OPINION
BROOK, Chief Judge.
Case Summary1
Appellant-plaintiff City of Gary, Indiana, by its Mayor, Scott L. King (“the City”), appeals the trial court’s dismissal of its suit against various handgun manufacturers, a handgun distributor, and various [374]*374handgun dealers (collectively, “Appellees”). We affirm in part and reverse and remand in part.
Issues
The City raises eight issues for our review, which we consolidate and restate as the following three:
I. whether the trial court properly dismissed the City’s public nuisance claim;
II. whether the trial court properly dismissed the City’s negligence claims; and
III. whether the trial court properly struck a proposed settlement agreement between the City and one of the Appellees from the City’s first amended complaint.
Facts and Procedural History
Appellees either manufacture, distribute, or sell handguns. The City originally filed suit against Appellees in Lake County Superior Court, alleging public nuisance against all Appellees; negligent distribution, marketing, and failure to warn against all Appellees; and negligent design against manufacturer Appellees. The City sought compensatory damages, injunctive relief, and punitive damages. On September 29, 1999, Appellees filed a notice of removal to federal court. On April 17, 2000, the federal court determined that there were no issues of federal law in the City’s claims and remanded the case to the trial court. In May and June of 2000, Appellees filed motions to dismiss under Indiana Trial Rule 12(B)(6) for failure to state claims upon which relief could be granted. On January 12, 2001, the trial court granted Appellees’ motions and dismissed all the City’s claims in an order reading in relevant part as follows:
JUDGMENT OF DISMISSAL
The parties defendant have been segregated by plaintiffs Complaint into the following categories, which identification said defendants seem to have accepted:
Manufacturers:
Smith & Wesson Corp.
F.I.E. Corp.
Beretta U.S.A. Corp.
Glock Corp.
Charter Arms Corp.
Savage Arms Corp.[*]
Interarms Corp.[*]
Harrington & Richardson Corp[*]
Hi-Point Firearms Corp.
Sigarms Corp.[*]
Navegar, Inc. d/b/a Intratec USA Corp.
Bryco Arms Corp.
Kel-Tec Cnc, Corp.[*]
Phoenix Arms Corp.
Lorcin Engineering Corp.
St[ur]m, Ruger & Co. Corp.
Sundance Industries Corp.1*5
Taurus Firearms Corp.
Dealers:
Ameri-Pawn of Lake Station, Inc.
Blythe[’]s Sport Shop, Inc.
Cash Indiana, Inc.
Fetla[’]s Bargain Center, IncJ*3
Jim Shema’s Outdoor Sports
Westforth Sports, Inc.
Distributor:
B.L. Jennings, Inc.
Miscellaneous John Does: [377]*377legislature, is improper. See Ind. Code § 35-47-2-1, et seq. (1999); see also Kellogg, 562 N.E.2d at 694.
[375]*375It has been conceded that, basically, Manufacturers sell handguns to Distributors, who in turn sell to Dealers, who in turn sell to the general public. Manufacturers are precluded by law from selling direct to members of the general public. This lawsuit applies only to the sale and distribution of handguns; not long guns (rifles and/or shot guns).
During the course of proceedings, the City settled with defendant, Fetla[’]s Bargain Center, Inc., and they are no longer a party. In addition, the City unilaterally filed with the Court a copy of an unexecuted, but proposed written Settlement Agreement between defendant Smith & Wesson Corp. and the City. There is no evidence that such Agreement was ever entered into, and Smith & Wesson Corp. remains a party defendant in this litigation. Defendant objected and moved to strike out the filing. The City did not object or otherwise respond. During the course of the second day of arguments, City referred to the Agreement, and defendants reiterated their objection. The Court sustained defendantsF] objection and granted their Motion to Strike the document from the Court’s records, as irrelevant, under Rule of Evidence 401, and as a purported agreement of settlement and compromise under Rule of Evidence 408. It should be noted that efforts were made to remove this cause to the United States District Court, for the Northern District of Indiana, Hammond Division, sitting at Hammond. Many months elapsed, during which pleadings and papers were filed in the Federal Clerk’s Office, before the Federal Court declined removal, and remanded the cause to state court.
The defendants’ respective Motion(s) to Dismiss are predicated upon Ind. Trial Rule 12(B)(6) which provides, in substance, for a dismissal of a pending cause if the well-pleaded allegations of the pending complaint, when taken as true, fail to state a claim upon which any relief can be granted, even when all inferences and intendments are taken, and viewed, in a light most favorable to plaintiff. Donahue v. St. Joseph County, 720 N.E.2d 1236 (Ind.Ct.App.1999), and City of New Haven v. Reichart, 729 N.E.2d 600 (Ind.Ct.App.2000).
