TRIAL MAGAZINE / July,
2000
When Playtime
Goes Wrong
By
Edward Steinbrecher
 |
| Children's joy on playgrounds
can turn to tears. Over 200,000 children suffer
playground injuries each year. |
Parents
think of a playground as a safe haven for
their children, but more than 200,000 children are
seen in emergency rooms each year as a result of playground
injuries. Seventy-five percent of these injuries occur
on public playgrounds, and 75 percent
are caused by falls. Thirty-six percent are classified
as severe. At least 15 children die each year due
to playground injuries, mostly caused by falls to
hard surfaces, strangulation by entanglement,
and head entrapment.
1
These injuries are not confined to a few aging playgrounds.
Safety problems are remarkably widespread. In a nationwide
survey of 760 playgrounds, 87 percent lacked adequate
protective surfaces, 42 percent had equipment with
head-entrapment hazards, and 40 percent had equipment
with protruding parts that could cause clothing to
become entangled. Overall, 43 percent of the playgrounds
surveyed had at least one piece of hazardous equipment.
2
| Thousands
of kids are injured on playgrounds every year
despite readily available safety standards.
Those responsible can be held liable. |
Most playground injuries and deaths
can be prevented with safe equipment design and playground
operation. Although it was common in the past for
playground operators to attempt to place blame for
an injury on the child who fell or on another boy
or girl who pushed the injured child, these excuses
are no longer valid. The duty to provide safe play
areas should be placed on those responsible for marketing
playground equipment and for operating playgrounds.
The duty of care owed
by a playground operator is the degree of care that
a person of ordinary prudence charged with similar
duties would exercise in the same circumstances.
3 A public or private landowner has a duty
to provide adequate supervision and to maintain the
premises and playground surfaces in a reasonably safe
condition.
The most authoritative
playground safety standards are published by the U.S.
Consumer Product Safety Commission in its Handbook
for Public Playground Safety. 4
This publication is the cornerstone of litigation
involving dangerous conditions of playgrounds and
related equipment. Another important resource is the
Report and Model Law on Public Play Equipment and
Areas,published by the Consumer
Federation of America.
5
The Handbook and
the Report, which list nearly identical standards,
contain a wealth of information regarding playground-surface
and equipment hazards. Any manufacturer of playground
equipment or any public entity operating playgrounds
is expected to be familiar with these standards.
Recently, the Handbook
was adopted by statute in California, which now requires
that all public playgrounds conform to these safety
standards. 6
Connecticut, Michigan, New Jersey, North Carolina,
and Texas have either adopted the Handbook
or are close to doing so. 7
The Handbook contains numerous requirements
for appropriate inspection and maintenance of equipment
and surfaces. Section 7.2 states that "all equipment
should be inspected frequently for any potential hazards,"
and "any damage or hazards detected during inspection
should be repaired immediately." This section
requires that records of all maintenance, inspections,
and repairs, as well as records of any accidents,
be retained.
At trial, a playground safety expert or consultant
familiar with these standards should present them
to a jury. 8
The expert should refer to the standards as tools
of good design, operation, and maintenance.
In the past, most playground cases were based on negligent
supervision, and these claims should still be pursued.
The defense usually seeks to blame the injured child,
claiming assumption of the risk or contributory negligence.
9 Defendants also claim the injury would not
have been prevented by the mere presence of supervision.
Because a school district or public entity has only
a general duty to supervise, defendants often argue,
it is difficult to conceive of a plan that would require
a supervisor to be near every child on a playground.
Generally, liability is easier to establish when there
was no supervision or when supervision was abandoned.
10
However, despite defendants typical arguments,
it is well known that the presence of supervisors
provides authority and discipline to protect against
serious injuries. 11
Pupils who were present on a playground near the time
of an accident have been allowed to testify that if
a teacher or supervisor had been present, the children
would have behaved differently.
