Rivera-Soto
Case opinions
Limited-duty rule on baseball teams' liability for spectators' foul ball injuries applies only when spectators are injured in seating areas
Decision byZazzali
ConcurrenceWallace
Concur/dissentRivera-Soto, LaVecchia
Turner
v. Mandalay Sports Entertainment LLC
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 2008 (2008-04-17)
Citation(s)180 P.3d 1172
Case history
Appealed fromNevada Eighth Judicial District Court
Court membership
Judges sittingGibbons, Paraguirre, Maupin, Saitta, Hardesty, Cherry, Douglas
Case opinions
Limited-duty rule for baseball teams bars recovery by plaintiff injured by foul ball while sitting at table in unprotected stadium dining area with view of game.
Decision byParaguirre
Concur/dissentGibbons, Cherry, Douglas

Almost 30 years later, the New Jersey Supreme Court held similarly in Maisonave v. Newark Bears, where the plaintiff had likewise suffered serious eye injuries after being hit by a foul ball when he turned around after hearing a warning while buying food from a vendor at a cart in an open area of the Riverfront Stadium concourse. After a trial court granted summary judgement to the team, an appeals court reversed and the Supreme Court sustained. Chief Justice James R. Zazzali's majority opinion, one of the earliest to refer to the rule specifically as the "baseball rule",[92] held it imposed a limited duty on teams, since fans "actively engage in the game by trying to catch foul balls", but followed Jones in holding it applied only to injuries sustained by those spectators in areas of the venue specifically intended for them to view the game from:

Fans foreseeably and understandably let down their guard when they are in other areas of the stadium ... 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 ...[92]

Two justices wrote separate opinions. John E. Wallace Jr. concurred in the result, but said he found the Baseball Rule anachronistic. He called for it to be replaced with the business-invitee class of visitor that had preceded it, noting that even the majority had admitted that the most dangerous seats for foul ball injuries were no longer those behind home plate but along the baselines. Wallace rejected concerns that abandoning it would give rise to a legal regime in which baseball teams and park owners would be forced to protect every seat from foul balls. "Instead," he wrote, "the application of traditional tort principles, such as comparative negligence, will adequately even out the playing field for both sides."[93]

Justice Roberto A. Rivera-Soto, joined by Jaynee LaVecchia, took the opposite approach, concurring in the reaffirmation of the Baseball Rule but dissenting from its limitation to the seating area. While he agreed with Wallace that it was better that "one and only one standard of care should apply in respect of the peril of objects leaving the playing field", Rivera-Soto would have had the court adopt the broader Baseball Rule for spectators regardless of where they were in the stadium, approvingly quoting the trial court's holding that "once a spectator, always a spectator — at least until the last out is registered." With the "hybrid standard of care", the decision adopted, ballparks might eventually be forced to completely seal off play, he feared.[94]

"[U]nless relief is provided through the Legislature," Rivera-Soto warned, the state's minor league stadiums would "serve as little more than a hothouse for budding tort litigation" under Maisonave.[94] The following year, the state legislature responded to the decision by codifying the Baseball Rule into statute, just as its Illinois counterpart had done in response to Coronel and Yates.[95]

Turner v. Mandalay Sports Entertainment LLC edit

In 2008, a divided Nevada Supreme Court came to the opposite conclusion in considering the case of a woman injured by a foul ball while sitting at a table on the concourse drinking beer at Cashman Field during a Las Vegas 51 game. Justice Ron Parraguirre wrote for a four-justice majority that, since the team had both verbal and signed warnings and the plaintiff chose to consume her beer in an unscreened area, one where she had not in his opinion demonstrated a significant risk of injury, it had not breached what it held to be its limited duty to her. In his dissent, Chief Justice Mark Gibbons, joined by Michael Cherry and Michael L. Douglas, agreed with the Maisonave court, which he quoted, that the Baseball Rule was properly limited to fans in areas meant for watching the game.[96]

Mascot antics edit

Lowe v.
California League of Professional Baseball
CourtCalifornia Courts of Appeal, Fourth District, Division 2
DecidedJuly 1, 1997 (1997-07-01)
Citation(s)56 Cal.App.4th 112
Court membership
Judges sittingMcDaniel, Richli (acting), Ward
Case opinions
Baseball team mascot's physical contact with spectator injured by foul ball increased inherent risk of such injury; summary judgement for team was thus improperly granted
Decision byMcDaniel

Lowe v. California League of Professional Baseball edit

In the late 20th century many professional sports teams began creating mascots for their branding, depicting them in logos and hiring people to dress up as the characters and entertain fans in the stands during lulls in play. In 1994 John Lowe was attending a home game of the Rancho Cucamonga Quakes, the Los Angeles Dodgers Class A farm team, when the team's mascot, "Tremor", a seven-foot-tall (210 cm) dinosaur played by a costumed team employee, repeatedly bumped his head with his tail. Lowe turned to look back eventually, and as he did was struck in the face by a foul ball, breaking several facial bones.[97]

Lowe's suit named the California League and the team as defendants, who were granted summary judgement by the trial court. The appeals court found much to criticize in that action, primarily that the defendants' pleadings "offered nothing in the way of either relevant or competent evidence" that the facts were beyond dispute; they also referred to mascots as an "intrical [sic] part of the game". On that point the court noted that the team had played games the previous season without Tremor.[97]

"As a matter of law, we hold that ... the game can be played in the absence of [a mascot]'s antics" the court concluded. Those antics had increased Lowe's risk of injury, and therefore under California law the plaintiff had a right to a jury trial. It reversed the trial court and remanded the case.[98]

Harting v. Dayton Dragons Professional Baseball Club edit

Harting v.
Dayton Dragons Professional Baseball Club
CourtOhio Court of Appeals, 2nd Dist.
DecidedApril 27, 2007 (2007-04-27)
Citation(s)71 Ohio App.3d 319, 2007-Ohio-2100
Case history
Appealed fromMontgomery County Court of Common Pleas
Court membership
Judges sittingDonovan, Fain, Grady
Case opinions
Distraction by mascot's antics at baseball game was inherent risk of game that barred recovery by plaintiff for injuries from foul ball
Decision byDonovan

An Ohio appeals court took a contrasting approach to the role of the mascot in the modern live baseball experience when it decided Harting v. Dayton Dragons Professional Baseball Club in 2005. The plaintiff had been watching a Dayton Dragons minor league game in 2005 at which the San Diego Chicken, a pioneering baseball mascot, was present. Harting was struck by a foul and knocked unconscious while he was performing in front of her; she sued both him and the team.[99]

The trial court granted summary judgement to both defendants. Harting argued on appeal that their primary assumption of risk defense did not apply to her since she had been distracted by the Chicken. "This argument ignores the fact that team mascots and their antics are common phenomena and the mascots are normally present during the entire course of the game", the court responded. "The fact that Harting was allegedly distracted by the Chicken ... when she was struck by the foul ball did not negate her duty to pay attention to the action taking place on the field." It further noted that she had not testified that the Chicken blocked her view of either the field or the foul ball.[100]

Coomer v. Kansas City Royals edit

Coomer v. Kansas City Royals
CourtMissouri Supreme Court
DecidedJune 14, 2014 (2014-06-14)
Citation(s)437 S.W.3d 184
Case opinions
Mascot antics are not intrinsic part of baseball as game; limited-duty "baseball rule" therefore does not bar claim by spectator injured by errantly tossed hot dog
Decision byWilson

In his Loughran dissent, Pennsylvania appellate justice John Bender had speculated about a hypothetical future case in which, under the majority's logic, "one of those executing the hotdog launch imprudently aimed at spectators seated a couple of rows into the stands ... would be immune if a spectator lost an eye after getting hit nearly point blank by a foil wrapped hotdog."[101] In 2009, that occurred, when John Coomer suffered a detached retina and cataracts requiring two surgeries after Kansas City Royals' mascot Sluggerrr hit him in the eye with a thrown hot dog. At his suit, a jury found for the team and he appealed.[102]

On appeal the Missouri Supreme Court reversed. Judge Paul C. Wilson wrote for a unanimous court that, contrary to the jury's findings but per Lowe, getting injured by a hot dog thrown by the team's mascot was not an inherent risk of watching baseball and a jury instruction to that effect was prejudicial to Coomer's case, since it was not a factual question for them to decide:[103]

Millions of fans have watched the Royals (and its forebears in professional baseball) play the National Pastime for the better part of a century before Sluggerrr began tossing hotdogs, and millions more people watch professional baseball every year in stadiums all across this country without the benefit of such antics. Some fans may find Sluggerrr's hotdog toss fun to watch between innings, and some fans may even have come to expect it, but this does not make the risk of injury from Sluggerrr's hotdog toss an "inherent risk" of watching a Royals game ... The Hotdog Launch is not an inherent part of the game; it is what the Royals do to entertain baseball fans when there is no game for them to watch. Sluggerrr may make breaks in the game more fun, but Coomer and his 12,000 rain-soaked fellow spectators were not there to watch Sluggerrr toss hotdogs; they were there to watch the Royals play baseball.[104]

On retrial the jury found neither Coomer nor the team to have been at fault.[105]

Codification edit

Four states—Arizona, Colorado, Illinois and New Jersey—have formally codified the Baseball Rule into law. In the latter two, this was done after state courts had limited the rule's applicability in different ways.[95]

The statutes the states adopted vary in the degree to which they have adopted the traditional components of the rule. In Arizona, teams are immune from liability for injuries from balls, bats or other equipment as long as they have offered enough protected seats to reasonably meet demand. New Jersey's law specifies that the team must protect the seats behind home plate. Illinois gives teams even more protection, requiring only that they keep the protective equipment in good order and exempting only a player's willful or wanton conduct. Colorado's statute, on the other hand, is the least specific, requiring only that teams "make a reasonable and prudent effort to design, alter, and maintain the premises of the stadium in reasonably safe condition relative to the nature of the game of baseball"[95]

Jasper v. Chicago National League Ball Club edit

Jasper v.
Chicago National League Ball Club
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois, 1st Dist., 3rd Div.
DecidedDecember 8, 1999 (1999-12-08)
Citation(s)722 N.E.2d 731,
309 Ill.App.3d 124
Case history
Appealed fromCook County Circuit Court
Court membership
Judges sittingCahill, Cerda, McBride
Case opinions
Baseball Facility Liability Act limiting teams' liability for injuries to spectators from foul balls was constitutional since it recognizes unique nature of hazards of viewing baseball
Decision byCahill

After the passage of the Illinois statute, James Jasper brought suit against the Cubs over a foul ball injury he claimed could have been prevented by a screen that had been removed in 1992 when the team installed skyboxes on the upper deck of Wrigley Field behind home plate. He asked the court to also declare the statute violated both the Equal Protection Clause of the United States Constitution and a provision of the state constitution that forbids the legislature from conferring a special benefit or exclusive privilege without a good public policy reason. Other sports, Jasper noted, did not get the same degree of immunity that the Baseball Rule, now codified into law, offered teams in that sport; he also argued it benefited only for-profit teams since other statutes limited the liability of non-profit park owners.[106]

The trial court granted the Cubs' motion for dismissal of the constitutional claims. On Jasper's appeal, the court found the statute constitutional. "[T]he sport of baseball does have unique characteristics that would reasonably prompt a legislature to enact limited liability legislation", it wrote, citing a similar case where the state's Supreme Court had upheld a law limiting the liability of landholders for injuries to snowmobilers on their property on the grounds that that recreational activity, too, had inherent dangers that property owners could not reasonably be expected to completely control. The court also rejected Jasper's claim that the statute's exclusion of golf courses could not be considered as he had not introduced any evidence suggesting a similar risk of injury from wayward golf balls; lastly it cited earlier cases in support of its dismissal of Jasper's contention that since other laws protected non-profit facility operators the legislature had only meant to protect the Cubs and White Sox:

The Baseball Act, itself, does not carve out a class of profit-making parks for a special benefit, but applies the same limited liability to all of them. Even if the Act applied only to parks that make a profit from baseball, plaintiff cites nothing to support the argument that encouraging a popular recreational activity ceases to be a legitimate state interest when the provider is making a profit.[106]

Applicability to other sports edit

Baseball is not the only sport that raises the potential for injuries to spectators struck by objects leaving the playing area. Litigation over injuries to ice hockey fans struck by hockey pucks at games in the U.S. dates to the 1930s, and there have also been suits from spectators injured by golf balls. Those actions have been guided by the Baseball Rule to some degree.[107]

Ice hockey edit

 
High plexiglass screens around an NHL hockey rink

Like baseball, hockey is played with a hard object that can leave the playing area and go into the stands at high speeds. As a result of this, rinks today have protective plexiglass shielding atop the boards. And like baseball, that shielding is higher in the areas where pucks are most likely to go into the stands: behind the goals. But unlike baseball, the gameplay is more flowing and continuous and requires fans to keep their eyes on a puck moving up and down the rink which may be difficult to see, much less anticipate.[108]

Hockey was first played in the United States in the 1890s; professional leagues had formed within two decades and the Boston Bruins, the first American team in the National Hockey League, began playing in 1924; on lower levels the sport was primarily played in Northeastern and Midwestern states with cold winters. Lawsuits over injuries from pucks leaving the rink were first reported in the mid-1930s.[107]

Since hockey was less established in the United States than baseball, courts of that era were willing as they had not been in the latter instance to consider a spectator's degree of knowledge of the sport, or lack thereof, as a factor. This yielded different holdings in different states. In the first two cases of hockey puck injuries considered by New York courts in 1935, the Baseball Rule cases in existence at the time were cited as precedent to hold that hockey teams or rink operators had no duty to screen all the seats, just enough for those who wanted them, and that "[i]t is common knowledge that the puck may leave the ice when the players are shooting for a goal."[109][110]

However, the Supreme Court of neighboring Massachusetts upheld a verdict the following year for a woman struck by a puck at Boston Garden, since it was the first hockey game she had attended and the usher who escorted her to her seat at center ice had not warned her that even with three vertical feet (1 m) of glass between her and the rink pucks could still come into the stands.[111] Four years later the same court declined to disturb a jury's verdict in favor of a man who was injured by a puck as he was walking from his seat to use the bathroom. The defendant had argued for contributory negligence, but, the court said, the degree to which the accident could have been anticipated was a factual finding properly submitted to the jury.[112]

Citing the relative novelty of the sport, which had only been played in California for 12 years at that time, a 1939 appeals court in that state declined to apply the Baseball Rule to hockey in Thurman v. Ice Palace. The plaintiff had attended an intramural University of Southern California hockey game at the defendant arena, where wire screens had been installed at the ends but not along the sides, where Thurman was sitting when a puck hit her in the mouth. Through her father, she sued the arena, the student organization that sponsored the game and all its members individually. The trial ended in a directed verdict for all the defendants, and she appealed.[113]

The appeals court affirmed the individual defendants' motions for dismissal, but reversed the directed verdict for the entities. Rejecting both the New York courts' decisions from four years earlier, as well as the defendants' reliance on Quinn, the court distinguished hockey from baseball by noting that in the former sport, the puck is "ordinarily batted along the ice", so spectators unfamiliar with the game, like Thurman, would not expect it to become airborne. Therefore:

The rule which has apparently uniformly been applied to baseball cases is, we believe, inapplicable to ice hockey games, for the reason that the average person of ordinary intelligence in this country is familiar with the game of baseball and it is reasonable to presume that such person appreciates the risk of being hit by a pitched or batted ball without being specifically warned of such danger. Hence a spectator at this nationally known game may ordinarily be held to assume such risk. However, the average person does not have the same knowledge respecting ice hockey or the risk of being hit by a flying puck while observing such a game.[114][l]

A Pennsylvania court echoed Thurman's reasoning in letting a verdict in favor of another woman who was injured at her first hockey game stand. "The argument is made that this case is analogous to a spectator at a baseball game", wrote a Court of Common Pleas judge in 1952's Schwilm v. Pennsylvania Sports, alluding to many of the other cases without citing any. Had the plaintiff been sitting on the side of the rink the court would have applied the same principle as the Baseball Rule and granted the defense request for judgment notwithstanding verdict, but since she was sitting at the end, where the team had raised the stands at Pittsburgh's Duquesne Gardens to a higher level without similarly making the screens higher, and had no understanding that pucks can go into the stands before one hit her in the head, the jury had properly found that the team had been negligent in its duties to spectators.[117]

Prior to that case the consensus had been changing. Five years before Schwilm, in Modec v. City of Eveleth, the Minnesota Supreme Court upheld a trial court's decision to set aside a $2,500 verdict won by a plaintiff from the city after he was injured at a municipally owned rink leased to a private operator. On appeal, the plaintiff had cited the cases from Massachusetts and other states where juries had been allowed to consider whether a plaintiff unfamiliar with hockey had been properly advised of the dangers. But the court distinguished those states from Minnesota, where the sport had been widely popular for a long time: "Hockey is played to such an extent in this region and its risks are so well known to the general public that as to the question before us there is no difference in fact between the two games so far as liability for flying baseballs and pucks is involved." Per its holdings in Wells and Brisson, it affirmed the trial court.[118]

An Illinois court still distinguished the two sports in the 1981 case of Riley v. Chicago Cougars Hockey Club. The plaintiff had been sitting in the front row of the upper deck at a 1974 game of the World Hockey Association (WHA) Cougars when a slap shot was deflected upwards and struck him, knocking him unconscious and causing a Jacksonian seizure that left a permanent brain lesion resulting in occasional epileptic seizures. He sued both the league and the team, winning a $90,000 verdict from the jury. It was affirmed on appeal; the defense, citing Maytnier, had asked the court to apply the Baseball Rule to hockey but it declined: "We do not believe that the general nonliability rule that is usually applied in baseball cases is necessarily applicable in hockey cases, because there are fundamental differences in the way baseball and hockey are played and the dangers incident to the games."[119]

In the later years of the 20th century, NHL attendance and interest grew as more games were broadcast and the league expanded.[107] A half-century after the Minnesota court's decision in the Eveleth case, an appeals court in neighboring Wisconsin followed the trial court in extending the Baseball Rule (in the process making one of the earliest judicial references to it as such) to hockey in affirming a grant of summary judgement in favor of the Milwaukee Admirals, saying the plaintiff's admitted knowledge of hockey made her contributorily negligent enough to bar recovery even under comparative negligence.[120] Courts in Pennsylvania[121] and California made similar holdings. In the latter, the court noted, in the half-century since Thurman, "professional ice hockey has grown in popularity both in California and nationally. In the present case, it is undisputed that ice hockey spectators face a known risk of being hit by a flying puck."[122]

The first years of the 21st century saw the first (and as of 2022, only) fatal hockey puck injury at an NHL game. Brittanie Cecil, 13, was watching a Columbus Blue Jackets game at Nationwide Arena on March 16, 2002, from behind the goal, when she was struck in the temple by a deflected slap shot. Initially she appeared have suffered only a cut, but walked to a first-aid station and was taken from there to the hospital, where after first improving her condition deteriorated due to a torn vertebral artery that had not been discovered, leading to her death two days after the injury.[123]

Her parents sued the Blue Jackets and other parties; they were eventually able to settle out of court for $1.2 million. League commissioner Gary Bettman ordered all NHL teams to put higher netting behind their arenas' goals.[124]

Golf edit

Cases involving injury from errant golf balls, which are smaller than baseballs or hockey pucks but are likewise very hard and travel at high speeds, account for half of all reported golf-related tort actions.[125] Most, however, are between golfers themselves,[126] among whom different standards of care apply, or to bystanders off the course.[127] In the 1970s and '80s, several cases involving injuries to spectators who paid to attend golf tournaments or other events reached appeals courts. One commentator suggests cases of this type, analogous to baseball, are much rarer in golf since professional players of that sport "tend to be able to do what the average Joe cannot—consistently hit golf shots."[126]