The Court Finds, Concludes, Adjudges and Decrees that each and all of the respective defendants’, manufacturers^], distributoras] and dealers[’] separate and several motions to dismiss should be, and the same hereby are, GRANTED, and this cause should be, and the same is hereby, DISMISSED, as to each and all of the remaining captioned defendants, for the following separate and several reasons, and upon the following separate and several grounds, to-wit:
The common law requirements for public nuisance claims in Indiana are very clear. First, public nuisance claims must arise from an unreasonable use of property. Deller v. Hofferberth, [127 Ind. 414] 26 N.E. 889 (Ind.1[89]1), or a violation of a specific statute, Whittington v. State of Indiana, 669 N.E.2d 1363 (Ind.1996). Second, to be liable for a public nuisance, one must be in control of the offending item or activity at the time of injury to plaintiff. See, e.g. Brown v. Powell, [92 Ind.App. 467] 176 N.E. 241, 243 (Ind.Ct.App.1931). Third, because public nuisance describes a form of harm rather than a free-standing tort theory of liability, plaintiffs must plead an actionable basis in tort for such a claim. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 821B, cmt. e. Fourth, a legislative body cannot authorize conduct on one hand, and seek to punish it through public nuisance actions on the other, [376]*376particularly where a comprehensive regulatory scheme already governs the challenged conduct. Sopher v. State, [169 Ind. 177] 81 N.E. 913 (Ind.1907). Plaintiffs Complaint does not satisfy any of these requirements. Plaintiffs Complaint fails to bring the City’s public nuisance claim within the limits set by Indiana common law.
Arguing that it need not plead an underlying tort in order to claim relief for the harm produced by a public nuisance, the City departs once again from common law, which requires that a defendant’s interference with a public right involve conduct which is “intentional or unintentional and otherwise actionable under the principles controlling liability for negligent or reckless conduct or for abnormally dangerous activities.” Restatement § 821B, cmt. e. In other words, public nuisance claims must arise from conduct which is actionable, not merely any conduct for which liability would not otherwise he, as plaintiff proposes.
As the City’s cases demonstrate, Indiana courts require that a plaintiff plead and show underlying actionable conduct in order to support a public nuisance claim. Contrary to plaintiffs argument, conduct cannot constitute a public nuisance unless it is actionable under some theory of tort law. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 821B cmt. c. The City has not pled and cannot plead actionable negligence, intentional misconduct or conduct creating an ultrahaz-ardous activity. The City is required to do so to survive defendants’ motion to dismiss.
Indiana common law likewise prohibits the City’s public nuisance claim here because defendants’ commercial activities are legislatively authorized and extensively regulated. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 821B, cmt. f; Sopher, 81 N.E. at 915. Under an umbrella of statutes and regulations, the United States Congress, the Indiana legislature, and Gary have each authorized the lawful distribution, ownership and sale of firearms of specific styles to federally licensed commercial entities — precisely the activity the City now seeks to declare a nuisance.
The City misstates Indiana law, claiming that defendants owe a duty of care to the City, because harm to the City caused by the criminal misuse of firearms is foreseeable. Indiana law supports the imposition of a duty of care to avoid foreseeable injuries to foreseeable victims only where the defendant has a relationship with the plaintiff that gives rise to a duty to protect the plaintiff from such injuries or, in the absence of such a relationship, where the defendant has actual control over the instrumentality which caused the harm. Ebbingham [v. FirstFleet, Inc.], 693 N.E.2d [644] at 648 [ (Ind.App.1998) ]; Whitten v. Kentucky Fried Chicken Corp., 570 N.E.2d 1353, 1356 (Ind.Ct.App.1991); Helmchen [v. White Hen Pantry, Inc.], 685 N.E.2d [180] at 181 [(Ind.App.1997)].
Public policy, as articulated by the Indiana legislature, supports defendants’ continued lawful, regulated manufacture and distribution of firearms to Indiana citizens. Kellogg vs. City of Gary, 562 N.E.2d 685, 694 (Ind.1990). Indiana statutes and regulations reflect Indiana’s public policy considerations concerning firearms and the distribution thereof. Those statutes and regulations expressly allow defendants to do precisely what the City claims renders them subject to liability in negligence. See id. The City’s attempt to characterize defendants as “wrongdoers”, where their activities are expressly allowed by the Indiana Constitution and the Indiana
[377]*377The City attempts to aggregate all shootings, including accidental and intentional shootings, as a basis for its product liability claim. By doing so, the City seeks to hold defendants absolutely liable for injuries sustained through any use of firearms, even where the firearms are misused and/or deliberately operated to cause intentional injury. Neither Indiana nor any other court has adopted such a radical departure from product liability law. See id.