12 If the accident involves a second students
misconduct, evidence of the students prior misconduct
will show that the supervisor should have foreseen
the possibility of injury.
13
Hazardous surfaces
The presence of a hard playground
surface is another possible basis for operator liability,
but the case law shows conflicting results in these
claims.14 Some states have found liability where playgrounds
had hard surfaces that contributed to injuries,
15 while other jurisdictions have reached the
opposite result and placed the blame for a fall on
the child.16
Falls inevitably occur on playgrounds, but
the severity of injury is directly related to the
surface on which a child falls. According to the CPSCs
Handbook.
| The surface under and around playground
equipment can be a major factor in determining
the injury-causing potential of a fall. A fall
onto a shock-absorbing surface is less likely
to cause a serious injury than a fall onto a hard
surface. Because head-impact injuries from a fall
have the potential for being life-threatening,
the more shock-absorbing a surface can be made,
the greater is the likelihood of reducing severe
injuries. 17 |
The Handbook
contains a table listing the "critical heights"
of various types of surfacing material.
19 The critical height is the height below
which a fall would not be expected to cause a life-threatening
injury. An expert can measure the fall height (the
height of the highest play surface) of a piece of
equipment, and use the table to determine whether
the ground surface is safe for that fall height. The
critical height of the surface must be equal to or
greater than the fall height of the equipment.
A safe surface
of loose-filled materials needs frequent inspection
to maintain adequate depth and to make sure the materials
remain loose. Without maintenance, the surface can
easily deteriorate and lose some of its shock-absorbing
properties.
In a playground
surface case, the jury needs to know that the type
of surface determines the injury-causing potential
of a fall and that careful design of the surface minimizes
the risk of serious injury. The defendant should have
taken this principle into account in designing and
maintaining the playground. Industry standards can
be used as proof of negligence or, at a minimum, to
present a question of fact. 20
A medical or
biomechanical expert can explain to the jury the mechanism
of injury and how much force is necessary to fracture
certain bones or cause head trauma. If the fall onto
a hard surface would have had a different outcome
on a safe surface, causation may be established. The
expert should explain why the surface was defective
and what the outcome would have been if the surface
had been safe.
Proving notice
In cases against
playground operators, the plaintiff must offer proof
that the defendant had actual or constructive notice
of a dangerous conditionthat the defendant either
knew or should have known of the danger or defect.
21 The more
obvious the dangerous condition, the more likely it
is that the operator had constructive notice of it.
Good sources for proving
notice are other children who used the playground
and people who conducted inspections, such as government
inspectors or employees of the playground operator.
Notice can also be proved by showing other incidents
where children sustained injury in a similar fashion.
The longer the dangerous condition existed, the more
opportunity the defendant had to discover and remedy
it.
Proof of the dangerous
condition must be documented by timely photographs
and videotape. 22
Measurements need to be made of the fall height, the
protruding object, the entanglement or entrapment
hazard, and the overall dimensions of the equipment.
Product liability
Like other products,
playground equipment is considered defective if it
is not as safe as an ordinary consumer would expect
or if the benefits of the design are outweighed by
the risks. 23
Equipment design is often implicated in causing serious
injuries to children.
| In a nationwide survey of
760 playgrounds, 43 had at least one piece of
hazardous equipment. |
For example, Marlene Escalera
broke her leg at a McDonalds playground while
playing on a Tug-N-Turn, a self-propelled merry-go-round.
24 The shoelace from her sneaker got caught
in a protruding bolt at the bottom of the stationary
base that she twirled around, causing a spiral fracture
of her leg. More than 40 other young children sustained
the same injury on the Tug-N-Turn, yet nothing was
done to eliminate the protrusion hazard.
McDonalds Corp. and JBI,
the manufacturer, were aware that the protruding bolt
was causing injuries and designed a cover to fit over
the bolt, but they failed to retrofit about 1,000
Tug-N-Turns already in use at the restaurants. A jury
found McDonalds Corp. liable on a products liability
theory since it had actively participated in the product
design.