Some of the situations that gave rise to the injuries argued similar reasons to Baseball Rule cases as to why golf courses or sponsoring organizations should be held liable. While waiting in line at a concession stand between fairways during the 1973 Western Open, played at the Chicago-area Midlothian Country Club, Alice Duffy was struck in the right eye, blinding her. Her suit alleged that the country club had failed to exclude spectators from the concession stand area, which she claimed had a higher risk of injury that the club was aware of.[128]

The trial court granted summary judgement to the defendants; Duffy appealed, arguing a triable issue of fact existed. The appeals court agreed with her and reversed. Among the cases it relied on was Maytnier, which it held to similarly deny the contractual assumption of risk defense and require that the defense argue more than just the plaintiff's awareness of a defect but the plaintiff's specific knowledge of that defect.[129] On retrial the jury found for Duffy and awarded her almost $450,000, a verdict affirmed after the club's appeal.[130]

Grisim v. Tapemark Charity Pro-Am Golf Tournament edit

Grisim v.
Tapemark Charity Pro-Am Golf Tournament
CourtMinnesota Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 14, 1986 (1986-10-14)
Citation(s)394 N.W.2d 261
Court membership
Judges sittingParker, Huspeni, Randall
Case opinions
Triable issue of fact existed as to whether defendant golf course had provided adequately safe seating in case brought by plaintiff injured by errant ball who sat elsewhere when seating provided was too crowded.
Decision byHuspeni

Grisim v. Tapemark Charity Pro-Am Golf Tournament, a 1986 Minnesota case, most directly reaches the underlying issue of the Baseball Rule: the availability of protected seating. The plaintiff had been attending the defendant tournament, where she was watching a golfer complete the 18th hole; since the bleachers next to the green were mostly full she decided to watch from under a nearby tree, where other spectators had already chosen to sit. Her left eye had to be surgically removed after being struck.[131]

The trial court granted summary judgement to the defendant tournament and country club, holding that primary assumption of risk barred the claim. Grisim appealed and the court agreed with her that that was reversible error. Citing Wells, it said there was a triable issue of fact for the jury as to whether the club had provided enough of the protected seating behind the green.[131]

Outside the U.S. edit

Canada edit

Liability for injuries to spectators from projectiles leaving the playing area in Canada has long been controlled by a case arising from a hockey puck injury.[132] In 1934's Elliott v. Amphitheatre Ltd., the Court of King's Bench of Manitoba, after reviewing many of the precedent American baseball cases, denied recovery on the grounds of assumption of risk: "The proprietor is held not to be an insurer and spectators assume the risk peculiar to that form of amusement."[133] It was also one of the authorities cited by the Minnesota Supreme Court in Modec;[118] but a decade earlier the Rhode Island Supreme Court, asked to consider Elliott as precedent by a defendant hockey rink, distinguished it from the one before it, since Elliott had testified to having watched many hockey games whereas the plaintiff in the case before it was attending her first hockey game and the Manitoba court had pointed to Elliott's familiarity as a reason for its decision.[134]

Japan edit

External videos
  Foul Balls in Japan: Real Sports Bonus Clip from HBO, showing foul ball protection in Japan's Tokyo Dome
 
Netting protecting seats close to outfield at Hanshin Koshien Stadium near Kobe, Japan

In all home stadiums of Nippon Professional Baseball teams, netting protecting the closest seats to the field extends all the way to the foul poles. When a foul ball gets over it, ushers point to it with a loud whistling device to alert fans, and immediately check on anyone who appears to have made contact with the ball. Signs at the entrances to sections remind fans of the danger, and animated video clips warning fans to watch for fouls are regularly played on the scoreboard;[135] tickets also have waivers printed on the back as they do in the U.S.[136]

The Tokyo Dome, home of the popular Yomiuri Giants, includes one section without netting. Spectators pay extra for these seats, known as "excitement" seats. A glove and helmet is provided with each one;[135] however many of those who sit in those seats do not use them.[136]

Despite these protections, foul balls do go into the stands and injure fans, who sometimes sue. In 2015, a woman blinded in one eye by a foul ball at a Nippon Ham Fighters game in the Sapporo Dome won a ¥42 million (just under US$380,000) verdict against the team. The Fighters responded by adding a warning horn to the ushers' whistles.[136]

Criticism edit

In the late 2010s, two widely-covered incidents brought the Baseball Rule into focus and led to calls for it to be abolished or greatly modified. Late in the New York Yankees 2017 season, a one-year-old girl attending a game at Yankee Stadium with her parents and grandparents was struck by a foul, suffering multiple facial fractures that led to a five-day hospital stay. The Yankees announced afterwards that they would join other MLB teams in extending their protective netting to the far end of the dugout from the near end, where it had been up to that point.[137]

The next season every team would have expanded screening, but that did not prevent the second foul-ball injury spectator death in MLB history, also at Dodger Stadium. Near the end of a Dodgers-San Diego Padres game, a foul ball went over the top of the fencing and struck Linda Goldbloom, 79, seated just below the press box, in the head. She died in a hospital four days later.[4]

Outdatedness edit

In a number of the Baseball Rule cases, particularly the more recent ones, judges, first in dissents such as Akins[53] and Rudnick,[54] and later in the Crespin[67] and Rountree majorities,[69] rejected the Baseball Rule as an artifact of the tort-law regime that prevailed before comparative negligence, when assumption of risk and contributory negligence were absolute bars to a plaintiff's recovery, and a reminder of why that transition was made in the first place.[53] But some also recognized that baseball, as well, had changed considerably since then and there was no reason for the law to sentimentalize the sport.[54]

Bob Gorman, coauthor of Death at the Ballpark, notes on his blog that Crane was decided during an era of baseball now known as the dead ball era, when games were generally low-scoring and teams relied generally on the small ball strategy of getting singles to advance their runners along the bases and get them in scoring positions. Home runs were rare and so were foul balls hit into the stands as batters did not regularly swing for the fences. The same ball could be used for the entire game, and often was. In 1918, a newer, harder ball was introduced, and batters began hitting home runs more frequently.[138]

The general admission policy under which Crane bought his ticket has also long vanished, replaced by reserved seating, often for an entire season, in which case a spectator could not move to a protected section even when those seats are empty. And the price of protected seating itself has risen far faster than inflation: single-game tickets for seats behind home plate and the backstop today cost in the $150–300 range, more than 10 times what Crane could have paid for a protected seat in 1911.[139]

Changes in gameplay and presentation edit

In a 2018 William and Mary Law Review article calling on courts to modify or even abolish the Baseball Rule, authors Nathaniel Grow and Zachary Flagel took note of how the game has changed even since the end of the dead ball era. Pitchers today throw the ball much harder, and batters likewise have improved their physical training and consequently their hitting power;[140] it was estimated that the Todd Frazier foul which injured the young girl at Yankee Stadium was traveling at 105 miles per hour (169 km/h) when it struck her.[141] At those speeds, spectators have less than half a second to react in the time it takes a ball to reach the stands, barely more than the quarter-second average human reaction time to visual stimuli.[140] In 2004, the Massachusetts Appeals Court noted the testimony of a plaintiff's expert witness, an engineering professor who calculated that a woman with no baseball familiarity who suffered permanent facial injuries from a foul that hit her at a Boston Red Sox game had little more than a second from the time the ball was hit to react to it, although it upheld summary judgement for the team per Massachusetts' earlier acceptance of the Baseball Rule.[142]

 
Retro-classic ballparks like Camden Yards began putting fans closer to the game

Grow and Flagler also calculated that early 21st century spectators are closer to the field of play than their counterparts of previous eras. The advent of retro-classic ballparks in the mold of Baltimore's Oriole Park at Camden Yards accelerated a trend of putting spectators closer to the action.[m] Backstops are now 15 feet (4.6 m) closer to home plate than they were in the mid-20th century, and the amount of overall foul territory has declined 21 percent since 1920, shortly after the Baseball Rule was established, suggesting spectators' ability to react to a foul has been correspondingly attenuated. Most of this decline has occurred since the early 1990s.[144]

As the cases involving mascot antics attest, spectators are offered a greater degree of distractions. In the past, spectators' attention, as it was in Keys,[41] might be diverted from the action on the field only by socializing with those seated nearby. "While fans of yesteryear could be held responsible for their own assumption of risk associated with being hit by a projectile leaving the field," wrote the authors of a 2002 Marquette Sports Law Review article, "such a finding was predicated on the fact that the injured fan was watching the game rather than turning his attention away from the game."[145]

But, "baseball games today are increasingly marketed as multifaceted entertainment experiences, offering spectators a variety of additional stimuli potentially distracting their attention from the action on the field", Grow and Flagler write. In addition to the mascots, increasingly sophisticated scoreboards run detailed video graphics with advertisements and scores and video highlights of games being played elsewhere. Ballparks also now offer free Wi-Fi, encouraging fans to use their smartphones to interact with players via social media during games, or order food for later pickup.[146]

Improvements in pitching, such as better conditioning and an increased reliance on specialist relief pitchers, have led to an increase in foul balls; in 2017 the number of foul balls exceeded balls put in play for the first time, according to FiveThirtyEight. Most of those foul balls have gone into the stands; the website attributes this development to the shrinkage of foul territory on the playing field.[147] In 2014 Bloomberg News estimated that there were, on average, 1,750 foul ball injuries at MLB parks every season; meaning fans get hit by foul balls more than batters get hit by a pitch.[5]

Incompatibility with law and economics edit

Grow and Flagel note that the Baseball Rule, unlike many other areas of tort law, has not been reexamined under law and economics, a movement that began with Guido Calabresi's 1970 book The Cost of Accidents. The goal in torts under law and economics is for most liability to rest with the party that can avoid the most risk at the least cost. "By doing so," they write, "courts can allocate liability in a way that increases the likelihood the parties will adopt the optimal level of precaution necessary in a given case, thus minimizing the overall social cost of accidents."[148]

It would cost MLB teams, which collectively see around $10 billion a year in revenue, mere thousands and a few days to install 60 feet (18 m) more of netting in thinner sizes which are less visually obstructive, Grow and Flagel argue. Injured spectators, on the other hand, 7.5 percent of whom require hospitalization, bear the costs of their own medical care (or their insurers) if they cannot recover in court. Those have reached $150,000 in some cases.[148]

 
Fans trying to catch a foul ball

Additional screening, Grow and Flagel allow, will have some additional costs to teams beyond the installation.[148] As many of the Baseball Rule cases have noted, the unprotected seats offer fans not just an unobstructed view but a chance to catch and keep a foul ball,[54][58] which teams have permitted fans to do since 1921.[5] Some may decide not to attend if that opportunity is denied them; however Grow and Flagel believe fans will adjust. The seats behind home plate and thus the backstop, they note, are typically the most expensive at any ballpark, "suggest[ing] that fans will continue to prioritize proximity to the field over an unobstructed view, and will adjust to the presence of additional netting.".[148]

Fans, by contrast, have three options to reduce their risk: sit in a protected seat, sit in a distant area of the stadium beyond reach of foul balls, or not attend the game at all. Grow and Flagel do not think these options are optimal. As previously noted, it is often utterly impossible or costly to obtain tickets behind screening. Fans choosing to sit in the upper decks will make the experience of watching games less desirable, and not going to games at all would cost teams more than the netting would. "The insights provided by the law-and-economics movement strongly suggest that the Baseball Rule currently fails to impose liability on the lowest cost and best risk avoider—the team itself—in the most efficient and socially optimal manner", Grow and Flagel write.[148]

Grow and Flagel argue that courts should abandon the Baseball Rule, or seriously modify it. They recommend subjecting teams to a strict liability standard for spectator injuries, which they admit might increase ticket prices but could be balanced by allowing some consideration of a spectator's own negligence, such as intoxication or making a deliberate attempt to catch the ball. Should courts or legislatures decline to do so, they could then expand the definition of the most dangerous area of the field, which most courts, along with the New Jersey statute enacted in response to Maisonave, have historically defined as the area behind home plate, without any real evidence. "The fact that MLB itself has officially encouraged its teams to extend their protective netting beyond just the area immediately behind home plate," they observe, "strongly suggests that the Baseball Rule, as traditionally applied, no longer imposes a reasonable level of care upon professional baseball teams."[149]

Courts could also hold that teams have a duty to warn fans about the dangers of foul balls entering the stands to a greater extent than they currently do, contrary to the common law that landowners generally do not have to, Grow and Flagel write. While spectators may be aware that foul balls do enter the stands, they may be under the impression those are pop flies, more easily avoidable than the line drive fouls that have caused injuries and deaths, and they may overestimate their ability to react to the latter. While mandatory warnings of hazards have been criticized as ineffectual, courts have been receptive to them in situations where the risk of distraction is high. Grow and Flagel suggest that if warnings were mandated, teams would have an incentive to experiment and find the most effective ways of delivering them.[150]

Defenses and responses edit

The Baseball Rule has its defenders. "The fact that the limited duty rule has its origins in the earliest days of baseball does not mean it's anachronistic or unfair" writes David Tavella. Without it, he believes teams would have no choice but to screen off the entire field, depriving most fans of a chance to catch a foul or connect with the players. In particular, he criticizes the New Mexico appeals court's Crespin decision, which had not yet been overruled at the time of his writing, as going too far in leaving all determinations of duty to the jury, which could lead to inconsistent results. Were the Baseball Rule to be modified, he believes, Maisonave is a more sensible standard, in his opinion, since it limits the rule's application to spectators engaged in the game from the seating area and its immediate vicinity.[151]

Tavella also dismisses complaints about the reliance on assumption of risk. "The [criticisms] generally are that the rule is old, so it must be changed." He is dubious of plaintiffs who testify that their baseball knowledge was so limited that they had no idea balls would leave the field of play, saying that danger should be obvious to a first-time spectator.[152] Tavella believes that a combination of the limited-duty rule established in Maisonave, the assumption of risk defense, and a general negligence standard would best balance the interests of teams and spectators.[153]

The cases involving mascot antics have come in for specific criticism. Ross Freeman, a law student at Missouri at the time, argued in 2015 that Coomer in particular was wrongly decided for both legal and policy reasons. On a legal basis, he noted, the state did not recognize different degrees of negligence. He saw even stronger policy reasons, believing the decision would adversely affect the state's MLB teams.[154]

Citing a 2013 article in The Wall Street Journal[155] that found the total actual gameplay in MLB games averaged about 18 minutes out of the three hours it usually took to play, Freeman argued that mascots and other in-stadium entertainment were now inextricably part of the game, contrary to the state supreme court's holding:

Teams like the Royals know that some fans come to the games solely for the ballpark food and other fan interactions ... Regardless of how ballpark owners respond, Coomer incentivizes ballpark owners to reduce or eliminate fan interactions with ballpark employees or mascots ... The court took a very narrow approach to why spectators attend baseball games in person. The court's assumption does not account for the possibility that some fans attend games not only to witness the game of baseball, but also for the total in-stadium experience of attending an MLB game. MLB spectators not only desire fan interaction, but they expect fan interaction for the price of admission, rather than just attending the stadium to simply watch the game.[154]

The court could also have distinguished Coomer from Lowe, the California precedent it relied on, Freeman wrote, by noting that Tremor's behavior in the latter case was not just negligent but recklessly so.[156]