The City’s failure to warn claim is equally flawed. In an attempt to maintain its otherwise deficient claim, the City reconfigures its argument, stating that defendants have not adequately warned buyers about the non-obvious dangers posed by firearms. The City cannot evade the allegations of its own Complaint, which — because of its aggregated nature — seeks to impose liability for failing to warn of the open and obvious dangers associated with firearms, as well as of the dangers of intentional and criminal misuse. In Indiana, a duty to warn of a product’s risks extends only to those who can reasonably be assumed to be ignorant of the risks that a warning would illuminate. Senco Prod. Inc. v. Riley, 434 N.E.2d 561, 570 (Ind.Ct.App. 1982). Moreover, the duty to warn assumes that there is a hidden defect in the product such that the danger created by the defect is not open or obvious to all. See Bemis Co. v. Rubush, 427 N.E.2d 1058, 1061, cert. denied, 459 U.S. 825, 103 S.Ct. 57, 74 L.Ed.2d 61 (1982). There is no such basis for such an assumption here, in light of the City’s aggregated claims which seek liability on the basis of intentional as well as accidental shootings. Accordingly, the City’s failure to warn claim should be dismissed.
For the reasons, and upon the grounds, set forth above, the Court GRANTS defendants’ Motions to Dismiss and, pursuant to Ind. Trial Rule 54(B), the Court expressly determines that there is no just reason for delay in entry of Judgment in favor of the defendants. Accordingly, the Court expressly directs entry of Judgment in favor of each and all of the remaining defendants named in the caption, and against the plaintiff City of Gary, by its Mayor, Scott L. King.
It is so ORDERED, ADJUDGED and DECREED this 12 day of January, 2001.
On January 22, 2001, the City filed an amended complaint, naming as additional defendants manufacturer Appellees Browning Arms Corp. (“Browning”), Colt’s Manufacturing Co., Inc. (“Colt’s”), and Davis Industries, Inc. (“Davis Industries”). On March 13, 2001, the trial court granted Appellees’ motion to dismiss the amended complaint:
ORDER OF MARCH 13,2001
On January 23, 2001, Plaintiff files its First Amended Complaint, amended by interlineation on March 12, 2001, after the original Complaint had been dismissed by this Court on January 12, 2001.
Certain Defendants filed a renewed Motion to Dismiss, along with a Motion to Strike the Smith and Wesson Settlement Agreement incorporated in the Amended Complaint. Other Defendants joined in said motion.
The Court NOW DETERMINES to grant Defendants’ Motion to Strike the Smith and Wesson Settlement Agree[378]*378ment included in the Amended Complaint as being immaterial to the issues being raised in the Complaint and is not admissible under Indiana Rules of Evidence No. 405.2 The Court FURTHER DETERMINES that the Amended Complaint does not correct the deficiencies of the original Complaint as determined by the Court with opinion.
IT IS THEREFORE, ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that the renewed Motion to Dismiss Plaintiffs First Amended Complaint by all Defendants is GRANTED and Plaintiffs First Amended Complaint is dismissed in its entirety with prejudice. It is further ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that the renewed Motion to Strike the Smith and Wesson Settlement Agreement by all Defendants is GRANTED and the Settlement Agreement of March 17, 2000 attached as an Exhibit to City’s First Amended Complaint is ORDERED stricken. The Court incorporates herein the reasoning set forth in its Order dated January 12, 2001.
SO ORDERED this 13th day of March, 2001.
The City now appeals.
Discussion and Decision
The trial court granted Appellees’ motion to dismiss the City’s complaint pursuant to Trial Rule 12(B)(6).
A trial rule 12(B)(6) motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted tests the sufficiency of a claim, not the facts supporting it. Therefore, we view the pleadings in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party and draw every reasonable inference therefrom in favor of that party. When reviewing a ruling on a motion to dismiss, we stand in the shoes of the trial court and must determine if the trial court erred in its application of the law.
Borgman v. Aikens, 681 N.E.2d 213, 216-17 (Ind.Ct.App.1997), trans. denied (1998) (citations omitted).