A common theme of products liability cases involving
playground equipment is the adequacy of warnings.
A manufacturer must take into account reasonably foreseeable
misuses of its product. 25
Liability extends to unintended uses if they were
foreseeable. The manufacturer should provide warnings
in light of all the foreseeable uses of the product
and instructions regarding regular maintenance and
replacement of parts.
Warnings help those responsible for the equipment
practice reasonable accident prevention in light of
potential hazards. Warnings can be placed in manuals,
but they are better placed on the equipment because
the manual is not always available to those charged
with maintenance, inspection, and supervision.
While the duty to install safe surfacing belongs to
the playground operator, a manufacturer must warn
of the need for safe surfacing under its equipment.
The company should provide a label warning of the
danger of installing its equipment on hard surfaces
and should warn that the fall height should not exceed
the critical height of the surface. The manufacturer
should give information about the critical heights
of various types of surfacing.
A manufacturer should not be able to claim that the
danger of installing climbing equipment on asphalt
is obvious to a person of ordinary prudence. 26
The company has superior knowledge regarding safe
installation and surfacing around its product.
The absence or inadequacy of warnings needs to be
causally linked to the conduct that would have been
different had proper warnings been provided. Warnings
are meant to guide the behavior of the adults in charge
of the playground who may not understand the hazards
and what they could have done to make the equipment
and play area safer. In some jurisdictions, there
is a presumption that a warning would have been heeded
had it been given. 27
In investigating the
warnings, it is important to obtain the manufacturers
literature, such as advertising, catalogs, and instructions
for assembly and maintenance. The playground operator
should provide the purchase documents; the inspection
and maintenance documents; and any rules or guidelines
for inspection, maintenance, and operation of the
playground.
Once the hazards are
understood, the warnings given by the manufacturer
must be reviewed to determine whether better warnings
would have made a difference in the outcome of the
accident.
Like crashworthiness
cases
In some ways,
playground cases are similar to crashworthiness cases.
Car manufacturers are required to protect against
the foreseeable consequences of an automobile collision.
It does not matter who is at fault in causing the
accident. Rather, the issue is whether the injuries
could have been prevented or minimized through safe
design. 28
These same principles apply to playground accidents.
Under a negligence
or products liability theory, the negligence or defect
does not have to be the only factor in causing the
injury, but it must be a substantial factor. 29
For example, a slide may be equipped with inadequate
handrails, but an injury might occur when one child
pushes another child in such a way that the handrails
would make no difference. Under these circumstances,
the manufacturer would probably not be liable. However,
the jury should be allowed to decide whether inadvertent
falls or typical childs behavior that could
be construed as negligence was foreseeable to the
manufacturer or playground operator.
Playground safety
has improved over the years, but much more needs to
be done. Most of the 200,000 injuries a year that
send children to emergency roomsas well as the
15 deaths each yearcan be prevented if playground
operators follow widely available safety standards
and if manufacturers design equipment carefully and
warn users adequately. Safe design, proper warnings,
and adherence to safe standards of operation are not
too much to ask for the safety of our children.
Notes
1. CONSUMER
PROD. SAFETY COMMN, PUB. NO. 325, HANDBOOK FOR
PUBLIC PLAYGROUND SAFETY (1997) (available at http://www.cpsc.gov)
[hereafter CPSC HANDBOOK]; M.G. Mack et al., Playground
Injuries in the 90s, 33 PARKS & RECREATION
88 (1998); National Program for Playground Safety,
Statistics (visited Apr. 23, 2000) http://www.uni.edu/playground/.
2. U.S. Public
Interest Research Group, Playing It Safe: A Fourth
Nationwide Safety Survey of Public Playgrounds (visited
Apr. 23, 2000)
http://www. pirg.org/consumer/playground/98/.
3. See, e.g.,
District of Columbia v. Shannon, 696 A.2d 1359, 1363
(D.C. 1997).