Garrett Broshuis, a former minor league player and baseball writer who has since become an attorney, makes similar arguments for both retaining the Baseball Rule and not applying it to objects tossed by mascots. In the former instance, he notes, in addition to other arguments, that stadium designers allow for it. In the latter, he sees little difference between the launched or thrown hot dogs and foul balls, as both are often equally desired. "So long as adequate care is taken in the selection of such souvenirs for tossing, these two attributes—spectator awareness and spectator desirability—dictate that the baseball rule should extend to souvenirs thrown into the stands."[157]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ It is also possible, Hylton writes, that baseball team owners of the era may have paid the medical bills of at least some injured fans, but he believes that unlikely based on historical accounts suggesting they were not given to such magnanimity.[9]
  2. ^ While the Blues had finished second in the eight-team Association during the 1911 season when Edling suffered his injury, they dropped to sixth in 1913 and 1914 when the case was tried and appealed, respectively.[21]
  3. ^ The Blues also argued that the jury might have been confused into thinking passages from a medical textbook read aloud by Edling's counsel while cross-examining a physician testifying as expert witness for the defense on the nature of Edling's injury were sworn testimony; the court rejected that too, saying that it was clear from the record that the attorney had merely been trying to frame his questioning better and was not introducing those passages into evidence.[3]
  4. ^ The plaintiff also claimed she had been sitting within the protected area; however the defense put on 13 witnesses who said otherwise. The court held that had she been sitting where she claimed, the ball would have had to curve in a highly improbable fashion in order to have hit her (but see Curtis v. Portland Baseball Club, cited below).[23]
  5. ^ The author of a 1940 Marquette Law Review article discussing the history of litigation over foul ball injuries speculated that there were two reasons for this: first, players have little control over the specific direction they hit the ball in; and second, there is no benefit to a batter in intentionally fouling, other than to avoid striking out, and much to lose as not only are a batter's first two fouls strikes, he is out if the foul ball is caught before hitting the ground, without even the possibility of benefiting his team as no baserunners can advance in that situation.[29]
  6. ^ The court also rejected her argument that the usher had assured her the seats were safe, finding that his actual words to her amounted only to his observation that many other spectators had sat in that area of the stands without being struck by a foul ball.[42]
  7. ^ In 1960, Dominick Lasala, 68, of Miami, died in the hospital two days after being struck on the side of the head at an International League Miami Marlins game, the first of two recorded deaths from fouls at minor league games.[45]
  8. ^ In a similar, unpublished 2000 Florida case, the parents of a boy injured by a batting practice foul during a pregame visit that was similarly part of a special promotion, to the Florida Marlins' bullpen, were able to recover.[66]
  9. ^ This reasoning was not widely accepted by courts in other states; in 1941 a New York court rejected Eno in a case with similar facts except that the ball that struck the plaintiff was an errant throw, holding that since batting practice and warmup is a necessary part of the game, a spectator necessarily assumes the risks incident to it should they choose to watch it,[76] a position echoed eight years later by a Georgia appeals court in a case involving an errantly thrown ball during pregame warmups.[77]
  10. ^ This change in procedure was used by another Missouri appellate court in 1941 to reverse a verdict in another plaintiff's favor; the holding was that by holding batting practice that way the team had satisfied its duties to spectators.[78]
  11. ^ A throwing error by Washington Senators' third baseman Sherry Robertson in 1943 had led to the first death of a spectator hit by a ball at a major league game, but it does not appear that any litigation ensued.[81]
  12. ^ A decade later, another rink defendant asked an appeals court to reconsider this on the basis of hockey's growth in the state in the intervening years;[115] it demurred.[116]
  13. ^ Grow and Flagler speculate that this trend has only been possible because, due to the Baseball Rule, teams do not have to worry about liability from foul-ball injuries[143]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Nathaniel Grow and Zachary Flagel, "The Faulty Law and Economics of the 'Baseball Rule' 2019-03-28 at the Wayback Machine", 60 Wm. & Mary L. Rev. 59, 63–64 (2018).
  2. ^ a b c d e f Crane v. Kansas City Baseball & Exhibition Co., 153 S.W. 1076 (Mo. App. 1913).
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Edling v. Kansas City Baseball & Exhibition Co., 168 S.W. 908 (Mo. App. 1914).
  4. ^ a b Elfrink, Tim (February 5, 2019). "A baseball killed a woman at Dodger Stadium, MLB's first foul-ball death in nearly 50 years". The Washington Post. Retrieved March 14, 2019.
  5. ^ a b c Glovin, David (September 9, 2014). . Bloomberg News. Archived from the original on February 7, 2019. Retrieved April 4, 2019.
  6. ^ a b Weeks, David; Gorman, Robert (2015). "15: Fans". Death at the Ballpark: More Than 2,000 Game-Related Fatalities of Players, Other Personnel and Spectators in Amateur and Professional Baseball, 1862–2014 (2nd ed.). McFarland. pp. 151–161. ISBN 9780786479320. Retrieved March 15, 2019.
  7. ^ a b c J.G. Hylton, "A Foul Ball in the Courtroom: The Baseball Spectator Injury as a Case of First Impression", 38 Tulsa L. Rev. 485, 487–88 (2013)
  8. ^ Foul Ball, 486n4
  9. ^ a b c d e f Foul Ball, 489-92
  10. ^ Indermaur v. Danes, 1 L.R.-C.P. 274 (Court of Common Pleas 1866).
  11. ^ Carleton v. Franconia Iron & Steel Co., 99 Mass. 216 (Mass. 1868).
  12. ^ Foul Ball, 490n28
  13. ^ Bennett v. Railroad Company, 102 U.S. 577 (1880)
  14. ^ Currier v. Boston Music Hall Association, 135 Mass. 414 (Mass. 1883).
  15. ^ Williams v. Dean, 931 N.W. 111 (Iowa 1907).
  16. ^ Blakeley v. White Star Line, 118 N.W. 482 (Michigan Supreme Court 1908).
  17. ^ Baseball Rule, at 71
  18. ^ a b c d e f g 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved February 29, 2024.
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  20. ^ Foul Ball, 496–7
  21. ^ Foul Ball, 499n71
  22. ^ a b c Foul Ball, 500
  23. ^ a b Carl Zollman, "Injuries From Flying Baseballs to Spectators at Ball Games", 24 Marq. L. Rev. 198, 200–201 (1940)
  24. ^ Wells v. Minneapolis Baseball & Athletic Association, 142 N.W. 706 (Minn. 1913).
  25. ^ Kavafian v. Seattle Baseball Club Association, 181 P. 679 (Wash. 1919).
  26. ^ Curtis v. Portland Baseball Club, 279 P. 277 (Ore. 1929).
  27. ^ a b c Quinn v. Recreation Park Association, 3 Cal. 2nd 725 (Cal. 1932).
  28. ^ a b Injuries, at 199
  29. ^ Injuries, at 198
  30. ^ Lorino v. New Orleans Baseball & Amusement Co., 133 So. 408 (La. 1931).
  31. ^ Injuries, 203–204
  32. ^ Grimes v. American League Baseball Club, 78 S.W. 2d 520 (Mo. App. 1935).
  33. ^ Grimes, at 524
  34. ^ Foul Ball, 501n89
  35. ^ Foul Ball, 501
  36. ^ a b c Baseball Rule, 74–76
  37. ^ Brisson v. Minneapolis Baseball & Athletic Association, 240 N.W. 903 (Minn. 1932).
  38. ^ Hudson v. Kansas City Baseball Club, 164 S.W. 2d 318 (Mo. 1942).
  39. ^ Hummel v. Columbus Baseball Club, 71 Ohio App. 321 (Ohio App. 1943).
  40. ^ Emhardt v. Perry Stadium, 113 Ind.App. 197 (Indiana Court of Appeals 1943).
  41. ^ a b c Keys v. Alamo City Baseball Co., 150 S.W. 2d 360 (Tex. App. 1941).
  42. ^ a b Anderson v. Kansas City Baseball Club, 213 S.W. 2d 170 (Mo. 1950).
  43. ^ Schentzel v. Philadelphia National League Club, 173 Pa. Superior Ct. 179 (Pa. Superior Court 1953).
  44. ^ Schentzel, 188
  45. ^ a b c d Death at the Ballpark, 153
  46. ^ Fish v. Los Angeles Dodgers Baseball Club, 56 Cal.App.3d 620, 640 (Cal.App. 1976).
  47. ^ a b c Friedman v. Houston Sports Association, 731 S.W. 2d 572 (Tex. App. 1987).
  48. ^ Nocera, Joe (May 11, 2017). "The Score: No Lawyers, No Nets, Dozens of Injuries". Bloomberg. Retrieved March 22, 2019., as cited at Baseball Rule, 65n16
  49. ^ Christopher Yamaguchi, "The Price of Admission: Liability in Professional Baseball and Hockey For Spectator Injuries Sustained During the Course of the Game" (2013) Seton Hall University School of Law Student Scholarship, 18
  50. ^ Baseball Rule, 80–83
  51. ^ C. P. Goplerud III. & Nicolas P. Terry, "Allocation of Risk between Hockey Fans and Facilities: Tort Liability after the Puck Drops", 38 Tulsa L. Rev. 445, 461–462 (2013).
  52. ^ a b c Akins v. Glens Falls City School District, 53 N.Y. 2d 325 (N.Y. 1981).
  53. ^ a b c Akins, 333–37
  54. ^ a b c d e f Rudnick v. Golden West Broadcasters, 156 Cal. App. 3d 793 (Cal. App., 4th Dist., Div. 3 1984).
  55. ^ Keys, at 371
  56. ^ Friedman, 575–77
  57. ^ Jasper v. Chicago National League Baseball Club, 722 N.E. 2d 731 (Ill.App., 1st Dist., 3rd Div. 1999).
  58. ^ a b c Edward v. City of Albuquerque, 241 P.3d 1086 (N.M. 2010).
  59. ^ Coronel v. Chicago White Sox, 595 N.E. 2d 45 (Ill.App. 1st Dist. 2nd Div. 1992).
  60. ^ Coronel, 47–48
  61. ^ a b Coronel, 48–50
  62. ^ Ward V. KMart Corporation, 136 Ill. 2d 132 (Ill. 1990).. The plaintiff had been injured when he walked into a post in front of the store carrying a large mirror in front of him that blocked his view.
  63. ^ "Yates v. Chicago National League Baseball Club">Yates v. Chicago National League Baseball Club, 595 N.E. 2d 570 (Illinois Appellate Court 1992).
  64. ^ Yates, 577–79.
  65. ^ Yates, at 581
  66. ^ Gil Fried and Robin Ammon Jr., "Baseball Spectators' Assumption of Risk: Is It 'Fair' or 'Foul? 13 Marq. Sports L. Rev. 39, 53 (2002)
  67. ^ a b c Crespin v. Albuquerque Baseball Club, 216 P.3d 827 (N.M.App. 2009).
  68. ^ Crespin, 834–35
  69. ^ a b c Rountree v. Boise Baseball Club, 296 P.3d 373 (Idaho 2013).
  70. ^ South Shore Baseball LLC v. DeJesus, 11 N.E.3d 903 (Ind. 2014).
  71. ^ South Shore Baseball at 911
  72. ^ a b South Shore Baseball, 907–909
  73. ^ Wills v. Wisconsin-Minnesota Light & Power Co., 205 N.W. 556 (Wisc. 1925).
  74. ^ Baseball Rule, at 77.
  75. ^ Cincinnati Base Ball Co. v. Eno, 112 Ohio St. 175, 183–84 (Ohio 1925).
  76. ^ Zeitz v. Cooperstown Centennial, 31 Misc.2d 142, 144–45 (New York Supreme Court, Westchester County 1941).
  77. ^ Hunt v. Thomasville Baseball Co., 80 Ga.App. 472, 474 (Ga.App. 1949).
  78. ^ Brummerhoff v. St. Louis National Baseball Club, 149 S.W.2d 382 (Mo.App. 1941).
  79. ^ Injuries, at 204
  80. ^ Ratcliff v. San Diego Baseball Club, 27 Cal.App.2d 733, 738 (Cal.App. 1938).
  81. ^ Death at the Ballpark, 161
  82. ^ a b Maytnier v. Rush, 225 N.E. 2d 83 (Ill.App. 1st Dist. 2nd Div. 1967).
  83. ^ Maytnier, 341–342
  84. ^ Maytnier, 346–47
  85. ^ Maytnier, at 351
  86. ^ Ted Curtis, "The Flood Act's Place in Baseball Legal History", 9 Marq. Sports L. Rev. 403, 408 (1999)
  87. ^ Loughran v. Philadelphia Phillies, 888 A.2d 872 (Pa.Sup. 2005).
  88. ^ Loughran, 875–76
  89. ^ Loughran, 877–82
  90. ^ a b Jones v. Three Rivers Management Corporation, 483 Pa. 75 (Pa. 1978).
  91. ^ Jones, 84–89
  92. ^ a b Maisonave v. Newark Bears, 881 A.2d 700, 708–709 (N.J. 2005) ("[W]e recognize that, since the birth of the baseball rule, 'both sports and tort law have undergone massive transformations.'").
  93. ^ Maisonave, 710–13
  94. ^ a b Maisonave, 713–18
  95. ^ a b c Baseball Rule,84-85
  96. ^ Turner v. Mandalay Sports Entertainment LLC, 180 P.3d 1172 (Nev. 2008).
  97. ^ a b Lowe v. California League of Professional Baseball, 56 Cal.App.4th 112 (Cal.App. 4th Dist., Div. 2 1997).
  98. ^ Lowe, 124–25
  99. ^ Harting v. Dayton Dragons Professional Baseball Club, 171 Ohio App.3d 319 (Ohio App. 2d Dist. 2007).
  100. ^ Harting, 325–26
  101. ^ Loughran, at 882
  102. ^ Coomer v. Kansas City Royals, 437 S.W.3d 184 (Mo. 2014).
  103. ^ Coomer, 199–201
  104. ^ Coomer, 202–03
  105. ^ Burnes, Brian (June 17, 2015). "Jury Clears Royals Once Again in Sluggerrr Hot Dog Toss that Ended Badly". Kansas City Star. Retrieved March 28, 2019.
  106. ^ a b Jasper v. Chicago National League Ball Club, 722 N.E.2d 731 (Ill.App., 1st Dist., 3rd Div. 1999).
  107. ^ a b c Price, 11–13
  108. ^ Price at 16
  109. ^ Hammel v. Madison Square Garden Corporation, 156 Misc. 311 (N.Y.App. 2nd Dept. 1935).
  110. ^ Ingersoll v. Onondaga Hockey Club, 245 App.Div. 137 (N.Y.App. 3rd Dept. 1935).
  111. ^ Shanney v. Boston Madison Square Garden Corp., 5 N.E.2d 1 (Mass. 1936).
  112. ^ Lemoine v. Springfield Hockey Association, 307 Mass. 102 (Mass. 1940).
  113. ^ Thurman v. Ice Palace, 36 Cal.App.2d 364 (Cal.App 2nd Dist., 2nd Div. 1939).
  114. ^ Thurman, at 368
  115. ^ Shurman v. Fresno Ice Rink, 91 Cal.App.2d 469, 474 (Cal.App., 4th Dist. 1949).
  116. ^ Shurman at 477. "Finally, it cannot be held, as a matter of law, that the general public has, at this particular date, become so familiar with the hazards of this sport and of the actual appreciation of the seriousness of the risk as to bring them within the 'common knowledge' rule and under the doctrine of assumption of risk."
  117. ^ Schwilm v. Pennsylvania Sports, 84 Pa. D. & C. 603 (Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County 1952).
  118. ^ a b Modec v. City of Eveleth, 29 N.W.2d 453 (Minn. 1947).
  119. ^ Riley v. Chicago Cougars Hockey Club, 100 Ill.App.3d 664, 666 (Ill.App., 1st Dist., 1st. Div. 1981).
  120. ^ Moulas v. PBC Productions, 213 Wis.2d 406, 420 (Wisc.App. 1997) ("Because the risks associated with hockey should be known to the reasonable person attending a game, because Moulas was aware of the risk, and because she chose to attend despite her knowledge and the warnings espoused, we conclude that summary judgment was appropriate.").
  121. ^ Petrongola v. Comcast–Spectacor L.P., 789 A.2d 204 (Pa.Sup. 2001).
  122. ^ Nemarink v. Los Angeles Kings Hockey Club, 127 Cal.Rptr.2d 10, 15 (Cal.App. 2002).
  123. ^ . Sports Illustrated. April 1, 2002. Archived from the original on June 9, 2009. Retrieved April 3, 2019.
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  126. ^ a b Price, at 23
  127. ^ John J. Kircher, "Golf and Torts: An Interesting Twosome", 12 Marq. Sports L. Rev. 347, 348–359
  128. ^ Duffy v. Midlothian Country Club, 92 Ill.App.3d 193 (Ill.App., 1st Dist., 5th Div. 1980).
  129. ^ Duffy, 199–200.
  130. ^ Duffy v. Midlothian Country Club, 135 Ill.App.3d 429 (Ill.App., 1st Dist., 5th Div. 1985).
  131. ^ a b Grisim v. Tapemark Charity Pro-Am Golf Tournament, 394 N.W.2d 261 (Minn.App. 1986).
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  133. ^ Elliot v. Amphitheatre Ltd., 3 W.W.R. 225 (Man.S.Ct. 1934).
  134. ^ James v. R.I. Auditorium, 199 A. 293 (R.I. 1938).
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  139. ^ Baseball Rule, 95–96
  140. ^ a b Baseball Rule, 90-91
  141. ^ "Baseball fans deserve more protection from foul balls". Chicago Tribune. August 29, 2017. Retrieved April 4, 2017.
  142. ^ Costa v. Boston Red Sox Baseball Club, 61 Mass.App.Ct. 299, 300 (Mass.App. 2004) ("Moreover, avoiding injury from a ball hit into the stands sometimes may be close to impossible. According to a professor of engineering retained by the plaintiff, the plaintiff had virtually no time to react to the ball that came her way. He determined, with the help of a range finder, that the distance from the plaintiff's seat to home plate was forty-seven yards, or 141 feet. By analyzing a videotape of the game, he also determined that the minimum speed of the baseball at the time it struck the plaintiff was ninety miles per hour, or 132 feet per second. Thus, he concluded, the plaintiff had no more than 1.07 seconds from the time Lewis hit the ball to take evasive action.").
  143. ^ Baseball Rule at 87
  144. ^ Baseball Rule, 87-90
  145. ^ Baseball Spectators, at 55
  146. ^ Baseball Rule, 97-98
  147. ^ Sawchik, Travis (February 21, 2019). "Foul Balls Are The Pace-Of-Play Problem Nobody's Talking About". FiveThirtyEight. Retrieved April 4, 2019.
  148. ^ a b c d e Baseball Rule, 98–106.
  149. ^ Baseball Rule, 111–118.
  150. ^ Baseball Rule, 118–122.
  151. ^ David Tavella, "Duty of Care to Spectators at Sporting Events: A Unified Theory", 6 Fla. A&M U. Law Rev. 181, 189–190 (2010)
  152. ^ "Duty of Care", at 192.
  153. ^ "Duty of Care", 195–196
  154. ^ a b Ross Freeman, "The (Hot) Dog Days of Summer: Missouri's 'Baseball Rule' Takes a Strike", 80 Mo. L. Rev. 560, 571–75 (2015)
  155. ^ Moyer, Steve (July 16, 2013). "In America's Pastime, Baseball Players Pass A Lot of Time". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved April 5, 2019.
  156. ^ Dog Days, 577–78,
  157. ^ Garrett Broshuis, "Death to the Crazy Hot Dog Vendor? The Continued Erosion of the Baseball Rule After Coomer v. Kansas City Royals", 6-7, sportslaw.org (2013)