We will not affirm a dismissal under T.R. 12(B)(6) unless it is apparent that the facts alleged in the challenged pleading are incapable of supporting relief under any set of circumstances. This court accepts as true the facts alleged in the pleading. Only when the pleading states a set of facts, which, even if true, would not support the relief requested, will we affirm the trial court’s dismissal.
Lattimore v. Amsler, 758 N.E.2d 568, 570 (Ind.Ct.App.2001) (citations omitted).
Under Indiana’s “notice” pleading system, a pleading need not adopt a specific legal theory of recovery to be adhered to throughout the case. Ind.Trial Rule 8(A)[.] A pleading is sufficient when it pleads the operative facts so as to place the defendant on notice as to the evidence to be presented at trial. Rather than exalt form over substance, this Court will uphold its long-standing policy that cases should be decided on the merits and justice should not be defeated by technicalities.
Binninger v. Hendricks County Bd. of Zoning Comm’rs, 668 N.E.2d 269, 272 (Ind.Ct.App.1996), trans. denied (1997) (some citations omitted). With these standards in mind, we turn to the City’s substantive claims.
I. Public Nuisance
In its amended complaint, the City alleged that “[Appellees’] joint and several [379]*379ongoing wrongful conduct relating to their creation, promotion, support, and supply of an illegitimate secondary market for handguns has created, maintained, and contributed to a public nuisance in the City of Gary.” Appellant’s App. at 31. Several of the City’s factual allegations involve dealer Appellees participating in “straw purchases,” wherein a person purchases a handgun with the intent to transfer it to a person who the purchaser knows cannot legally purchase a handgun. Id. at 15-18. The City further alleged that “the residents of Gary will continue to fear for their health, safety and welfare and will be subjected to conduct that interferes with the comfortable enjoyment of their life and property.” Id. at 31. Before we can evaluate the City’s public nuisance claim, we must examine the relevant public nuisance law.
Indiana Code Section 34-19-1-1 provides that “[wjhatever is: (1) injurious to health; (2) indecent; (3) offensive to the senses; or (4) an obstruction to the free use of property; so as essentially to interfere with the comfortable enjoyment of life or property, is a nuisance, and the subject of an action.” This statute authorizes two causes of action: private nuisance and public nuisance. “The essence of a private nuisance is the use of property to the detriment of the use and enjoyment of another’s property[,]” Wernke v. Halas, 600 N.E.2d 117, 120 (Ind.Ct.App.1992), whereas “[a] public nuisance only requires an interference with a common right.” Sand Creek Partners, L.P. v. Finch, 647 N.E.2d 1149, 1152 n. 4 (Ind.Ct.App.1995).3
The nuisance statute is written in broad, general terms, and “it becomes clear that an incredible breadth of conduct arguably fits under the label ‘nuisance’, including most crimes and torts.” Id. at 1152. “Some limits must exist on the law of nuisance[;] to ascertain these limits we turn to our common law.” Id. Of relevance in the instant case, one limitation is the legislative authorization of a particular activity.4
[380]*380This limitation was explained by our supreme court in the following passage from Sopher v. State, 169 Ind. 177, 81 N.E. 913 (1907), in which the State sued a licensed saloon owner:
A public nuisance, strictly speaking, arises out of the violation of public rights, and, as a general rule, results in no more special injury5 to one person than to another. 1 Wood, Nuisances (3d ed.), § 1.
Such a nuisance always arises from unlawful acts, consequently that which is lawful cannot be regarded in a legal sense as a public nuisance. Therefore, if the legislature of the State, by a statute, authorizes an act to be done, which, in the absence of such a statute, would constitute a public nuisance, such act is thereby made lawful, and cannot be considered or regarded in a legal sense as a nuisance so far as the public is concerned, unless the legislature, in enacting the statute, has exceeded its power.
Id. at 183, 81 N.E. at 915 (emphasis added).
The Sopher court went on to explain that
[i]t is not within the province of the judges of this court, nor of those of the lower courts, in the discharge of their official duties, to criticize the policy of the legislative department, which the latter has adopted in dealing with the liquor traffic. In the administration of justice all courts must be controlled, so far as applicable, by the laws which the legislature has constitutionally enacted, without regard to the individual views, in respect to the wisdom or expediency of such laws, of the persons who may preside over such courts. Neither boards of commissioners nor courts can be held responsible for granting a license under the laws to sell intoxicating liquors to an applicant therefor who is shown to be legally entitled to such license. In discharging this duty such boards of commissioners and courts but carry out the mandate of the law, above which no one can rise, and not the individual views of those who preside over them. It must be evident to every unprejudiced mind that a court cannot nullify an act of the legislature on the mere assertion of persons assailing it that a license granted thereunder permits the licensee to maintain a public nuisance per se by merely selling intoxicating liquors, without violating any of the laws of the State in conducting the place in which such liquors are sold, for, as heretofore shown, whatever is authorized by an act of the legislature, which that body is competent, under the Constitution, to pass, is not, in the eye of the law, a nuisance.