4. First published
in 1981, revised in 1991, 1994, and 1997. Download
a free copy at http://www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/pubs/325.pdf.
5. First published
in 1992, revised in 1996 and 1998.
6. CAL. HEALTH &
SAFETY CODE §115730 (West 2000).
7. See National Program
for Playground Safety, In the News (visited Apr. 23,
2000) http://www.uni.
edu/playground/.
8. Dash v. City of
New York, 654 N.Y.S.2d 33, 34 (App. Div. 1997).
9. At common law and
in most states, a minor under the age of four is not
capable of negligence. Untalan v. Glass, 12 Cal. Rptr.
1, 2 (1961).
10. See Lopez v. City
of New York, 163 N.Y.S.2d 562, 565 (App. Div. 1957),
affd, 178 N.Y.S.2d 860 (1958).
11. Titus v. Lindberg,
228 A.2d 65, 70 (N.J. 1967).
12. See Cirillo v.
Milwaukee, 150 N.W.2d 460, 465 (Wis. 1967).
13. Silverman v. Board
of Educ., 225 N.Y.S.2d 77 (App. Div. 1962).
14. See, e.g., James
L. Isham, Annotation, Liability of Local Government
Entity for Injury Resulting from Use of Outdoor Playground
Equipment at Municipally Owned Park or Recreation
Area, 73 A.L.R. 4th 496 (1989).
15. See, e.g.,
City of Miami v. Ameller, 472 So. 2d 728, 729 (Fla.
1985); Prosser v. County of Erie, 665 N.Y.S.2d 216
(App. Div. 1997).
16. Scarano v. Town
of Ela, 520 N.E.2d 62, 65 (Ill. App. Ct. 1988); Stewart
v. New York City Hous. Auth., 307 N.Y.S.2d 674 (App.
Div. 1970).
17. CPSC HANDBOOK,
supra note 1, at §4.
18. CONSUMER PROD.
SAFETY COMMN, PROPOSED STANDARD FOR PUBLIC PLAYGROUND
EQUIPMENT 29 (1976).
19. CPSC HANDBOOK,
supra note 1, §4.5,
Table 1.
20. Hinckley v. Krantz,
658 N.E.2d 797 (Ohio Ct. App. 1995).
21. See, e.g., Miller
v. District of Columbia, 343 A.2d 278, 280 (D.C. 1975)
(stating that constructive notice is inferred from
duty to inspect); Felt v. City of Toledo, 192 N.E.
11 (Ohio Ct. App. 1933).
22. See, e.g.,
Ortego v. Jefferson Davis Parish Sch. Bd., 657 So.
2d 378, 381 (La. Ct. App. 1995) (holding photos taken
four months after the accident inadmissible).
23. See, e.g.,
Barker v. Lull Engg Co., 573 P.2d 443 (Cal.
1978).
24. Escalera v. McDonalds
Corp., No. 208390 (Cal., Kern County Super. Ct. Dec.
3, 1991). A $5 million fine was later imposed by the
CPSC based on McDonalds failure to report playground
accidents.
25. See, e.g., Ringstad
v. I. Magnin & Co., 239 P.2d 848 (Wash. 1952).
26. Hart v. Western
Inv. & Dev. Co., 417 F.2d 1296, 1301 (10th Cir.
1969).
27. See, e.g., Coffman
v. Keene Corp., 628 A.2d 710 (N.J. 1993).
28. See, e.g.,
Kudlacek v. Fiat S.p.A., 509 N.W.2d 603, 606 (Neb.
1994).
29. See, e.g.,
Mitchell v. Gonzales, 819 P.2d 872, 876 (Cal. 1991).
Edward
Steinbrecher is the managing
partner of Encino's Steinbrecher and Associates, specializing
in serious injury cases, including crashworthiness,
product liability and premises liability matters.
He can be reached at ed@steinbrecherlaw.com.
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