baseball, rule, this, article, about, tort, rule, governing, liability, injuries, spectators, from, foul, balls, rules, baseball, baseball, rules, american, tort, exculpatory, clause, applicable, baseball, games, with, spectators, holds, that, baseball, team, . This article is about the tort law rule governing liability for injuries to spectators from foul balls For the rules of baseball see baseball rules In American tort law the Baseball Rule 1 is an exculpatory clause applicable to baseball games with spectators it holds that a baseball team or its sponsoring organization cannot be held liable for injuries suffered by a spectator struck by a foul ball batted into the stands under most circumstances as long as the team has offered some protected seating in the areas where foul balls are most likely to cause injuries This is considered within the standard of reasonable care that teams owe to spectators although in recent decades it has more often been characterized as a limited or no duty rule and applied to ice hockey and golf as well It is largely a matter of case law in state courts although four states have codified it Backstop behind home plate at Petco Park the San Diego Padres home stadium Under the Baseball Rule this is the minimum protection from foul ball injuries teams must provide The rule arose from a pair of 1910s decisions by the Missouri Court of Appeals both considering suits filed by spectators at home games of the minor league Kansas City Blues In the first considered to be the case that established the rule the court upheld a trial verdict against the plaintiff holding that his decision to sit outside the netting the team had installed behind home plate constituted contributory negligence and assumption of risk on his part 2 Conversely in the second decided a year later the court upheld a verdict for a plaintiff who had been struck in the eye by a foul ball that passed through a hole in the netting between him and home plate 3 Other state courts accepted those cases as precedent and used them to decide similar cases By the 1930s it was interpreted as requiring teams to erect protective screening over the stands behind home plate a practice that had already become common in the late 19th century due to injuries from foul balls which rose after an 1884 rule change allowed overhand pitching Courts have seen it as balancing the team s duty of care toward spectators with the spectators interest in having an unobstructed view of the game available and perhaps being able to take home a recovered foul ball as a souvenir It has been held to apply in some other situations besides foul balls when a player deliberately threw the ball into the stands as a souvenir for instance but not in others such as errant pitches from a relief pitcher warming up in the bullpen situations where multiple balls are in play such as formerly batting practice where struck spectators are not in the seating areas of the venue or where they may have been distracted by the team s mascot In the wake of some serious injuries caused by foul balls in Major League Baseball MLB parks in the 2010s including the first foul ball spectator death at an MLB game in almost 50 years 4 there have been calls for the rule to be re examined or abolished altogether as more spectators are struck by a foul ball than players in the game are hit by a pitch 5 While MLB has required all of its teams to extend their protective screens to cover the area to the far end of the dugout on either side of the field critics note that it is no longer possible for spectators to choose to sit under those screens given that all seats in the venue are reserved for those who buy them many for the entire season Further they say balls are hit harder and spectators who on average now sit closer to the field than they did in 1913 have more distractions Two states supreme courts have declined to adopt the rule which has been criticized as a relic of the era before the adoption of comparative negligence a widely read William and Mary Law Review article further argues that the Baseball Rule fails the law and economics standards of optimally allocated tort liability 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 Development of modern game 1 2 19th century tort law 1 3 Establishment of the Baseball Rule 1 3 1 Crane v Kansas City Baseball amp Exhibition Co 1 3 2 Edling v Kansas City Baseball amp Exhibition Co 1 4 Precedence and evolution 1 4 1 Grimes v American League Baseball Club 1 4 2 Brisson v Minneapolis Baseball amp Athletic Association 1 5 Mid 20th century evolution 1 5 1 Schentzel v Philadelphia National League Club 1 6 First major league foul ball death 1 7 1970s 80s Comparative negligence 1 7 1 Akins v Glens Falls City School District 1 7 2 Rudnick v Golden West Broadcasters 1 7 3 Friedman v Houston Sports Association 1 8 1990s present Reconsideration 1 8 1 Coronel v Chicago White Sox 1 8 2 Yates v Chicago National League Baseball Club 1 8 3 New Mexico Crespin and Edward 1 8 4 Rountree v Boise Baseball Club 1 8 5 South Shore Baseball LLC v DeJesus 2 Exceptions 2 1 Injury to non spectating bystander 2 2 Batting practice 2 3 Lost bats 2 4 Thrown balls 2 4 1 Maytnier v Rush 2 4 2 Loughran v The Phillies 2 5 Spectators away from seating area 2 5 1 Jones v Three Rivers Management Corporation 2 5 2 Maisonave v Newark Bears 2 5 3 Turner v Mandalay Sports Entertainment LLC 2 6 Mascot antics 2 6 1 Lowe v California League of Professional Baseball 2 6 2 Harting v Dayton Dragons Professional Baseball Club 2 6 3 Coomer v Kansas City Royals 3 Codification 3 1 Jasper v Chicago National League Ball Club 4 Applicability to other sports 4 1 Ice hockey 4 2 Golf 4 2 1 Grisim v Tapemark Charity Pro Am Golf Tournament 5 Outside the U S 5 1 Canada 5 2 Japan 6 Criticism 6 1 Outdatedness 6 2 Changes in gameplay and presentation 6 3 Incompatibility with law and economics 6 4 Defenses and responses 7 See also 8 Notes 9 ReferencesHistory editDevelopment of modern game edit Professional baseball in the United States began in 1869 In those early years there was little risk of injury from a ball hit into the stands While seats were located as close as a few feet 1 2 m from the foul lines putting fans at risk of being hit by overthrown balls or lost bats 6 there was less risk from batted balls At the time the rules required pitchers to not only deliver the ball underhand but with their arms barely bent and from below the waist In addition batters could and did request the ball be pitched to a specific position over the plate 7 As a result most games were dominated by offense with fielding providing most defense and games often ended with very high scores by modern standards One or sometimes both teams exceeding 100 runs in a game was not unusual Pitchers some of whom had learned to throw the ball very fast even underhand began to influence the game and drive down scores with the help of gradual rule changes that allowed the ball to be delivered from higher up with the arm more cocked making the first curveballs possible Injuries in the stands from foul balls in the late 1870s earned the area behind home plate the nickname of the slaughter pit the National League s Providence Grays became the first team to erect a protective screen over that section of their park in 1879 7 In 1884 the evolution to modern pitching was completed when overhand pitching was allowed Consequently it became much harder for hitters to direct the ball into fair territory when they connected with it More teams began erecting backstops as they came to be called similar to those the Grays had put up but they were not always popular with fans The Milwaukee Northwestern League team removed theirs after two weeks of fan complaints that they unduly obstructed their view of play 7 19th century tort law edit Fatalities from foul balls occurred in the late 19th and early 20th centuries many of those struck and killed were children watching or otherwise in proximity to amateur games In one unusual 1902 incident a 20 year old Ohio man watching a game was stabbed through the heart when a friend who was lending him a knife was struck by a foul ball as he did after telling his friends he was not badly hurt he began bleeding uncontrollably and died a few minutes later 6 The Washington Star reported in 1888 that a man claiming to have been hit by a ball whether batted or thrown was not clear at a Washington Statesmen game the year before had filed suit if he had it did not result in a published opinion 8 Media reports from the era suggest that there were other lawsuits besides the 1888 Washington lawsuit against baseball teams over foul ball injuries around the turn of the century but none were reported They may have been disposed through settlement trial or withdrawal It has also been suggested that the law concerning torts brought by public invitees such as spectators at a baseball game was not seen as favorable to such suits 9 Up to the time of baseball s origins in the United States common law treated those on private property not generally open to the public like sporting venues but on the property with the owner s permission as licensees The property owner owed them no other duty of care than to protect them from unforeseeable hazards incident to the conditions of the property That standard would have likely precluded any suit over injuries from a foul ball as they were a foreseeable risk 9 However in 1866 an English court s decision Indermaur v Dames held that a landowner was indeed liable for damages from personally known hazards or hazards the landowner reasonably could have been expected to Since the plaintiff was there for business reasons to inspect a faulty gas regulator when he fell through the defendant s floor and suffered injury the Court of Common Pleas held he was not a licensee but a visitor or invitee there to transact business mutually beneficial to both parties a distinction recent cases had begun to recognize but not formalize 10 The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court accepted Indermaur as precedent two years later in a similar case of a ship damaged by a submerged rock 11 and it would eventually be so recognized by the courts of 26 states 12 and the U S Supreme Court 13 In 1883 the Massachusetts Supreme Court held that a patron of a place of public amusement was an invitee and that the defendant a dance hall had a duty to maintain the premises safely 14 Legal scholar Seymour Thompson wrote in a popular work on tort law that the duties of business owners towards invitees or business visitors as they were now known applied with special force to establishments to which the public are invited in large numbers As the 20th century dawned courts had applied that principle to a wide variety of such businesses including sports venues 9 However despite a more favorable legal climate there were no reported cases over foul ball injuries Marquette law professor J G Hylton in a history of the origins of the Baseball Rule notes that the visitor principle had primarily decided cases where the issues with the property had existed prior to the plaintiff s entry on to it and thus a plaintiff could claim both that the defendant knew of the defect and he himself did not whereas most spectators at a baseball game would have known that foul balls frequently entered the stands at high speed There had not been many cases where the plaintiffs knowledge of the possible risks was a factor 9 Also at the time American courts recognized assumption of risk and contributory negligence when proven as absolute bars to any recovery by a plaintiff If they knew of the dangers of foul balls and chose to sit in an unprotected seat Hylton writes then he or she opened himself up to the charge that his or her own negligence had contributed to his or her injury He also speculates that the dominant cultural ethos of rugged individualism during the Gilded Age and early Progressive Era may have led injured spectators to fault themselves and only themselves for their injury a 9 The earliest reported lawsuit over injuries from a batted baseball was filed during the first decade of the 20th century A man watching a horse race at an Iowa agricultural fair was hit by a foul ball from a baseball game being played on the track s infield He sued the directors of the fair in 1907 the state s Supreme Court held that the directors were not liable since their organization s purpose was to promote agriculture and the baseball game was not part of that thus they could not be expected to have knowledge of the risks it posed and there was no nonfeasance 15 The following year Michigan s Supreme Court took judicial notice in a case brought by a patron injured by a foul ball from a nearby game while dancing at a resort of the inherent risks of watching a baseball game and that every spectator assumed them by choosing to watch It is knowledge common to all that in these games of baseball hard balls are thrown and batted with great swiftness that they are liable to be muffed or batted or thrown outside the lines of the diamond and visitors standing in position that may be reached by such balls have voluntarily placed themselves there with knowledge of the situation and may be held to assume the risk 16 Establishment of the Baseball Rule edit Crane v Kansas City Baseball amp Exhibition Co edit Crane v Kansas City Baseball amp Exhibition Co CourtMissouri Court of Appeals Kansas City DivisionDecided17 February 1913 1913 02 17 Citation s 153 S W 1076Case historyAppealed fromJackson County Circuit CourtCase opinionsBaseball team had duty to spectators to provide some seats screened from foul balls at games but not to screen all seats spectator who chose to sit in unprotected seats when protected ones were available was contributorily negligent to his own injury by a foul ball and could not recover Trial court upheld Decision byJohnsonKeywordsNegligencetortsassumption of riskduty of careIn 1913 an appellate court for the first time heard a case against a baseball team arising from a foul ball injury incurred by a paying spectator at the game 17 Three years earlier Samuel Crane had gone to a home game of the Kansas City Blues an American Association class AA minor league team at Association Park in Kansas City Missouri At the ticket counter he had the choice of a seat in the bleachers beyond the outfield fence for 25 10 in today s dollars 18 or in the grandstand next to the infield for twice that price In either area all seats were general admission Crane could sit wherever he wanted if a space was available 2 By that time protective screens had been installed in every baseball park where the game was played professionally At minimum they covered the area immediately behind home plate the screen at Association Park extended as far as first and third base on either foul line roughly 90 feet 27 m from home Crane decided to sit in an area beyond the screen and at some point during the game was struck by a foul ball and injured the details are not known 2 Crane later filed suit in Jackson County Circuit Court 19 arguing that the Blues had been negligent and seeking 100 in damages 3 000 in today s dollars 18 plus court costs their duty of reasonable care to him required that they screen off all the grandstand seats He and the team stipulated to the facts of the case and agreed to try it as a question of law The trial court held for the team Crane appealed 2 The Kansas City Division of the Missouri Court of Appeals affirmed the judgement Citing the Michigan Supreme Court s 1908 dictum it held that Crane had assumed the risks of watching a baseball game when he chose to attend Since given a choice between protected and unprotected seats Crane chose the latter for the unobstructed view the court speculated there was contributory negligence on his part and the team was not liable One invited to a place who is offered a choice of two positions one of which is less safe than the other cannot be said to be in the exercise of reasonable care if with full knowledge of the risks and dangers he chooses the more dangerous place wrote Judge W O Jackson That is a fundamental rule of the law of negligence 2 Almost a century later Hylton observed that despite Crane s failure to win his case the court s decision did impose two requirements on teams While they avoided a requirement they screen off all seats and end the practice of offering standing room only attendance behind the outfield fence to latecomers at sold out games both of which would have likely reduced attendance the court did hold that teams owed a duty of reasonable care to fans which specifically meant that they should offer at least some protected seating This responsibility could not be shirked Hylton wrote and it did not matter either if the patron knew of the danger before attending or was informed of it upon entering the park 20 Edling v Kansas City Baseball amp Exhibition Co edit Edlingv Kansas City Baseball amp Exhibition Co CourtMissouri Court of Appeals Kansas City DivisionDecided1 June 1914 1914 06 01 Citation s 168 S W 908Case historyAppealed fromJackson County Circuit CourtCase opinionsBaseball team was negligent in not properly maintaining screen that kept foul balls from entering section of stands spectator injured when foul passed through a hole in the screen was not contributorily negligent for not being able to avoid ball s path Trial court upheld Decision byJ JohnsonKeywordsNegligencetortsassumption of riskduty of careWithin a year another case of a fan injured by a foul ball at a Blues game came before the same court allowing it to apply and clarify the rule The circumstances of this case were markedly different and the court found for the plaintiff one Edling 3 In 1911 Charles Edling like Crane went to a Blues home game He too paid the higher price for a grandstand seat but unlike Crane chose to sit behind the netting halfway up the stands from the field level on almost a line with home plate and the pitcher s mound so he could see pitches curve During the game Edling lost sight of one of the many foul balls until it struck him in the eye having passed through a square foot 930 cm2 hole in the netting The injuries were serious including a broken nose as well as the eye damage and Edling filed suit demanding 3 500 110 000 in today s dollars 18 plus court costs 3 Since there was a factual dispute as to the condition of the screen the team claimed it was new and in perfect condition while fans who had attended other games testified that it had had many holes which had gone unrepaired for a long time the case was heard by a jury The team mounted two other defenses that even in perfect condition a screen unobtrusive enough to not detract from spectators enjoyment of the game could not also be strong enough to stop all foul balls and that Edling had also been contributorily negligent by failing to keep track of the ball that had hit him after it had been hit to that Edling s lawyer responded that if the Blues players had kept their eyes on the ball as well as the team s lawyers said Edling should have the team would have had a much better season b 3 The jury found for Edling and the Blues appealed In response to the team s claim that the jury should not have heard the testimony about the condition of the screen the appeals court relied on Crane to hold that by purposely sitting behind the screen Edling could reasonably assume he was safe from foul balls It was the duty of defendant to keep the screen free from defects and if it did not the jury could properly infer that it was guilty of negligence 3 We must also ignore the suggestion that screening capable of blocking all foul balls would be too hard to see through the court said Evidence at trial it explained had shown that a mesh of chicken wire similar to that used at Association Park could stop any batted ball with minimal impact on spectators view when properly maintained Citing Edling s attorney s comment the court also agreed it was not Edling s responsibility to avoid injury by keeping track of the ball at all times The uncertainty in the direction speed and force of a batted ball is one of the interesting and exciting features of the game the court observed and frequently it is difficult for even a trained eye to follow the course of the ball c 3 Hylton reads Edling as contractualizing the relationship between team and spectator in the area of foul ball risk and protection By screening off some of the seats a team implicitly guaranteed to the spectators who chose to sit behind the screen that it would be in sufficient condition to protect them from foul ball injuries unless as the team claimed Edling had they knowingly remained in front of a defective portion While not obligated to screen every seat in the park he comments the team was obligated not only to provide protected seats for fans who desired them but also to maintain those seats in a reasonable manner 22 Precedence and evolution edit Crane became precedent outside Missouri before Edling was even heard there Later in 1913 the Minnesota Supreme Court considered a case like Crane s brought by a spectator who had chosen to sit in an unprotected area of the stands and been injured by a foul ball The plaintiff a woman who was attending a baseball game for the first time ever on Ladies Day had won in the lower courts but the state s highest court overturned the verdict citing the case s similarities to Crane and quoting from that opinion extensively Unlike Crane the plaintiff argued that she had had no familiarity with the game and thus should at least have been warned about the possibility of injury from a foul ball but the court did not distinguish her case from Crane s on that basis d 24 22 Washington s Supreme Court relied on Crane in 1919 to reverse an earlier case in which it had allowed an injured spectator to proceed with his suit The circumstances were similar the plaintiff had chosen to sit in unprotected seating where protected seats had been available but the plaintiff in Kavafian v Seattle Baseball Club Association had initially argued that the team s negligence lay in having changed its mind about where to put screening as Kavafian s seat was located in an area of the stadium originally intended to have it Per Crane the court again found that as long as the team had made some protected seats available a spectator who chose not to sit there assumed all the risk 25 22 In 1929 the Supreme Court in neighboring Oregon was confronted with a first impression variation on the foul ball injury A man who had attended a game in Portland four years earlier and sat near the edge of a 150 foot 46 m screen was nevertheless struck and permanently injured by a foul ball that curved behind it At trial he had prevailed and been awarded 3 000 50 000 in today s dollars 18 which was upheld on appeal However the state Supreme Court held that such an unusual trajectory for a foul ball was so unforeseeable that the team could not reasonably be expected to protect spectators from a ball so hit and vacated the award 26 23 nbsp Gus Suhr the only Major League batter ever sued over a foul ball injuryJoan Quinn a San Francisco teenager who attended a 1929 game of the Pacific Coast League s Seals at Recreation Park asked to be seated behind the screen but was told by the usher that none were available at that time so she sat in an unprotected seat expecting the usher would find a protected one A foul ball hit by Gus Suhr struck and injured her 27 She sued not only the club but Suhr 28 the first reported instance in which a plaintiff named a batter as a defendant e in addition to the team in a foul ball tort arguing that since she had requested a protected seat she had not voluntarily assumed the risk of the injury that befell her 27 At trial the judge granted the team s motion for a directed verdict in their favor after Quinn presented her case On appeal the court took note that while protected seats were available elsewhere in the grandstand she had nonetheless insisted on sitting near first base and upheld the ruling saying that she had temporarily assumed the risk The California Supreme Court agreed and saw fit to reprint the entire appellate opinion 27 A 1930 incident concerned a ball hit fairly though not during the actual game The plaintiff went to a game in New Orleans and bought a ticket to the bleachers 158 feet 48 m from home plate and protected by a five foot high 1 5 m screen at field level While walking to his seat before the game he was hit by a ball from batting practice to which he had not paid attention and his jaw was broken The following year the Louisiana Supreme Court upheld a judgement for the team finding the case fundamentally similar to Crane with the plaintiff s inattention to the game similarly constituting contributory negligence and the team having satisfied its duty as the grandstand was already properly screened 30 31 Grimes v American League Baseball Club edit Grimes v American League Baseball ClubCourtMissouri Court of AppealsDecided5 February 1935 1935 02 05 Citation s 78 S W 2d 520Case historyAppealed fromSt Louis Circuit CourtCourt membershipJudges sittingBennick Hostetler Becker McCullenCase opinionsConstruction of temporary benches at baseball park from which foul ball bounced and injured spectator increased risk of injury park was thus in breach of its duty of reasonable care Decision byBennickKeywordsNegligencetortsassumption of riskduty of careIn one unusual case also from Missouri a court did hold that a plaintiff sitting in unprotected seating could