While all citizens of this State have a perfect right to cry out, or declare upon the hustings, or before the legislature, or other assembled bodies, that the liquor traffic cannot be legalized without committing a sin, and while their arguments might be sufficiently potent to induce the legislature to prohibit abso[381]*381lutely the traffic, they could be of no avail before a court which can neither make nor unmake laws.
Id. at 201-02, 81 N.E. at 921-22. In other words, if an activity causes harm that would otherwise constitute a public nuisance, but the activity has been authorized by the legislature, then the author of the activity cannot be held legally responsible for public nuisance.6 As the Sopher court [382]*382stated, “if the legislature of the State, by a statute, authorizes an act to be done, ... such act is thereby made lawful, and cannot be considered or regarded in a legal sense as a nuisance so far as the public is concemed[J” Id. at 183, 81 N.E. at 915.
We must accept as true the City’s allegations that the illegal secondary handgun market in the City is causing increased fear among its residents and that Appellees are, at least in part, causing the increased fear through their activities. However, Appellees cannot be legally responsible for public nuisance if their activities are authorized by the legislature.7 For the City’s public nuisance claim to survive the pleading stage, the City must allege activity by Appellees that is specifically proscribed by the legislature.8
The manufacture, distribution, and sale of handguns are authorized by both state and federal law, although these activities are heavily regulated.9 The City does not allege that any Appellees have violated any specific statute, ordinance, rule, or regulation with respect to the manufacture, distribution, or sale of handguns. After evaluating the City’s first amended complaint in the light most favorable to the City and drawing every reasonable inference therefrom in the City’s favor, we conclude that as to manufacturer [383]*383Appellees Smith & Wesson Corp. (“Smith & Wesson”), Beretta U.S.A., Corp., Colt’s, Browning, Glock Corp., Charter Arms Corp., Hi Point Firearms Corp., Navegar Inc., d/b/a/ Intratec U.S.A., Corp., Bryco Arms Corp., Phoenix Arms Corp., Lorcin Engineering Corp., Sturm, Ruger & Co., Corp., Taurus Firearms Corp., Davis Industries, distributor Appellee B.L. Jennings Inc., and dealer Appellees Jack’s Loan, Inc. (“Jack’s Loan”), Jim Shema’s Outdoor Sports, and Westforth Sports, Inc., the City has alleged no legislatively unauthorized activity. Thus, the trial court properly dismissed the City’s public nuisance claim against those parties for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Such is not the case for the remaining dealer Appellees, however.
Paragraph 39A of the City’s first amended complaint alleged that Appellee Cash Indiana, Inc. (“Cash Indiana”) sold a handgun to an undercover police officer who, known to Cash Indiana, was going to give it to a person who appeared to be unable legally to buy a handgun without first submitting to a background check. See Appellant’s App. at 15. Paragraph 39C alleged that Cash Indiana sold a handgun to an undercover police officer who, known to Cash Indiana, was going to give it to a person who claimed to be a convicted felon. Id. at 16. Paragraph 39E alleged that Appellee Ameri-Pawn of Lake Station, Inc. (“Ameri-Pawn”) sold a handgun to an undercover police officer who, known to Ameri-Pawn, was going to give it to a person who claimed to be a juvenile. Id. at 17. Paragraph 39F alleged that Appellee Blythe’s Sport Shop, Inc. (“Blythe’s”) sold a handgun to an undercover police officer who, known to Blythe’s, was going to give it to a person who claimed to be a juvenile. Id. Paragraph 39H alleged that Cash Indiana sold a handgun to an undercover police officer who, known to Cash Indiana, was going to give it to a person who appeared to be unable to legally purchase a handgun without first submitting to a background check. Id. Paragraph 391 alleged that Ameri-Pawn sold a handgun to an undercover police officer who, known to Ameri-Pawn, was going to give it to a person who appeared to be unable to legally purchase a handgun without first submitting to a background check.