recover On the last day of the St Louis Browns 1931 season at Sportsman s Park Violet Grimes attended with a date and chose to sit near third base at field level well outside the area screened behind home plate To accommodate extra crowds expected for that year s World Series in which the Cardinals who shared the park with the Browns were hosting the first two games against the Philadelphia Athletics starting the next day temporary wooden seats had been built and added extending 15 feet 4 6 m into the field In the second game of a doubleheader with the Chicago White Sox a foul ball ricocheted off the railing on the temporary seating and into Grimes eye 32 Grimes prevailed at trial and was awarded 5 000 by the jury 96 200 in today s dollars 18 The Browns appealed the court upheld the verdict noting that the 60 foot 18 m distance between the foul lines and the stands existed for a reason and that the temporary seating closed to spectators that day distinguished the case from Crane and the others like it in that it was not an ordinary part of games at the park P laintiff was subjected the court wrote not only to the usual and ordinary perils of the game when played under its usual and ordinary conditions but also to an unusual and extraordinary hazard which had concededly been put in the park to meet unusual conditions and which was not even designed or intended to serve a purpose at the game plaintiff was attending 33 Brisson v Minneapolis Baseball amp Athletic Association edit Brisson v Minneapolis Baseball amp Athletic AssociationCourtMinnesota Supreme CourtDecided18 March 1932 1932 03 18 Citation s 240 N W 903 185 Minn 507Case opinionsBaseball team owes spectators reasonable care in protecting them from foul balls standard is met by screening seats behind home plate and making enough available to accommodate reasonable demand for protected seatsDecision byCharles LoringKeywordsNegligencetortsassumption of riskduty of careOverall in the two decades after Crane courts in six more states would rely on it as precedent and reaffirm that reliance 34 by the 1930s it was seen as a seminal case in the area of landowner liability specifically the liability of sporting venue operators 35 The most significant of those cases came from the latter line when the Minnesota Supreme Court heard Brisson v Minneapolis Baseball amp Athletic Association in 1932 It settled two questions Crane and the courts that relied on it had not 36 Brisson alleged that he had intended to sit in the protected area but found all the seats there filled So he sat instead in an unprotected seat where like the other plaintiffs he was hit by a foul ball and injured He argued that Crane required the team to ensure that protected seats were available for any spectator who wanted one thus the lack of availability of such seats negated any assumption of risk on his part 37 36 A verdict in the plaintiff s favor too was appealed again to the state s highest court and overturned as the justices believed that reasonable care did not require making unprotected seats available for anyone who wanted them What it did require was that teams make a reasonable amount of such seats available as to satisfy the typical demand for them and that the most dangerous area of the stands be so screened While the Minnesota Supreme Court did not specify any part of the stands at a baseball game later courts more explicitly stated this to be the seats behind home plate which had already been screened at most baseball parks since the 1880s 36 Mid 20th century evolution edit In 1942 when deciding Hudson v Kansas City Baseball Club which held that a plaintiff asserting that he had believed that a reserved seat he bought a ticket for was protected was not sufficiently different from other cases as to warrant an exception to the rule the Missouri Supreme Court noted that Crane and Edling have become leading cases throughout the country in torts related to foul ball injuries 38 The following year a spectator struck in the abdomen by a foul at a 1941 Columbus Red Birds game one of the earliest to be played at night argued that the team should have provided sufficient illumination for those in unprotected seating as he was that night to be able to see the ball should it come into the stands appealed the directed verdict for the team The Ohio Court of Appeals divided with two of the three judges declining to distinguish night games If the risk was greater due to the fact that it was a night game played under artificial lights by the same token the plaintiff was under greater obligation to protect himself by seeking a position of safety behind screens The dissenting judge argued that that was a factual question a jury should have been allowed to decide saying it would be a dangerous policy for the law to pronounce a principle of immunity to ball clubs against ordinary care as related to the construction of its stands or the location or the placing of equipment which has to do with the safety of its patrons 39 An appeals court in neighboring Indiana later that year also declined to distinguish an injury resulting from a fellow spectator s attempt to throw the foul back on the field holding that that too was part of the game The danger of a ball thrown by a spectator toward the playing field while play is in session seems to us to be an ordinary hazard of the game wrote the court in Emhardt v Perry Stadium noting also that the plaintiff had testified she and her husband had regularly attended games at the park for four years prior to the 1937 incident It affirmed summary judgement for the defendant team and park 40 Since Brisson had specified the terms under which teams needed to provide screening plaintiffs seeking to recover began basing their challenges on their lack of knowledge of the risks These cases generally involved women who had accompanied their husbands or sons to the ballpark The first such case had been decided the year before when a Texas appeals court heard Keys v Alamo City Baseball Co Keys had taken her son to a Texas League game in San Antonio where they both sat in unprotected seats far from the backstop During the fifth or sixth inning she was struck in the chest by a foul ball her son had ducked while she had been talking to a friend seated several rows behind her 41 To overcome the team s assumption of risk defense she argued that she was not that familiar with the game having only attended one other baseball contest several years earlier While it found the team partially negligent in that the usher who had directed her and her son to the seats did not warn them there was no protection there from foul balls the court disagreed with claim of ignorance of the hazard noting that the record showed that her son aged 14 had gone to other games at the park and often played or threw baseballs in and around the home suggesting he was a baseball fan as is nearly every normal American boy Even if Keys had not taken note of this the court added she had been at the game for long enough to see as her son had pointed out to her that quite a few foul balls go into the stands 41 In yet another case from Kansas City brought by a woman who moved with her son to unprotected seats at a 1947 game on the usher s apparent assurance that they were safe only to be hospitalized after the ensuing injury the Missouri Supreme Court called the dangers of being struck by a foul ball open and obvious to any one who possesses normal powers of observation A knowledge of the rules or strategy of the game is not necessary to a realization of such hazard 42 f Schentzel v Philadelphia National League Club edit Schentzel v Philadelphia National League ClubCourtSuperior Court of PennsylvaniaDecided14 April 1953 1953 04 14 Citation s 173 Pa Superior Ct 179Case historyAppealed fromPa Court of Common Pleas for Philadelphia CountyCourt membershipJudges sittingRhodes Hirt Reno Dithrich Ross Arnold and GuntherCase opinionsJudicial notice taken of risk of foul ball injury at baseball games being common knowledge even where plaintiff claims little interest in the sport Trial court reversed Decision byRossKeywordsNegligencetortsassumption of riskduty of careA Pennsylvania Superior Court panel echoed Keys in 1953 s Schentzel v Philadelphia National League Club when it overturned a jury verdict in favor of a woman who had gone with her husband to see a Philadelphia Phillies doubleheader at Shibe Park in 1949 The couple had driven to Philadelphia from Allentown and arrived late at the start of the first game s seventh inning They had been assured by the ticket seller that their seats in the upper deck were behind the screen When they found out that they were not rather somewhat displaced towards first base they resolved to see if they could exchange their tickets for a pair to seats that were but due to crowds in the aisle they chose to wait until that trip could be made more easily Roughly two minutes afterwards 10 minutes after they arrived the woman was injured by a foul ball 43 Schentzel made the novel argument that teams should install extra screening on Ladies Days such as the one she had attended since many women were admitted for free and it could not be expected that most of them would be familiar with the game But as in the Texas case the Pennsylvania court did not find it plausible at that time that the plaintiff could be ignorant of the fact that foul balls went into the stands her testimony that the game was the first she had ever attended and the minimal amount of time she and her husband had been at the game notwithstanding Starting from the premise that she was a middle aged woman of normal intelligence the court reiterated the holding of Keys in this regard Consequently she must be presumed to have been cognizant of the neighborhood knowledge with which individuals living in organized society are normally equipped We think the frequency with which foul balls go astray alight in the grandstand or field and are sometimes caught and retained by onlookers at baseball games is a matter of such common everyday practical knowledge as to be a subject of judicial notice It strains our collective imagination to visualize the situation of the wife of a man obviously interested in the game whose children view the games on the home television set and who lives in a metropolitan community so far removed from that knowledge as not to be chargeable with it 44 First major league foul ball death edit In 1970 for the first time a spectator died of injuries from a foul ball at a major league game g Alan Fish 14 went to the Los Angeles Dodgers May 16 home game at Dodger Stadium against the San Francisco Giants with other boys from his recreational program and the program director where they sat in the second row at field level along the first base line A Manny Mota foul hit Fish on the back of the head above his ear in the bottom of the third 45 Fish initially lost consciousness but regained it after a minute and appeared to have recovered completely by the end of the game However on his ride home he began experiencing dizziness and by the time he returned his parents took him to three hospitals in order to find one that would treat him His condition deteriorated and surgery could not be done Fish died after being taken off life support three days later 45 The Fishes brought suit against the Dodgers the medical facilities and the first physician to see their son asking 1 million in damages They alleged the team had been negligent in designing and operating the stadium and along with the other defendants had been negligent in treating Alan The trial judge disallowed the first count against the Dodgers and before trial the Fishes dropped suit against the medical facilities When it finally came to trial in 1973 the jury initially deadlocked but after the judge pressured them to keep deliberating they found for the defendants 45 Three years later an appeals court reversed the trial court on the grounds of a jury instruction that should have been given but was not 46 1970s 80s Comparative negligence edit With plaintiffs now effectively denied the opportunity to recover based on their own level of knowledge of the game lawyers began adding the claim that teams were negligent in failing to warn spectators about the dangers of foul balls Many states had reformed their tort laws with courts and or legislatures embracing the newer doctrine of comparative negligence assumption of risk and contributory negligence the pillars of the Baseball Rule in Crane were no longer absolute defenses and a plaintiff whose own negligence had contributed to their injury could still recover albeit less than what they had demanded as long as they were found to be less than 50 percent at fault 47 These cases left the Baseball Rule intact courts in California New York and Texas wrote influential rulings declining to revisit it although not without some skepticism and an outright dissent in New York These favorable verdicts notwithstanding teams did begin to take some steps to warn fans of the danger from foul balls Waivers were printed on the back of tickets 48 and teams began having announcements read over the park s public address system reminding fans to stay alert at any time balls were in use on the field not just during play 49 In declining to revisit the Baseball Rule without contributory negligence and assumption of risk as absolute defenses to suits over foul ball injuries courts revised the duty of care owed by teams to spectators Crane had stated that it arose out of reasonable care 2 but the decisions of the 1980s held that a team owed either a limited duty or no duty at all to spectators beyond that established by the Baseball Rule 50 Akins v Glens Falls City School District edit Akins v Glens Falls City School District nbsp CourtNew York Court of AppealsDecided18 June 1981 1981 06 18 Citation s 53 N Y 2d 325 441 N Y S 2d 644Case historyAppealed fromAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of New YorkCourt membershipJudges sittingCooke Gabrielli Jones Wachtler Jasen Fuschberg MeyerCase opinionsRule that baseball teams must provide some protected seating areas to be immune from liability over foul ball injuries to spectators is adequate under comparative negligenceDecision byJasenConcurrenceGabrielli Jones WachtlerConcur dissentFuschberg MeyerDissentCookeIn 1981 s Akins v Glens Falls City School District the New York Court of Appeals the highest court of a state that had been one of the first to adopt comparative negligence heard the first case challenging the Baseball Rule under that doctrine 51 Five years earlier Akins had attended one of her son s high school baseball games Arriving after it had started she chose to watch standing since there were no seating facilities available behind a three foot high 1 m chainlink fence that ran from the backstop along the third base line approximately 60 feet 18 m from the plate Within 10 minutes a foul ball hit her in the eye causing permanent injury 52 At trial she asked 250 000 805 000 in today s dollars 18 alleging the school district could have put wings equal in height to the backstop s 24 feet 7 3 m to both bases at minimal cost the jury found the school district liable and awarded her 100 000 finding her only 35 percent liable for her injury A five judge panel of the state s Appellate Division divided narrowly in upholding her appeal with the dissenting justices arguing that Akins had not proved the school district negligent and the case went to the Court of Appeals The judges there also divided narrowly reversing the appeals court 52 Judge Matthew J Jasen s majority opinion held that the standard set by Brisson almost half a century earlier screening behind the plate at least and protected seating available for the number of spectators who could reasonably be expected to want it still applied Since that had been provided the school district had met the duty of reasonable care which was now required of New York landowners regardless of the category of visitor and was not liable Jasen did not think the court needed given that holding to reconsider the Baseball Rule under comparative negligence 52 The court s chief judge Lawrence H Cooke wrote the dissent He and his two colleagues accused the majority of usurping the jury s task 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 it has in effect undertaken the task of prescribing the size shape and location of backstops and other protective devices Cooke noted that the jury in the case had heard testimony that it was relatively inexpensive to add those wings to the backstop and that they were common in the area that school district officials knew that fouls went over the fence but posted no signs warning of them and that the batter who had hit the foul in a varsity high school contest was a powerful enough hitter to have made it to the major leagues by the time the Court of Appeals heard the case Lastly he charged that the majority had by refusing to consider comparative negligence in this case effectively negated it as a concept 53 Rudnick v Golden West Broadcasters edit Rudnick v Golden West BroadcastersCourtCalifornia Court of Appeals 4th District Division 3Decided31 May 1984 1984 05 31 Citation s 156 Cal App 3d 793 202 Cal Rptr 900Case opinionsWhile baseball rule limiting teams liability in foul ball injuries to spectators remains intact under comparative negligence whether defendant provided adequate protected seating to meet rule s conditions is a triable issue of factThree years later an appeals court in another comparative negligence state California considered a foul ball case in that light Loretta Rudnick after being struck and injured by a foul ball at a California Angels game brought suit against the team While she had been sitting in an unprotected area of Anaheim Stadium near first base she argued that that was no longer a valid defense for the team since under comparative negligence her stated lack of familiarity with baseball and consequent assumption that all seats were safe made her responsibility a triable issue of fact After presenting her case the trial court had granted the Angels motion for summary judgement 54 The appeals court reversed but only because it felt the Angels motion had not met the standard for summary judgement In asserting that 2 300 protected seats were available the motion neglected in the court s opinion to note that that number was but a tenth of the crowd the team typically drew nor did it make any effort to show how that was a reasonable amount to have available especially when most of those seats were reserved for season ticket holders The rest of its opinion went on to reassert the validity of the Baseball Rule as recognized by the state s Supreme Court in Quinn a half century earlier in the comparative negligence environment allowing in the process that t he law has traditionally treated the national pastime in a sui generis manner For spectators it concluded the chance to apprehend a misdirected baseball is as much a part of the game as the seventh inning stretch or peanuts and Cracker Jack 54 A concurring justice agreed that the Angels had not satisfied the requirement of demonstrating that no issue of fact existed but took issue with the majority s reaffirmation of the Baseball Rule They find quite remarkably that Quinn is still a beacon of enlightened tort law He cited the many changes made to baseball since 1935 as parallel to changes in tort law Baseball had indeed gotten sui generis treatment from the law he agreed but there is absolutely no support to suggest it is above the law and insulated from the duty and liabilities imposed on others Say it ain t so Joe 54 Friedman v Houston Sports Association edit Friedman v Houston Sports AssociationCourtTexas Courts of AppealsDecidedMarch 5 1987 1987 03 05 Citation s 731 S W 2d 572Court membershipJudges sittingDunn Sam Bass and CohenCase opinionsComparative negligence does not create a duty for baseball teams to warn spectators of possibility of injuries from foul ballsDecision byDunnConcurrenceCohenThree years after Rudnick a Texas appeals court likewise rejected the notion that the move to comparative negligence required reassessing the Baseball Rule After an 11 year old girl had been struck in the face by a foul while sitting near first base at a 1978 Houston Astros game she and her father were awarded 180 000 in actual and punitive damages which the judge then set aside on a defense motion 47 In affirming the appeals court first reiterated the holding from Keys that it would be absurd and no doubt resented by many patrons 55 to expect a baseball team to individually warn everyone entering the park of the dangers from foul balls leaving the field of play It then rejected the argument that the state s recent move to comparative negligence required it to reconsider the Baseball Rule noting that neither New York nor California had either Comparative negligence does not create a duty it wrote 47 Like Akins and Rudnick the decision came with some skepticism A concurring justice noted that while he agreed with the decision since Friedman had been accompanied by her father he was troubled by the court s willingness to discard the jury s findings that her father had not himself been negligent He speculated that there would be situations in which a duty to warn could be found perhaps if a young child entered the venue unsupervised even though his or her parents might be held negligent for allowing that 56 1990s present Reconsideration edit In 1992 appeals courts in Chicago hearing the cases of two spectators who had been injured at games of both of the city s MLB teams showed less deference to the Baseball Rule than courts previously had The state legislature responded by codifying the rule into statute 57 In the 21st century courts in Idaho Indiana and New Mexico declined to adopt it although in the latter instance that state s Supreme Court overruled the decision 58 Coronel v Chicago White Sox edit Coronel v Chicago White SoxCourtIllinois Appellate CourtDecidedMay 19 1992 1992 05 19 Citation s 595 N E 2d 45 230 Ill App 3d 734 171 Ill Dec 917Case historyAppealed fromCook County Circuit CourtCourt membershipJudges sittingScariano Hartman DiVitoCase opinionsWhether baseball team had adequate protected seats available and whether spectator injured by foul ball was adequately warned by team given distractions at game is a triable issue of fact for jury even if dangers of such injury are open and obviousDecision byScarianoBlanca Coronel s lawsuit against the White Sox had little to distinguish it from other cases in the Baseball Rule line She had gone to Comiskey Park in 1986 to attend her first Sox game where she sat behind the plate five rows from the field and three seats outside the edge of the backstop In the sixth inning she reached down for some popcorn and when she looked up a foul ball struck her in the face and broke her jaw The trial court hearing her suit granted summary judgement for the team and she appealed arguing the team s duties to her rested on questions of triable fact 59 Unlike its predecessors in the other large states however the Illinois Appellate Court declined to reaffirm the Baseball Rule Justice Anthony Scariano reviewed other cases from Illinois and other states including Wells and Akins to conclude that we cannot accept the suggestion advanced by the Sox that it should be they and not the jury who should determine the adequacy of the protection afforded its fans at a baseball game The Sox backstop he pointed out was only 39 7 feet 12 1 m wide narrower than the one at the high school game in Akins and a jury thus could consider whether that was sufficient protection 60 Scariano also rejected the team s argument that it owed Coronel no duty to warn her of the hazards of foul balls beyond the language on the ticket and a warning on the scoreboard during the game 61 Illinois case law since the state s move to comparative negligence had held that even in the case of open and obvious dangers like foul balls landowners might still be found to have a duty to warn One of the factors that might trigger that duty was the possibility that a visitor might have his or her attention diverted in a way that increased their risk of injury from the hazard 62 This Scariano saw as an especially apt point for baseball spectators For it is common knowledge that at major league baseball games the attention of the spectators is frequently diverted for example by large numbers of vendors who purvey a variety of food and drink which the fans consume on the premises while the game is in progress as plaintiff was doing in the instant case It is to be expected then that in the process of purchasing and consuming such items the fans distraction from the game is bound to occur The court remanded the case so a jury could decide the questions of fact 61 Yates v Chicago National League Baseball Club edit Yates v Chicago National League Baseball ClubCourtIllinois Appellate Court 1st Dist 1st Div DecidedApril 6 1992 1992 04 06 Citation s 595 N E 2d 570 230 Ill App 3d 472 172 Ill Dec 209Case historyAppealed fromCook County Circuit CourtCourt membershipJudges sittingO Connor Campbell and ManningCase opinionsWaiver language printed on rear of baseball ticket is insufficient for contractual assumption of risk defense against negligence claim over spectator s foul ball injuryDecision byO ConnorAround the same time a different division of the same Illinois appellate court heard Yates v Chicago National League Ball Club a suit against the Cubs over a Leon Durham foul ball that struck the plaintiff in the face at Wrigley Field in 1983 ending his own baseball career and causing vision problems that persisted over the pendency of the case A jury had found for him and the Cubs appealed 63 The Cubs appeal was primarily based on evidentiary issues at the trial Most relevant to the Baseball Rule the appeals court ruled that Yates did not have to introduce evidence that the amount of seats protected by the backstop was adequate to meet demand as Coronel had narrowed a plaintiff s burden of proof to simply whether the screen was adequate protection without regard to the demand for seats behind them and contrary to one of the Cubs other grounds for appeal the jury could consider that question 64 The appeals court also rejected the Cubs argument that the ticket waiver created a contractual assumption of risk Other Illinois case law had held that a contractual assumption of risk required that the plaintiff have assented to the agreement this could not be so the trial court had ruled because the print was so small that it was not legibly reproduced on the photocopy submitted to the trial court 65 New Mexico Crespin and Edward edit Edward v City of AlbuquerqueCourtNew Mexico Supreme CourtDecidedSeptember 3 2010 2010 09 03 Citation s 241 P 3d 1086 148 N M 646 2010 NMSC 043Case historyAppealed fromNew Mexico Court of AppealsCourt membershipJudges sittingUnanimousCase opinionsLimited duty rule for baseball teams regarding injuries to spectators from foul balls adequately balances their interestsDecision byChavezThe New Mexico Court of Appeals became the first court to explicitly reject the Baseball Rule in 2009 s Crespin v Albuquerque Baseball Club The Crespins four year old son s skull was fractured by a ball hit into the stands during batting practice while the family was enjoying a pregame picnic in an area with tables behind the outfield fence for local Little Leaguers served by the minor league Albuquerque Isotopes h They sued the Isotopes the city of Albuquerque as stadium owner batter Dave Matranga then with the New Orleans Zephyrs and the Zephyrs parent team the Houston Astros for whom Matranga had played in the majors 67 The trial court granted summary judgement to all defendants On appeal the court affirmed it for the Astros and Matranga since he had hit the ball fairly as baseball players are supposed to do in a game the court noted the hit would have been a home run and thus the Astros for whom Matranga had once played had trained him properly and neither he nor they could have been held negligent But it reversed the judgement against the team and city 67 This case presents the first opportunity for a New Mexico appellate court to consider whether to carve out an exception to the usual tort doctrines for the sport of baseball The court declined finding the rule inconsistent with comparative negligence Under our present tort system we discern no public policy reason to justify bestowing immunity on the business of baseball It remanded the case to the trial court so the jury could decide among other issues whether the Isotopes were negligent in failing to warn the picnickers that batting practice was about to begin 68 The following year the state s Supreme Court overruled the appeals court in a decision renamed Edward v City of Albuquerque W e believe that a limited duty rule Chief Justice Edward L Chavez wrote for a unanimous court albeit not the one argued for by defendants is warranted by sound policy considerations After a lengthy review of previous case law from in and out of state he called the rule symmetrical in that while spectators had to exercise ordinary care to avoid injury from batted balls while teams had a duty not to increase the risks Chavez sought to balance the team s duties with the interest of spectators in catching a foul ball He did however affirm the appeals court s denial of summary judgement saying the city and team had not sufficiently established the facts to support it 58 Rountree v Boise Baseball Club edit Rountree v Boise Baseball ClubCourtIdaho Supreme CourtDecidedFebruary 23 2013 2013 02 23 Citation s 296 P 3d 373 154 Idaho 167Court membershipJudges sittingBurdick Eismann J Jones W Jones and HortonCase opinionsNo valid public policy reason exists for adopting limited duty baseball rule in cases of spectators injured by foul ballsDecision byJ JonesIn 2013 s Rountree v Boise Baseball Club Idaho s Supreme Court rejected the Baseball Rule The plaintiff had been hit while eating in Memorial Stadium at a 2008 Boise Hawks game The trial court had held that only the state legislature could adopt it which Justice Jim Jones wrote for a unanimous court was incorrect But while the court could adopt it he continued w e find no compelling public policy requiring us to do so 69 The court Jones conceded had earlier adopted the fireman s rule limiting the liability of landowners for injuries suffered by responding emergency personnel on their property But that recognized the fundamental link between firefighters confronting danger and sustaining consequent injuries Jones did not see any similar reason the public had to expose itself to foul ball injuries to watch baseball The opinion also rejected the defendants claim that implied primary assumption of risk was a valid defense in the case 69 South Shore Baseball LLC v DeJesus edit South Shore Baseball LLC v DeJesusCourtIndiana Supreme CourtDecidedJune 27 2014 2014 06 27 Citation s 11 N E 3d 903Case historyAppealed fromIndiana Court of AppealsCourt membershipJudges sittingDickson Massa Rucker David RushCase opinionsAdoption of rule limiting duty of baseball teams to spectators injured by foul balls is properly left to the legislatureDecision byMassaThe year after Rountree the Indiana Supreme Court also declined to adopt the Baseball Rule even as it held for the defendant team on the facts of the case South Shore Baseball LLC v DeJesus had been brought by a woman struck in the face by a pop up foul on the opening day of the 2009 Gary SouthShore RailCats season at U S Steel Yard She had been sitting just outside the screening heard the foul and looked up to see it in time for it to strike her in the face breaking several bones and blinding her in the left eye 70 At trial the team s motion for summary judgement was denied then reversed on appeal While DeJesus had argued that the netting should have extended further she had testified that she had been to many RailCats games that she was aware of the hazards of foul balls and had heard a warning to that effect over the stadium s public address system She appealed to the state Supreme Court which affirmed This undisputed evidence shows DeJesus was not relying on the netting to protect her from the danger of foul balls wrote Justice Mark Massa for a unanimous court 71 The court had also been asked in an amicus curiae brief filed by the Indianapolis Indians the Pittsburgh Pirates triple A minor league team in the state to formally adopt the Baseball Rule which it said the state had already done 70 years earlier in Emhardt Massa responded with a baseball metaphor Although we appreciate a well turned double play we will take this particular pitch Emhardt s holding had contained the essence of the rule he agreed but it was rooted in the legal doctrines the state had abandoned in favor of comparative negligence We do not find it instructive here 72 Massa agreed that b aseball undoubtedly occupies a special place in American life and culture quoting praise for the sport from a 1911 decision of the court but n evertheless we are not convinced that any sport even our national pastime merits its own special rule of liability If that was a decision the state should make it was the state legislature s prerogative he concluded 72 Exceptions editInjury to non spectating bystander edit Courts have strictly adhered to the Baseball Rule but they have almost always limited its applicability to spectators watching the game or walking through viewing areas holding that only that activity gives rise to the assumed risk of foul ball injury The first plaintiff to recover after Edling was a young Wisconsin girl who was hit in the face while her mother was adjusting her dress along a highway about 90 feet 27 m from a baseball diamond at a park operated by the local trolley company the family was not watching the game There can be no serious claim that the respondent was guilty of contributory negligence as she was on the highway and entirely ignorant of her danger the Wisconsin Supreme Court held in 1925 as it affirmed a 2 000 33 000 in today s dollars 18 28 jury verdict in her favor 73 Batting practice edit Another 1925 case from the Midwest addressed an injury arising from batting practice resulting in a change in procedure for that aspect of the pregame The plaintiff in Cincinnati Base Ball Co v Eno was attending a Cincinnati Reds twi night doubleheader four years earlier with her father during batting practice between the games which at the time consisted of several groups of players scattered around the field she and her father went closer to the field for a look at the players practicing there just 15 25 feet 4 6 7 6 m away 74 a foul broke her jaw The Ohio Supreme Court affirmed an appellate ruling that reversed the trial court s directed verdict for the team distinguishing the case from Crane and its progeny by noting that multiple balls were in play during batting practice and spectators could not reasonably be expected to keep track of all of them 75 i As a result of the case the Reds and other professional teams began holding batting practice with only one batter at a time swinging from home plate j 79 Lost bats edit The Baseball Rule has not been extended to cover injuries from lost bats that go into the stands In 1938 a California appeals court considered the case of Martha Ratcliff who had been walking down the aisle to her protected seat at a San Diego Padres Pacific Coast League game during batting practice when struck by a player s bat which had slipped from his grip 80 feet 24 m away She prevailed at trial and was awarded 2 000 by the jury a verdict sustained on appeal since the evidence showed that bats had gone into the stands before and the court held that i t was a question for the jury whether such an accident as this could have been reasonably anticipated and we think the evidence is sufficient to sustain their finding upon that question 80 Thrown balls edit Maytnier v Rush edit Maytnier v RushCourtIllinois Appellate CourtDecidedMarch 6 1967 1967 03 06 Citation s 80 Ill App 2d 336 225 N E 2d 83Case historyAppealed fromCook County Circuit CourtCourt membershipJudges sittingBryant Burke Lyons Case opinionsInjury from errantly thrown baseball is sufficiently different from one caused by foul ball as for sufficiency of protection against risk to be a triable question of fact usual immunity from liability for baseball teams does not apply Decision byLyonsA ball errantly thrown into the stands as a consequence of a pitcher s warmup during the game rather than batted also was beyond the scope of the rule k In 1957 David Maytnier 13 went to a Cubs doubleheader at Wrigley Field where he got a front row ticket that he had requested be as close to the Cubs dugout as possible he wound up being seated about 10 or 15 seats further away from the plate than the dugout The seat was thus close to the bullpen where a wild pitch by reliever Bob Rush struck Maytnier in the face during the sixth inning of the second game 82 Maytnier s father sued both Rush and the Cubs testimony at trial revealed that the former who had been having problems with his pitching that season had been experimenting with a new pitch which in that particular instance 6 foot 3 inch 1 91 m bullpen catcher Gordon Massa testified had been above him and to his left beyond his ability to catch when standing The jury found for Maytnier against the team but for Rush against him 82 Both Maytnier and the Cubs appealed His appeal against the Rush verdict was dismissed as untimely 83 The Cubs appeal made several arguments including all the previous Baseball Rule cases from Illinois and other states The court distinguished them all from the instant case instead it was more persuaded by Eno and Ratcliff The facts here in issue evidence an entirely different situation in which the plaintiff was struck by a ball not in play in the game coming from his left at a time when the spectators attentions were focused on the ball actually in play in the game to plaintiff s right The case at bar presents factual circumstances quite different from those held applicable to the general rules concerning nonliability of ball park owners to spectators This court cannot say therefore that defendant Chicago Cubs has not breached a duty as a matter of law 84 The case had thus been properly submitted to the jury and the appeals court therefore declined to disturb it 85 Possibly as a consequence of Maytnier baseball venues at all levels banned players from playing pepper a warmup exercise sometimes played as an informal game in itself in which a batter bats balls to several fielders nearby due to the risk of similar injuries to spectators since it was often played on the side of the field before games This is often indicated with signs Teams have also moved bullpens off the field to enclosed areas behind the back fence 86 Loughran v The Phillies edit Loughran v The PhilliesCourtSuperior Court of PennsylvaniaDecidedNovember 23 2005 2005 11 23 Citation s 888 A 2d 872Case historyAppealed fromPhiladelphia County Court of Common PleasCourt membershipJudges sittingMusmanno Bender OlszewskiCase opinionsLimited duty rule for baseball teams bars recovery for injury from ball thrown into stands as souvenir by player since it was a routine aspect of game even if not necessary for playDecision byOlszewskiDissentBenderIn contrast to Maytnier injuries resulting from a ball deliberately thrown into the stands by a player as a souvenir were held beyond recovery under the Baseball Rule in a 2005 Pennsylvania case Jeremy Loughran sued the team and outfielder Marlon Byrd after he was hit in the face and concussed by a ball thrown into the stands by Byrd after making the last out of an inning during a 2003 game The trial court granted Byrd and the team summary judgement and Loughran appealed 87 Three of the four judges on the Superior Court panel affirmed the trial court They rejected Loughran s argument that Byrd s throw was not a customary part of the game and thus outside the scope of the risk he assumed in attending it In so determining we cannot be limited to the rigid standards of the Major League Baseball rule book we must instead consider the actual everyday goings on that occur both on and off the baseball diamond the court wrote B oth outfielders and infielders routinely toss caught balls to fans at the end of an inning which indeed had occurred 20 times that night two of which landed near Loughran before he was injured 88 Justice John Bender dissented arguing that the majority should have distinguished between an accidental throw into the stands and Byrd s gratuitous toss completely unnecessary to the game Apparently in the majority s view a thrown ball is a thrown ball he wrote I am unwilling to accept the premise that simply because the custom is commonplace the commonality of the custom provides blanket immunity from the way it is carried out Players throwing last out balls into the stands as a gift to fans had a duty to exercise reasonable care in doing so he reiterated 89 Spectators away from seating area edit Jones v Three Rivers Management Corporation edit Jones v Three Rivers Management CorporationCourtPennsylvania Supreme CourtDecidedNovember 18 1978 1978 11 18 Citation s 483 Pa 75 394 A 2d 546Case historyAppealed fromSuperior Court of PennsylvaniaCourt membershipJudges sittingEagen O Brien Roberts Nix Manderino LarsenCase opinionsRule limiting liability of baseball teams for foul ball injuries applies only when spectators are injured while in seating areas plaintiff injured while walking on stadium concourse was not incurring ordinary risks of watching gameDecision byRobertsOn July 16 1970 the day the Pittsburgh Pirates played their first home game at Three Rivers Stadium Evelyn Jones was walking one of the stadium s interior concourses before the game There were openings that looked out over the field during the course of her walk she looked through some but did not stop to do so for long Near right field unaware that batting practice had begun she turned to go to a concession stand for food and as she did was struck in the eye by a batted ball 90 At trial a jury found for Jones against the Pirates and its subsidiary that managed the stadium awarding her 125 000 The Superior Court panel that heard the appeal reversed both but divided on the management company s liability Jones appealed that decision to the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania 90 Movies must be seen in a darkened room roller coasters must accelerate and decelerate rapidly and players will bat balls into the grandstand Justice Samuel J Roberts wrote for a unanimous court referring to other state tort precedents concerning inherent risks at places of amusement as well as the Baseball Rule which he characterized as no duty But even in a place of amusement not every risk is reasonably expected He noted that the openings and archways overlooking the field near where Jones was hit were architectural choices not essential to playing baseball and thus the jury was properly charged with deciding whether the Pirates were negligent in operating the stadium with them Their verdict was sustained the Baseball Rule was held to apply only to those spectators in the seating area 91 Maisonave v Newark Bears edit Maisonave v Newark BearsCourtNew Jersey Supreme CourtCitation s 881 A 2d 700 185 N J 70Court membershipJudges sittingPoritz Long Zazzali Albin Wallace LaVecchia Rivera SotoCase opinionsLimited duty rule on baseball teams liability for spectators foul ball injuries applies only when spectators are injured in seating areasDecision byZazzaliConcurrenceWallaceConcur dissentRivera Soto LaVecchiaTurnerv Mandalay Sports Entertainment LLCCourtNevada Supreme CourtDecidedApril 17 2008 2008 04 17 Citation s 180 P 3d 1172Case historyAppealed fromNevada Eighth Judicial District CourtCourt membershipJudges sittingGibbons Paraguirre Maupin Saitta Hardesty Cherry DouglasCase opinionsLimited duty rule for baseball teams bars recovery by plaintiff injured by foul ball while sitting at table in unprotected stadium dining area with view of game Decision byParaguirreConcur dissentGibbons Cherry DouglasAlmost 30 years later the New Jersey Supreme Court held similarly in Maisonave v Newark Bears where the plaintiff had likewise suffered serious eye injuries after being hit by a foul ball when he turned around after hearing a warning while buying food from a vendor at a cart in an open area of the Riverfront Stadium concourse After a trial court granted summary judgement to the team an appeals court reversed and the Supreme Court sustained Chief Justice James R Zazzali s majority opinion one of the earliest to refer to the rule specifically as the baseball rule 92 held it imposed a limited duty on teams since fans actively engage in the game by trying to catch foul balls but followed Jones in holding it applied only to injuries sustained by those spectators in areas of the venue specifically intended for them to view the game from Fans foreseeably and understandably let down their guard when they are in other areas of the stadium 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 92 Two justices wrote separate opinions John E Wallace Jr concurred in the result but said he found the Baseball Rule anachronistic He called for it to be replaced with the business invitee class of visitor that had preceded it noting that even the majority had admitted that the most dangerous seats for foul ball injuries were no longer those behind home plate but along the baselines Wallace rejected concerns that abandoning it would give rise to a legal regime in which baseball teams and park owners would be forced to protect every seat from foul balls Instead he wrote the application of traditional tort principles such as comparative negligence will adequately even out the playing field for both sides 93 Justice Roberto A Rivera Soto joined by Jaynee LaVecchia took the opposite approach concurring in the reaffirmation of the Baseball Rule but dissenting from its limitation to the seating area While he agreed with Wallace that it was better that one and only one standard of care should apply in respect of the peril of objects leaving the playing field Rivera Soto would have had the court adopt the broader Baseball Rule for spectators regardless of where they were in the stadium approvingly quoting the trial court s holding that once a spectator always a spectator at least until the last out is registered With the hybrid standard of care the decision adopted ballparks might eventually be forced to completely seal off play he feared 94 U nless relief is provided through the Legislature Rivera Soto warned the state s minor league stadiums would serve as little more than a hothouse for budding tort litigation under Maisonave 94 The following year the state legislature responded to the decision by codifying the Baseball Rule into statute just as its Illinois counterpart had done in response to Coronel and Yates 95 Turner v Mandalay Sports Entertainment LLC edit In 2008 a divided Nevada Supreme Court came to the opposite conclusion in considering the case of a woman injured by a foul ball while sitting at a table on the concourse drinking beer at Cashman Field during a Las Vegas 51 game Justice Ron Parraguirre wrote for a four justice majority that since the team had both verbal and signed warnings and the plaintiff chose to consume her beer in an unscreened area one where she had not in his opinion demonstrated a significant risk of injury it had not breached what it held to be its limited duty to her In his dissent Chief Justice Mark Gibbons joined by Michael Cherry and Michael L Douglas agreed with the Maisonave court which he quoted that the Baseball Rule was properly limited to fans in areas meant for watching the game 96 Mascot antics edit Lowe v California League of Professional BaseballCourtCalifornia Courts of Appeal Fourth District Division 2DecidedJuly 1 1997 1997 07 01 Citation s 56 Cal App 4th 112Court membershipJudges sittingMcDaniel Richli acting WardCase opinionsBaseball team mascot s physical contact with spectator injured by foul ball increased inherent risk of such injury summary judgement for team was thus improperly grantedDecision byMcDanielLowe v California League of Professional Baseball edit In the late 20th century many professional sports teams began creating mascots for their branding depicting them in logos and hiring people to dress up as the characters and entertain fans in the stands during lulls in play In 1994 John Lowe was attending a home game of the Rancho Cucamonga Quakes the Los Angeles Dodgers Class A farm team when the team s mascot Tremor a seven foot tall 210 cm dinosaur played by a costumed team employee repeatedly bumped his head with his tail Lowe turned to look back eventually and as he did was struck in the face by a foul ball breaking several facial bones 97 Lowe s suit named the California League and the team as defendants who were granted summary judgement by the trial court The appeals court found much to criticize in that action primarily that the defendants pleadings offered nothing in the way of either relevant or competent evidence that the facts were beyond dispute they also referred to mascots as an intrical sic part of the game On that point the court noted that the team had played games the previous season without Tremor 97 As a matter of law we hold that the game can be played in the absence of a mascot s antics the court concluded Those antics had increased Lowe s risk of injury and therefore under California law the plaintiff had a right to a jury trial It reversed the trial court and remanded the case 98 Harting v Dayton Dragons Professional Baseball Club edit Harting v Dayton Dragons Professional Baseball ClubCourtOhio Court of Appeals 2nd Dist DecidedApril 27 2007 2007 04 27 Citation s 71 Ohio App 3d 319 2007 Ohio 2100Case historyAppealed fromMontgomery County Court of Common PleasCourt membershipJudges sittingDonovan Fain GradyCase opinionsDistraction by mascot s antics at baseball game was inherent risk of game that barred recovery by plaintiff for injuries from foul ballDecision byDonovanAn Ohio appeals court took a contrasting approach to the role of the mascot in the modern live baseball experience when it decided Harting v Dayton Dragons Professional Baseball Club in 2005 The plaintiff had been watching a Dayton Dragons minor league game in 2005 at which the San Diego Chicken a pioneering baseball mascot was present Harting was struck by a foul and knocked unconscious while he was performing in front of her she sued both him and the team 99 The trial court granted summary judgement to both defendants Harting argued on appeal that their primary assumption of risk defense did not apply to her since she had been distracted by the Chicken This argument ignores the fact that team mascots and their antics are common phenomena and the mascots are normally present during the entire course of the game the court responded The fact that Harting was allegedly distracted by the Chicken when she was struck by the foul ball did not negate her duty to pay attention to the action taking place on the field It further noted that she had not testified that the Chicken blocked her view of either the field or the foul ball 100 Coomer v Kansas City Royals edit Coomer v Kansas City RoyalsCourtMissouri Supreme CourtDecidedJune 14 2014 2014 06 14 Citation s 437 S W 3d 184Case opinionsMascot antics are not intrinsic part of baseball as game limited duty baseball rule therefore does not bar claim by spectator injured by errantly tossed hot dogDecision byWilsonIn his Loughran dissent Pennsylvania appellate justice John Bender had speculated about a hypothetical future case in which under the majority s logic one of those executing the hotdog launch imprudently aimed at spectators seated a couple of rows into the stands would be immune if a spectator lost an eye after getting hit nearly point blank by a foil wrapped hotdog 101 In 2009 that occurred when John Coomer suffered a detached retina and cataracts requiring two surgeries after Kansas City Royals mascot Sluggerrr hit him in the eye with a thrown hot dog At his suit a jury found for the team and he appealed 102 On appeal the Missouri Supreme Court reversed Judge Paul C Wilson wrote for a unanimous court that contrary to the jury s findings but per Lowe getting injured by a hot dog thrown by the team s mascot was not an inherent risk of watching baseball and a jury instruction to that effect was prejudicial to Coomer s case since it was not a factual question for them to decide 103 Millions of fans have watched the Royals and its forebears in professional baseball play the National Pastime for the better part of a century before Sluggerrr began tossing hotdogs and millions more people watch professional baseball every year in stadiums all across this country without the benefit of such antics Some fans may find Sluggerrr s hotdog toss fun to watch between innings and some fans may even have come to expect it but this does not make the risk of injury from Sluggerrr s hotdog toss an inherent risk of watching a Royals game The Hotdog Launch is not an inherent part of the game it is what the Royals do to entertain baseball fans when there is no game for them to watch Sluggerrr may make breaks in the game more fun but Coomer and his 12 000 rain soaked fellow spectators were not there to watch Sluggerrr toss hotdogs they were there to watch the Royals play baseball 104 On retrial the jury found neither Coomer nor the team to have been at fault 105 Codification editFour states Arizona Colorado Illinois and New Jersey have formally codified the Baseball Rule into law In the latter two this was done after state courts had limited the rule s applicability in different ways 95 The statutes the states adopted vary in the degree to which they have adopted the traditional components of the rule In Arizona teams are immune from liability for injuries from balls bats or other equipment as long as they have offered enough protected seats to reasonably meet demand New Jersey s law specifies that the team must protect the seats behind home plate Illinois gives teams even more protection requiring only that they keep the protective equipment in good order and exempting only a player s willful or wanton conduct Colorado s statute on the other hand is the least specific requiring only that teams make a reasonable and prudent effort to design alter and maintain the premises of the stadium in reasonably safe condition relative to the nature of the game of baseball 95 Jasper v Chicago National League Ball Club edit Jasper v Chicago National League Ball ClubCourtAppellate Court of Illinois 1st Dist 3rd Div DecidedDecember 8 1999 1999 12 08 Citation s 722 N E 2d 731 309 Ill App 3d 124Case historyAppealed fromCook County Circuit CourtCourt membershipJudges sittingCahill Cerda McBrideCase opinionsBaseball Facility Liability Act limiting teams liability for injuries to spectators from foul balls was constitutional since it recognizes unique nature of hazards of viewing baseballDecision byCahillAfter the passage of the Illinois statute James Jasper brought suit against the Cubs over a foul ball injury he claimed could have been prevented by a screen that had been removed in 1992 when the team installed skyboxes on the upper deck of Wrigley Field behind home plate He asked the court to also declare the statute violated both the Equal Protection Clause of the United States Constitution and a provision of the state constitution that forbids the legislature from conferring a special benefit or exclusive privilege without a good public policy reason Other sports Jasper noted did not get the same degree of immunity that the Baseball Rule now codified into law offered teams in that sport he also argued it benefited only for profit teams since other statutes limited the liability of non profit park owners 106 The trial court granted the Cubs motion for dismissal of the constitutional claims On Jasper s appeal the court found the statute constitutional T he sport of baseball does have unique characteristics that would reasonably prompt a legislature to enact limited liability legislation it wrote citing a similar case where the state s Supreme Court had upheld a law limiting the liability of landholders for injuries to snowmobilers on their property on the grounds that that recreational activity too had inherent dangers that property owners could not reasonably be expected to completely control The court also rejected Jasper s claim that the statute s exclusion of golf courses could not be considered as he had not introduced any evidence suggesting a similar risk of injury from wayward golf balls lastly it cited earlier cases in support of its dismissal of Jasper s contention that since other laws protected non profit facility operators the legislature had only meant to protect the Cubs and White Sox The Baseball Act itself does not carve out a class of profit making parks for a special benefit but applies the same limited liability to all of them Even if the Act applied only to parks that make a profit from baseball plaintiff cites nothing to support the argument that encouraging a popular recreational activity ceases to be a legitimate state interest when the provider is making a profit 106 Applicability to other sports editBaseball is not the only sport that raises the potential for injuries to spectators struck by objects leaving the playing area Litigation over injuries to ice hockey fans struck by hockey pucks at games in the U S dates to the 1930s and there have also been suits from spectators injured by golf balls Those actions have been guided by the Baseball Rule to some degree 107 Ice hockey edit nbsp High plexiglass screens around an NHL hockey rinkLike baseball hockey is played with a hard object that can leave the playing area and go into the stands at high speeds As a result of this rinks today have protective plexiglass shielding atop the boards And like baseball that shielding is higher in the areas where pucks are most likely to go into the stands behind the goals But unlike baseball the gameplay is more flowing and continuous and requires fans to keep their eyes on a puck moving up and down the rink which may be difficult to see much less anticipate 108 Hockey was first played in the United States in the 1890s professional leagues had formed within two decades and the Boston Bruins the first American team in the National Hockey League began playing in 1924 on lower levels the sport was primarily played in Northeastern and Midwestern states with cold winters Lawsuits over injuries from pucks leaving the rink were first reported in the mid 1930s 107 Since hockey was less established in the United States than baseball courts of that era were willing as they had not been in the latter instance to consider a spectator s degree of knowledge of the sport or lack thereof as a factor This yielded different holdings in different states In the first two cases of hockey puck injuries considered by New York courts in 1935 the Baseball Rule cases in existence at the time were cited as precedent to hold that hockey teams or rink operators had no duty to screen all the seats just enough for those who wanted them and that i t is common knowledge that the puck may leave the ice when the players are shooting for a goal 109 110 However the Supreme Court of neighboring Massachusetts upheld a verdict the following year for a woman struck by a puck at Boston Garden since it was the first hockey game she had attended and the usher who escorted her to her seat at center ice had not warned her that even with three vertical feet 1 m of glass between her and the rink pucks could still come into the stands 111 Four years later the same court declined to disturb a jury s verdict in favor of a man who was injured by a puck as he was walking from his seat to use the bathroom The defendant had argued for contributory negligence but the court said the degree to which the accident could have been anticipated was a factual finding properly submitted to the jury 112 Citing the relative novelty of the sport which had only been played in California for 12 years at that time a 1939 appeals court in that state declined to apply the Baseball Rule to hockey in Thurman v Ice Palace The plaintiff had attended an intramural University of Southern California hockey game at the defendant arena where wire screens had been installed at the ends but not along the sides where Thurman was sitting when a puck hit her in the mouth Through her father she sued the arena the student organization that sponsored the game and all its members individually The trial ended in a directed verdict for all the defendants and she appealed 113 The appeals court affirmed the individual defendants motions for dismissal but reversed the directed verdict for the entities Rejecting both the New York courts decisions from four years earlier as well as the defendants reliance on Quinn the court distinguished hockey from baseball by noting that in the former sport the puck is ordinarily batted along the ice so spectators unfamiliar with the game like Thurman would not expect it to become airborne Therefore The rule which has apparently uniformly been applied to baseball cases is we believe inapplicable to ice hockey games for the reason that the average person of ordinary intelligence in this country is familiar with the game of baseball and it is reasonable to presume that such person appreciates the risk of being hit by a pitched or batted ball without being specifically warned of such danger Hence a spectator at this nationally known game may ordinarily be held to assume such risk However the average person does not have the same knowledge respecting ice hockey or the risk of being hit by a flying puck while observing such a game 114 l A Pennsylvania court echoed Thurman s reasoning in letting a verdict in favor of another woman who was injured at her first hockey game stand The argument is made that this case is analogous to a spectator at a baseball game wrote a Court of Common Pleas judge in 1952 s Schwilm v Pennsylvania Sports alluding to many of the other cases without citing any Had the plaintiff been sitting on the side of the rink the court would have applied the same principle as the Baseball Rule and granted the defense request for judgment notwithstanding verdict but since she was sitting at the end where the team had raised the stands at Pittsburgh s Duquesne Gardens to a higher level without similarly making the screens higher and had no understanding that pucks can go into the stands before one hit her in the head the jury had properly found that the team had been negligent in its duties to spectators 117 Prior to that case the consensus had been changing Five years before Schwilm in Modec v City of Eveleth the Minnesota Supreme Court upheld a trial court s decision to set aside a 2 500 verdict won by a plaintiff from the city after he was injured at a municipally owned rink leased to a private operator On appeal the plaintiff had cited the cases from Massachusetts and other states where juries had been allowed to consider whether a plaintiff unfamiliar with hockey had been properly advised of the dangers But the court distinguished those states from Minnesota where the sport had been widely popular for a long time Hockey is played to such an extent in this region and its risks are so well known to the general public that as to the question before us there is no difference in fact between the two games so far as liability for flying baseballs and pucks is involved Per its holdings in Wells and Brisson it affirmed the trial court 118 An Illinois court still distinguished the two sports in the 1981 case of Riley v Chicago Cougars Hockey Club The plaintiff had been sitting in the front row of the upper deck at a 1974 game of the World Hockey Association WHA Cougars when a slap shot was deflected upwards and struck him knocking him unconscious and causing a Jacksonian seizure that left a permanent brain lesion resulting in occasional epileptic seizures He sued both the league and the team winning a 90 000 verdict from the jury It was affirmed on appeal the defense citing Maytnier had asked the court to apply the Baseball Rule to hockey but it declined We do not believe that the general nonliability rule that is usually applied in baseball cases is necessarily applicable in hockey cases because there are fundamental differences in the way baseball and hockey are played and the dangers incident to the games 119 In the later years of the 20th century NHL attendance and interest grew as more games were broadcast and the league expanded 107 A half century after the Minnesota court s decision in the Eveleth case an appeals court in neighboring Wisconsin followed the trial court in extending the Baseball Rule in the process making one of the earliest judicial references to it as such to hockey in affirming a grant of summary judgement in favor of the Milwaukee Admirals saying the plaintiff s admitted knowledge of hockey made her contributorily negligent enough to bar recovery even under comparative negligence 120 Courts in Pennsylvania 121 and California made similar holdings In the latter the court noted in the half century since Thurman professional ice hockey has grown in popularity both in California and nationally In the present case it is undisputed that ice hockey spectators face a known risk of being hit by a flying puck 122 The first years of the 21st century saw the first and as of 2022 update only fatal hockey puck injury at an NHL game Brittanie Cecil 13 was watching a Columbus Blue Jackets game at Nationwide Arena on March 16 2002 from behind the goal when she was struck in the temple by a deflected slap shot Initially she appeared have suffered only a cut but walked to a first aid station and was taken from there to the hospital where after first improving her condition deteriorated due to a torn vertebral artery that had not been discovered leading to her death two days after the injury 123 Her parents sued the Blue Jackets and other parties they were eventually able to settle out of court for 1 2 million League commissioner Gary Bettman ordered all NHL teams to put higher netting behind their arenas goals 124 Golf edit Cases involving injury from errant golf balls which are smaller than baseballs or hockey pucks but are likewise very hard and travel at high speeds account for half of all reported golf related tort actions 125 Most however are between golfers themselves 126 among whom different standards of care apply or to bystanders off the course 127 In the 1970s and 80s several cases involving injuries to spectators who paid to attend golf tournaments or other events reached appeals courts One commentator suggests cases of this type analogous to baseball are much rarer in golf since professional players of that sport tend to be able to do what the average Joe cannot consistently hit golf shots 126 Some of the situations that gave rise to the injuries argued similar reasons to Baseball Rule cases as to why golf courses or sponsoring organizations should be held liable While waiting in line at a concession stand between fairways during the 1973 Western Open played at the Chicago area Midlothian Country Club Alice Duffy was struck in the right eye blinding her Her suit alleged that the country club had failed to exclude spectators from the concession stand area which she claimed had a higher risk of injury that the club was aware of 128 The trial court granted summary judgement to the defendants Duffy appealed arguing a triable issue of fact existed The appeals court agreed with her and reversed Among the cases it relied on was Maytnier which it held to similarly deny the contractual assumption of risk defense and require that the defense argue more than just the plaintiff s awareness of a defect but the plaintiff s specific knowledge of that defect 129 On retrial the jury found for Duffy and awarded her almost 450 000 a verdict affirmed after the club s appeal 130 Grisim v Tapemark Charity Pro Am Golf Tournament edit Grisim v Tapemark Charity Pro Am Golf TournamentCourtMinnesota Court of AppealsDecidedOctober 14 1986 1986 10 14 Citation s 394 N W 2d 261Court membershipJudges sittingParker Huspeni RandallCase opinionsTriable issue of fact existed as to whether defendant golf course had provided adequately safe seating in case brought by plaintiff injured by errant ball who sat elsewhere when seating provided was too crowded Decision byHuspeniGrisim v Tapemark Charity Pro Am Golf Tournament a 1986 Minnesota case most directly reaches the underlying issue of the Baseball Rule the availability of protected seating The plaintiff had been attending the defendant tournament where she was watching a golfer complete the 18th hole since the bleachers next to the green were mostly full she decided to watch from under a nearby tree where other spectators had already chosen to sit Her left eye had to be surgically removed after being struck 131 The trial court granted summary judgement to the defendant tournament and country club holding that primary assumption of risk barred the claim Grisim appealed and the court agreed with her that that was reversible error Citing Wells it said there was a triable issue of fact for the jury as to whether the club had provided enough of the protected seating behind the green 131 Outside the U S editCanada edit Liability for injuries to spectators from projectiles leaving the playing area in Canada has long been controlled by a case arising from a hockey puck injury 132 In 1934 s Elliott v Amphitheatre Ltd the Court of King s Bench of Manitoba after reviewing many of the precedent American baseball cases denied recovery on the grounds of assumption of risk The proprietor is held not to be an insurer and spectators assume the risk peculiar to that form of amusement 133 It was also one of the authorities cited by the Minnesota Supreme Court in Modec 118 but a decade earlier the Rhode Island Supreme Court asked to consider Elliott as precedent by a defendant hockey rink distinguished it from the one before it since Elliott had testified to having watched many hockey games whereas the plaintiff in the case before it was attending her first hockey game and the Manitoba court had pointed to Elliott s familiarity as a reason for its decision 134 Japan edit External videos nbsp Foul Balls in Japan Real Sports Bonus Clip from HBO showing foul ball protection in Japan s Tokyo Dome nbsp Netting protecting seats close to outfield at Hanshin Koshien Stadium near Kobe JapanIn all home stadiums of Nippon Professional Baseball teams netting protecting the closest seats to the field extends all the way to the foul poles When a foul ball gets over it ushers point to it with a loud whistling device to alert fans and immediately check on anyone who appears to have made contact with the ball Signs at the entrances to sections remind fans of the danger and animated video clips warning fans to watch for fouls are regularly played on the scoreboard 135 tickets also have waivers printed on the back as they do in the U S 136 The Tokyo Dome home of the popular Yomiuri Giants includes one section without netting Spectators pay extra for these seats known as excitement seats A glove and helmet is provided with each one 135 however many of those who sit in those seats do not use them 136 Despite these protections foul balls do go into the stands and injure fans who sometimes sue In 2015 a woman blinded in one eye by a foul ball at a Nippon Ham Fighters game in the Sapporo Dome won a 42 million just under US 380 000 verdict against the team The Fighters responded by adding a warning horn to the ushers whistles 136 Criticism editIn the late 2010s two widely covered incidents brought the Baseball Rule into focus and led to calls for it to be abolished or greatly modified Late in the New York Yankees 2017 season a one year old girl attending a game at Yankee Stadium with her parents and grandparents was struck by a foul suffering multiple facial fractures that led to a five day hospital stay The Yankees announced afterwards that they would join other MLB teams in extending their protective netting to the far end of the dugout from the near end where it had been up to that point 137 The next season every team would have expanded screening but that did not prevent the second foul ball injury spectator death in MLB history also at Dodger Stadium Near the end of a Dodgers San Diego Padres game a foul ball went over the top of the fencing and struck Linda Goldbloom 79 seated just below the press box in the head She died in a hospital four days later 4 Outdatedness edit In a number of the Baseball Rule cases particularly the more recent ones judges first in dissents such as Akins 53 and Rudnick 54 and later in the Crespin 67 and Rountree majorities 69 rejected the Baseball Rule as an artifact of the tort law regime that prevailed before comparative negligence when assumption of risk and contributory negligence were absolute bars to a plaintiff s recovery and a reminder of why that transition was made in the first place 53 But some also recognized that baseball as well had changed considerably since then and there was no reason for the law to sentimentalize the sport 54 Bob Gorman coauthor of Death at the Ballpark notes on his blog that Crane was decided during an era of baseball now known as the dead ball era when games were generally low scoring and teams relied generally on the small ball strategy of getting singles to advance their runners along the bases and get them in scoring positions Home runs were rare and so were foul balls hit into the stands as batters did not regularly swing for the fences The same ball could be used for the entire game and often was In 1918 a newer harder ball was introduced and batters began hitting home runs more frequently 138 The general admission policy under which Crane bought his ticket has also long vanished replaced by reserved seating often for an entire season in which case a spectator could not move to a protected section even when those seats are empty And the price of protected seating itself has risen far faster than inflation single game tickets for seats behind home plate and the backstop today cost in the 150 300 range more than 10 times what Crane could have paid for a protected seat in 1911 139 Changes in gameplay and presentation edit In a 2018 William and Mary Law Review article calling on courts to modify or even abolish the Baseball Rule authors Nathaniel Grow and Zachary Flagel took note of how the game has changed even since the end of the dead ball era Pitchers today throw the ball much harder and batters likewise have improved their physical training and consequently their hitting power 140 it was estimated that the Todd Frazier foul which injured the young girl at Yankee Stadium was traveling at 105 miles per hour 169 km h when it struck her 141 At those speeds spectators have less than half a second to react in the time it takes a ball to reach the stands barely more than the quarter second average human reaction time to visual stimuli 140 In 2004 the Massachusetts Appeals Court noted the testimony of a plaintiff s expert witness an engineering professor who calculated that a woman with no baseball familiarity who suffered permanent facial injuries from a foul that hit her at a Boston Red Sox game had little more than a second from the time the ball was hit to react to it although it upheld summary judgement for the team per Massachusetts earlier acceptance of the Baseball Rule 142 nbsp Retro classic ballparks like Camden Yards began putting fans closer to the gameGrow and Flagler also calculated that early 21st century spectators are closer to the field of play than their counterparts of previous eras The advent of retro classic ballparks in the mold of Baltimore s Oriole Park at Camden Yards accelerated a trend of putting spectators closer to the action m Backstops are now 15 feet 4 6 m closer to home plate than they were in the mid 20th century and the amount of overall foul territory has declined 21 percent since 1920 shortly after the Baseball Rule was established suggesting spectators ability to react to a foul has been correspondingly attenuated Most of this decline has occurred since the early 1990s 144 As the cases involving mascot antics attest spectators are offered a greater degree of distractions In the past spectators attention as it was in Keys 41 might be diverted from the action on the field only by socializing with those seated nearby While fans of yesteryear could be held responsible for their own assumption of risk associated with being hit by a projectile leaving the field wrote the authors of a 2002 Marquette Sports Law Review article such a finding was predicated on the fact that the injured fan was watching the game rather than turning his attention away from the game 145 But baseball games today are increasingly marketed as multifaceted entertainment experiences offering spectators a variety of additional stimuli potentially distracting their attention from the action on the field Grow and Flagler write In addition to the mascots increasingly sophisticated scoreboards run detailed video graphics with advertisements and scores and video highlights of games being played elsewhere Ballparks also now offer free Wi Fi encouraging fans to use their smartphones to interact with players via social media during games or order food for later pickup 146 Improvements in pitching such as better conditioning and an increased reliance on specialist relief pitchers have led to an increase in foul balls in 2017 the number of foul balls exceeded balls put in play for the first time according to FiveThirtyEight Most of those foul balls have gone into the stands the website attributes this development to the shrinkage of foul territory on the playing field 147 In 2014 Bloomberg News estimated that there were on average 1 750 foul ball injuries at MLB parks every season meaning fans get hit by foul balls more than batters get hit by a pitch 5 Incompatibility with law and economics edit Grow and Flagel note that the Baseball Rule unlike many other areas of tort law has not been reexamined under law and economics a movement that began with Guido Calabresi s 1970 book The Cost of Accidents The goal in torts under law and economics is for most liability to rest with the party that can avoid the most risk at the least cost By doing so they write courts can allocate liability in a way that increases the likelihood the parties will adopt the optimal level of precaution necessary in a given case thus minimizing the overall social cost of accidents 148 It would cost MLB teams which collectively see around 10 billion a year in revenue mere thousands and a few days to install 60 feet 18 m more of netting in thinner sizes which are less visually obstructive Grow and Flagel argue Injured spectators on the other hand 7 5 percent of whom require hospitalization bear the costs of their own medical care or their insurers if they cannot recover in court Those have reached 150 000 in some cases 148 nbsp Fans trying to catch a foul ballAdditional screening Grow and Flagel allow will have some additional costs to teams beyond the installation 148 As many of the Baseball Rule cases have noted the unprotected seats offer fans not just an unobstructed view but a chance to catch and keep a foul ball 54 58 which teams have permitted fans to do since 1921 5 Some may decide not to attend if that opportunity is denied them however Grow and Flagel believe fans will adjust The seats behind home plate and thus the backstop they note are typically the most expensive at any ballpark suggest ing that fans will continue to prioritize proximity to the field over an unobstructed view and will adjust to the presence of additional netting 148 Fans by contrast have three options to reduce their risk sit in a protected seat sit in a distant area of the stadium beyond reach of foul balls or not attend the game at all Grow and Flagel do not think these options are optimal As previously noted it is often utterly impossible or costly to obtain tickets behind screening Fans choosing to sit in the upper decks will make the experience of watching games less desirable and not going to games at all would cost teams more than the netting would The insights provided by the law and economics movement strongly suggest that the Baseball Rule currently fails to impose liability on the lowest cost and best risk avoider the team itself in the most efficient and socially optimal manner Grow and Flagel write 148 Grow and Flagel argue that courts should abandon the Baseball Rule or seriously modify it They recommend subjecting teams to a strict liability standard for spectator injuries which they admit might increase ticket prices but could be balanced by allowing some consideration of a spectator s own negligence such as intoxication or making a deliberate attempt to catch the ball Should courts or legislatures decline to do so they could then expand the definition of the most dangerous area of the field which most courts along with the New Jersey statute enacted in response to Maisonave have historically defined as the area behind home plate without any real evidence The fact that MLB itself has officially encouraged its teams to extend their protective netting beyond just the area immediately behind home plate they observe strongly suggests that the Baseball Rule as traditionally applied no longer imposes a reasonable level of care upon professional baseball teams 149 Courts could also hold that teams have a duty to warn fans about the dangers of foul balls entering the stands to a greater extent than they currently do contrary to the common law that landowners generally do not have to Grow and Flagel write While spectators may be aware that foul balls do enter the stands they may be under the impression those are pop flies more easily avoidable than the line drive fouls that have caused injuries and deaths and they may overestimate their ability to react to the latter While mandatory warnings of hazards have been criticized as ineffectual courts have been receptive to them in situations where the risk of distraction is high Grow and Flagel suggest that if warnings were mandated teams would have an incentive to experiment and find the most effective ways of delivering them 150 Defenses and responses edit The Baseball Rule has its defenders The fact that the limited duty rule has its origins in the earliest days of baseball does not mean it s anachronistic or unfair writes David Tavella Without it he believes teams would have no choice but to screen off the entire field depriving most fans of a chance to catch a foul or connect with the players In particular he criticizes the New Mexico appeals court s Crespin decision which had not yet been overruled at the time of his writing as going too far in leaving all determinations of duty to the jury which could lead to inconsistent results Were the Baseball Rule to be modified he believes Maisonave is a more sensible standard in his opinion since it limits the rule s application to spectators engaged in the game from the seating area and its immediate vicinity 151 Tavella also dismisses complaints about the reliance on assumption of risk The criticisms generally are that the rule is old so it must be changed He is dubious of plaintiffs who testify that their baseball knowledge was so limited that they had no idea balls would leave the field of play saying that danger should be obvious to a first time spectator 152 Tavella believes that a combination of the limited duty rule established in Maisonave the assumption of risk defense and a general negligence standard would best balance the interests of teams and spectators 153 The cases involving mascot antics have come in for specific criticism Ross Freeman a law student at Missouri at the time argued in 2015 that Coomer in particular was wrongly decided for both legal and policy reasons On a legal basis he noted the state did not recognize different degrees of negligence He saw even stronger policy reasons believing the decision would adversely affect the state s MLB teams 154 Citing a 2013 article in The Wall Street Journal 155 that found the total actual gameplay in MLB games averaged about 18 minutes out of the three hours it usually took to play Freeman argued that mascots and other in stadium entertainment were now inextricably part of the game contrary to the state supreme court s holding Teams like the Royals know that some fans come to the games solely for the ballpark food and other fan interactions Regardless of how ballpark owners respond Coomer incentivizes ballpark owners to reduce or eliminate fan interactions with ballpark employees or mascots The court took a very narrow approach to why spectators attend baseball games in person The court s assumption does not account for the possibility that some fans attend games not only to witness the game of baseball but also for the total in stadium experience of attending an MLB game MLB spectators not only desire fan interaction but they expect fan interaction for the price of admission rather than just attending the stadium to simply watch the game 154 The court could also have distinguished Coomer from Lowe the California precedent it relied on Freeman wrote by noting that Tremor s behavior in the latter case was not just negligent but recklessly so 156 Garrett Broshuis a former minor league player and baseball writer who has since become an attorney makes similar arguments for both retaining the Baseball Rule and not applying it to objects tossed by mascots In the former instance he notes in addition to other arguments that stadium designers allow for it In the latter he sees little difference between the launched or thrown hot dogs and foul balls as both are often equally desired So long as adequate care is taken in the selection of such souvenirs for tossing these two attributes spectator awareness and spectator desirability dictate that the baseball rule should extend to souvenirs thrown into the stands 157 See also edit nbsp Baseball portal nbsp Law portal nbsp United States portalSports law 1913 in baseball Baseball law Federal Baseball Club v National League 1922 U S Supreme Court decision finding baseball was not interstate commerce and therefore exempt from antitrust law a decision still in force but likewise criticized as based on outdated facts and legal understanding Matt Keough pitcher whose playing career ended in 1992 after injuries from a foul ball that struck him in the dugout Luis Salazar former player who lost an eye from a foul ball injury while sitting in the dugout Bolton v Stone an English court case of a bystander struck by an errant cricket ballNotes edit It is also possible Hylton writes that baseball team owners of the era may have paid the medical bills of at least some injured fans but he believes that unlikely based on historical accounts suggesting they were not given to such magnanimity 9 While the Blues had finished second in the eight team Association during the 1911 season when Edling suffered his injury they dropped to sixth in 1913 and 1914 when the case was tried and appealed respectively 21 The Blues also argued that the jury might have been confused into thinking passages from a medical textbook read aloud by Edling s counsel while cross examining a physician testifying as expert witness for the defense on the nature of Edling s injury were sworn testimony the court rejected that too saying that it was clear from the record that the attorney had merely been trying to frame his questioning better and was not introducing those passages into evidence 3 The plaintiff also claimed she had been sitting within the protected area however the defense put on 13 witnesses who said otherwise The court held that had she been sitting where she claimed the ball would have had to curve in a highly improbable fashion in order to have hit her but see Curtis v Portland Baseball Club cited below 23 The author of a 1940 Marquette Law Review article discussing the history of litigation over foul ball injuries speculated that there were two reasons for this first players have little control over the specific direction they hit the ball in and second there is no benefit to a batter in intentionally fouling other than to avoid striking out and much to lose as not only are a batter s first two fouls strikes he is out if the foul ball is caught before hitting the ground without even the possibility of benefiting his team as no baserunners can advance in that situation 29 The court also rejected her argument that the usher had assured her the seats were safe finding that his actual words to her amounted only to his observation that many other spectators had sat in that area of the stands without being struck by a foul ball 42 In 1960 Dominick Lasala 68 of Miami died in the hospital two days after being struck on the side of the head at an International League Miami Marlins game the first of two recorded deaths from fouls at minor league games 45 In a similar unpublished 2000 Florida case the parents of a boy injured by a batting practice foul during a pregame visit that was similarly part of a special promotion to the Florida Marlins bullpen were able to recover 66 This reasoning was not widely accepted by courts in other states in 1941 a New York court rejected Eno in a case with similar facts except that the ball that struck the plaintiff was an errant throw holding that since batting practice and warmup is a necessary part of the game a spectator necessarily assumes the risks incident to it should they choose to watch it 76 a position echoed eight years later by a Georgia appeals court in a case involving an errantly thrown ball during pregame warmups 77 This change in procedure was used by another Missouri appellate court in 1941 to reverse a verdict in another plaintiff s favor the holding was that by holding batting practice that way the team had satisfied its duties to spectators 78 A throwing error by Washington Senators third baseman Sherry Robertson in 1943 had led to the first death of a spectator hit by a ball at a major league game but it does not appear that any litigation ensued 81 A decade later another rink defendant asked an appeals court to reconsider this on the basis of hockey s growth in the state in the intervening years 115 it demurred 116 Grow and Flagler speculate that this trend has only been possible because due to the Baseball Rule teams do not have to worry about liability from foul ball injuries 143 References edit a b Nathaniel Grow and Zachary Flagel The Faulty Law and Economics of the Baseball Rule Archived 2019 03 28 at the Wayback Machine 60 Wm amp Mary L Rev 59 63 64 2018 a b c d e f Crane v Kansas City Baseball amp Exhibition Co 153 S W 1076 Mo App 1913 a b c d e f g Edling v Kansas City Baseball amp Exhibition Co 168 S W 908 Mo App 1914 a b Elfrink Tim February 5 2019 A baseball killed a woman at Dodger Stadium MLB s first foul ball death in nearly 50 years The Washington Post Retrieved March 14 2019 a b c Glovin David September 9 2014 Baseball Caught Looking as Fouls Injure 1 750 Fans a Year Bloomberg News Archived from the original on February 7 2019 Retrieved April 4 2019 a b Weeks David Gorman Robert 2015 15 Fans Death at the Ballpark More Than 2 000 Game Related Fatalities of Players Other Personnel and Spectators in Amateur and Professional Baseball 1862 2014 2nd ed McFarland pp 151 161 ISBN 9780786479320 Retrieved March 15 2019 a b c J G Hylton A Foul Ball in the Courtroom The Baseball Spectator Injury as a Case of First Impression 38 Tulsa L Rev 485 487 88 2013 Foul Ball 486n4 a b c d e f Foul Ball 489 92 Indermaur v Danes 1 L R C P 274 Court of Common Pleas 1866 Carleton v Franconia Iron amp Steel Co 99 Mass 216 Mass 1868 Foul Ball 490n28 Bennett v Railroad Company 102 U S 577 1880 Currier v Boston Music Hall Association 135 Mass 414 Mass 1883 Williams v Dean 931 N W 111 Iowa 1907 Blakeley v White Star Line 118 N W 482 Michigan Supreme Court 1908 Baseball Rule at 71 a b c d e f g 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved February 29 2024 Foul Ball 494 Foul Ball 496 7 Foul Ball 499n71 a b c Foul Ball 500 a b Carl Zollman Injuries From Flying Baseballs to Spectators at Ball Games 24 Marq L Rev 198 200 201 1940 Wells v Minneapolis Baseball amp Athletic Association 142 N W 706 Minn 1913 Kavafian v Seattle Baseball Club Association 181 P 679 Wash 1919 Curtis v Portland Baseball Club 279 P 277 Ore 1929 a b c Quinn v Recreation Park Association 3 Cal 2nd 725 Cal 1932 a b Injuries at 199 Injuries at 198 Lorino v New Orleans Baseball amp Amusement Co 133 So 408 La 1931 Injuries 203 204 Grimes v American League Baseball Club 78 S W 2d 520 Mo App 1935 Grimes at 524 Foul Ball 501n89 Foul Ball 501 a b c Baseball Rule 74 76 Brisson v Minneapolis Baseball amp Athletic Association 240 N W 903 Minn 1932 Hudson v Kansas City Baseball Club 164 S W 2d 318 Mo 1942 Hummel v Columbus Baseball Club 71 Ohio App 321 Ohio App 1943 Emhardt v Perry Stadium 113 Ind App 197 Indiana Court of Appeals 1943 a b c Keys v Alamo City Baseball Co 150 S W 2d 360 Tex App 1941 a b Anderson v Kansas City Baseball Club 213 S W 2d 170 Mo 1950 Schentzel v Philadelphia National League Club 173 Pa Superior Ct 179 Pa Superior Court 1953 Schentzel 188 a b c d Death at the Ballpark 153 Fish v Los Angeles Dodgers Baseball Club 56 Cal App 3d 620 640 Cal App 1976 a b c Friedman v Houston Sports Association 731 S W 2d 572 Tex App 1987 Nocera Joe May 11 2017 The Score No Lawyers No Nets Dozens of Injuries Bloomberg Retrieved March 22 2019 as cited at Baseball Rule 65n16 Christopher Yamaguchi The Price of Admission Liability in Professional Baseball and Hockey For Spectator Injuries Sustained During the Course of the Game 2013 Seton Hall University School of Law Student Scholarship 18 Baseball Rule 80 83 C P Goplerud III amp Nicolas P Terry Allocation of Risk between Hockey Fans and Facilities Tort Liability after the Puck Drops 38 Tulsa L Rev 445 461 462 2013 a b c Akins v Glens Falls City School District 53 N Y 2d 325 N Y 1981 a b c Akins 333 37 a b c d e f Rudnick v Golden West Broadcasters 156 Cal App 3d 793 Cal App 4th Dist Div 3 1984 Keys at 371 Friedman 575 77 Jasper v Chicago National League Baseball Club 722 N E 2d 731 Ill App 1st Dist 3rd Div 1999 a b c Edward v City of Albuquerque 241 P 3d 1086 N M 2010 Coronel v Chicago White Sox 595 N E 2d 45 Ill App 1st Dist 2nd Div 1992 Coronel 47 48 a b Coronel 48 50 Ward V KMart Corporation 136 Ill 2d 132 Ill 1990 The plaintiff had been injured when he walked into a post in front of the store carrying a large mirror in front of him that blocked his view Yates v Chicago National League Baseball Club gt Yates v Chicago National League Baseball Club 595 N E 2d 570 Illinois Appellate Court 1992 Yates 577 79 Yates at 581 Gil Fried and Robin Ammon Jr Baseball Spectators Assumption of Risk Is It Fair or Foul 13 Marq Sports L Rev 39 53 2002 a b c Crespin v Albuquerque Baseball Club 216 P 3d 827 N M App 2009 Crespin 834 35 a b c Rountree v Boise Baseball Club 296 P 3d 373 Idaho 2013 South Shore Baseball LLC v DeJesus 11 N E 3d 903 Ind 2014 South Shore Baseball at 911 a b South Shore Baseball 907 909 Wills v Wisconsin Minnesota Light amp Power Co 205 N W 556 Wisc 1925 Baseball Rule at 77 Cincinnati Base Ball Co v Eno 112 Ohio St 175 183 84 Ohio 1925 Zeitz v Cooperstown Centennial 31 Misc 2d 142 144 45 New York Supreme Court Westchester County 1941 Hunt v Thomasville Baseball Co 80 Ga App 472 474 Ga App 1949 Brummerhoff v St Louis National Baseball Club 149 S W 2d 382 Mo App 1941 Injuries at 204 Ratcliff v San Diego Baseball Club 27 Cal App 2d 733 738 Cal App 1938 Death at the Ballpark 161 a b Maytnier v Rush 225 N E 2d 83 Ill App 1st Dist 2nd Div 1967 Maytnier 341 342 Maytnier 346 47 Maytnier at 351 Ted Curtis The Flood Act s Place in Baseball Legal History 9 Marq Sports L Rev 403 408 1999 Loughran v Philadelphia Phillies 888 A 2d 872 Pa Sup 2005 Loughran 875 76 Loughran 877 82 a b Jones v Three Rivers Management Corporation 483 Pa 75 Pa 1978 Jones 84 89 a b Maisonave v Newark Bears 881 A 2d 700 708 709 N J 2005 W e recognize that since the birth of the baseball rule both sports and tort law have undergone massive transformations Maisonave 710 13 a b Maisonave 713 18 a b c Baseball Rule 84 85 Turner v Mandalay Sports Entertainment LLC 180 P 3d 1172 Nev 2008 a b Lowe v California League of Professional Baseball 56 Cal App 4th 112 Cal App 4th Dist Div 2 1997 Lowe 124 25 Harting v Dayton Dragons Professional Baseball Club 171 Ohio App 3d 319 Ohio App 2d Dist 2007 Harting 325 26 Loughran at 882 Coomer v Kansas City Royals 437 S W 3d 184 Mo 2014 Coomer 199 201 Coomer 202 03 Burnes Brian June 17 2015 Jury Clears Royals Once Again in Sluggerrr Hot Dog Toss that Ended Badly Kansas City Star Retrieved March 28 2019 a b Jasper v Chicago National League Ball Club 722 N E 2d 731 Ill App 1st Dist 3rd Div 1999 a b c Price 11 13 Price at 16 Hammel v Madison Square Garden Corporation 156 Misc 311 N Y App 2nd Dept 1935 Ingersoll v Onondaga Hockey Club 245 App Div 137 N Y App 3rd Dept 1935 Shanney v Boston Madison Square Garden Corp 5 N E 2d 1 Mass 1936 Lemoine v Springfield Hockey Association 307 Mass 102 Mass 1940 Thurman v Ice Palace 36 Cal App 2d 364 Cal App 2nd Dist 2nd Div 1939 Thurman at 368 Shurman v Fresno Ice Rink 91 Cal App 2d 469 474 Cal App 4th Dist 1949 Shurman at 477 Finally it cannot be held as a matter of law that the general public has at this particular date become so familiar with the hazards of this sport and of the actual appreciation of the seriousness of the risk as to bring them within the common knowledge rule and under the doctrine of assumption of risk Schwilm v Pennsylvania Sports 84 Pa D amp C 603 Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County 1952 a b Modec v City of Eveleth 29 N W 2d 453 Minn 1947 Riley v Chicago Cougars Hockey Club 100 Ill App 3d 664 666 Ill App 1st Dist 1st Div 1981 Moulas v PBC Productions 213 Wis 2d 406 420 Wisc App 1997 Because the risks associated with hockey should be known to the reasonable person attending a game because Moulas was aware of the risk and because she chose to attend despite her knowledge and the warnings espoused we conclude that summary judgment was appropriate Petrongola v Comcast Spectacor L P 789 A 2d 204 Pa Sup 2001 Nemarink v Los Angeles Kings Hockey Club 127 Cal Rptr 2d 10 15 Cal App 2002 Death of a fan Sports Illustrated April 1 2002 Archived from the original on June 9 2009 Retrieved April 3 2019 Parents of girl killed by puck receive 1 2 million USA Today April 14 2004 Retrieved April 3 2019 Tonner Catherine Sawyer Thomas H Hypes Michael G 1999 Legal Issues in Golf A 25 Year Litigation History 1973 1998 Journal of Legal Aspects of Sport 9 2 126 doi 10 1123 jlas 9 3 125 Retrieved April 1 2019 a b Price at 23 John J Kircher Golf and Torts An Interesting Twosome 12 Marq Sports L Rev 347 348 359 Duffy v Midlothian Country Club 92 Ill App 3d 193 Ill App 1st Dist 5th Div 1980 Duffy 199 200 Duffy v Midlothian Country Club 135 Ill App 3d 429 Ill App 1st Dist 5th Div 1985 a b Grisim v Tapemark Charity Pro Am Golf Tournament 394 N W 2d 261 Minn App 1986 Siskind Gary E December 1968 Liabilities for Injuries to Spectators Osgoode Hall Law Journal 6 2 307 Retrieved April 2 2019 Elliot v Amphitheatre Ltd 3 W W R 225 Man S Ct 1934 James v R I Auditorium 199 A 293 R I 1938 a b St John Allen September 30 2017 Does Japanese Baseball Have The Answer For MLB s Dangerous Foul Ball Problem Forbes Retrieved April 2 2019 a b c Graczyk Wayne December 26 2015 Protecting fans from batted balls presents an ongoing challenge Japan Times Retrieved April 2 2019 Witz Billy October 1 2017 Father of Girl Hit by Ball Recounts Ordeal and the Yankees Promise Fixes The New York Times Retrieved April 3 2019 Gorman Bob November 17 2017 The Antiquated Baseball Rule WordPress Retrieved April 3 2019 Baseball Rule 95 96 a b Baseball Rule 90 91 Baseball fans deserve more protection from foul balls Chicago Tribune August 29 2017 Retrieved April 4 2017 Costa v Boston Red Sox Baseball Club 61 Mass App Ct 299 300 Mass App 2004 Moreover avoiding injury from a ball hit into the stands sometimes may be close to impossible According to a professor of engineering retained by the plaintiff the plaintiff had virtually no time to react to the ball that came her way He determined with the help of a range finder that the distance from the plaintiff s seat to home plate was forty seven yards or 141 feet By analyzing a videotape of the game he also determined that the minimum speed of the baseball at the time it struck the plaintiff was ninety miles per hour or 132 feet per second Thus he concluded the plaintiff had no more than 1 07 seconds from the time Lewis hit the ball to take evasive action Baseball Rule at 87 Baseball Rule 87 90 Baseball Spectators at 55 Baseball Rule 97 98 Sawchik Travis February 21 2019 Foul Balls Are The Pace Of Play Problem Nobody s Talking About FiveThirtyEight Retrieved April 4 2019 a b c d e Baseball Rule 98 106 Baseball Rule 111 118 Baseball Rule 118 122 David Tavella Duty of Care to Spectators at Sporting Events A Unified Theory 6 Fla A amp M U Law Rev 181 189 190 2010 Duty of Care at 192 Duty of Care 195 196 a b Ross Freeman The Hot Dog Days of Summer Missouri s Baseball Rule Takes a Strike 80 Mo L Rev 560 571 75 2015 Moyer Steve July 16 2013 In America s Pastime Baseball Players Pass A Lot of Time The Wall Street Journal Retrieved April 5 2019 Dog Days 577 78 Garrett Broshuis Death to the Crazy Hot Dog Vendor The Continued Erosion of the Baseball Rule After Coomer v Kansas City Royals 6 7 sportslaw org 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Baseball Rule amp oldid 1187438231, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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