Each of these allegations describes the straw purchase of a handgun, which is a felony in Indiana. See Ind.Code § 35-47-2.5-14(b) (“A person who purchases a handgun with the intent to ... resell or otherwise provide the handgun to another person who the person knows or has reason to believe is ineligible for any reason to purchase or otherwise receive from a dealer a handgun ... commits a Class D felony.”). A dealer who knowingly or intentionally attempts to aid, induce, or cause a straw purchase also commits an unlawful act and can be held criminally liable to the same extent as the purchaser.10
[384]*384Under the facts alleged by the City, dealer Appellees Cash America, Ameri-Pawn, and Blythe’s have attempted to aid, induce, or cause the straw purchase of a handgun, which is clearly legislatively unauthorized. We therefore reverse the trial court’s dismissal of the City’s public nuisance claim against those parties.11
II. Negligence
The City also brought suit against all Appellees for negligent marketing, distribution, sale, and failure to warn, and brought suit against manufacturer Appel-lees for negligent design. Specifically, the City alleged that Appellees’ “conduct is negligent and [that they have] breached their duty of care to [the City] and its citizenry by creating and supplying and supporting an illegitimate secondary market for handguns ... by failing to exercise reasonable care in [the] marketing, manufacture,] ... distribution^] and sale of their handguns.” Appellant’s App. at 32. The City also alleged that “[a]ll [Appellees] further violated their duty by negligently designing, manufacturing, distributing, and/or selling guns with inadequate, incomplete, or nonexistent warnings regarding the risks of harm of the product[.]” Id. at 34.
The City alleged that “manufacturer [Appellees] specifically violated [their duty to [the City] to act in a reasonably prudent manner in regards to the design of their handguns] by designing guns which they knew or should have known did not have adequate safety devices[.]” Id. The City further claimed that
[a]s a direct and proximate result of [Appellees’] aforesaid negligent intentional and wrongful acts and omissions, the handguns manufactured, distributed and sold by [Appellees] have damaged [the City] and harmed its citizenry, thereby causing [the City] to incur substantial expenses for police and other law enforcement services, rescue services, emergency medical services and other emergency services, pension benefits, disability benefits, workers’ compensation benefits, health care, jail costs, increased security and other services in public facilities and other necessary facilities and services due to the threat of or actual use of the [Appellees’] handguns.
Id. at 35.
To sustain an action for negligence, the City must establish
(1) a duty owed by the defendant to conform its conduct to a standard of care arising from its relationship with [385]*385the plaintiff; (2) a breach of that duty; and (3) an injury proximately caused by the breach of that duty. The first of these three elements, the existence of a duty, is a question of law for the court to determine.
Benton v. City of Oakland City, 721 N.E.2d 224, 232 (Ind.1999) (citations omitted). “The duty, when found to exist, is the duty to exercise reasonable care under the circumstances.” Stump v. Indiana Equip. Co., 601 N.E.2d 398, 402 (Ind.Ct. App.1992), trans. denied (1993). “The duty never changes, [although] the standard of conduct required to measure up to that duty varies depending upon the particular circumstances.” Id. “Absent a duty, there can be no breach, and thus, no basis for recovery under a negligence theory.” Bloemker v. Detroit Diesel Corp., 720 N.E.2d 753, 757 (Ind.Ct.App.1999), trans. denied (2000).
“[T]he relationship of the parties is a proper factor for consideration in determining whether a legal duty exists in a particular case.” Perdue Farms, Inc. v. Pryor, 683 N.E.2d 239, 241-42 (Ind.1997) (citing Webb v. Jarvis, 575 N.E.2d 992, 995 (Ind.1991)). “This determination may also consider various other factors, among which are the reasonable foreseeability of harm and public policy concerns.” Id. In the instant case, we consider the relationship of the parties,12 the reasonable foreseeability of the harm, and public policy concerns. Some of the City’s allegations apply only to some Appellees of which there are three distinct classes: manufacturers, a distributor, and dealers. We consider each class of Appellees separately where appropriate.
A. Relationship Between the Parties
13
1. Dealers
The City has not alleged that any of the dealer Appellees has any established legal [386]*386relationship with the City, such as a contractual relationship, a landlord/tenant relationship, or a fiduciary relationship. In fact, only one Appellee (dealer Jack’s Loan) is even located in the City. Dealer Appellees merely sell handguns, some of which eventually make their way into the City. Simply put, the relationship between the City and dealer Appellees is, at best, an attenuated one.
2. Distributor and Manufacturers
The relationship between the City and distributor Appellee and manufacturer Ap-pellees is even more attenuated, especially with respect to the chain of distribution described in the City’s allegations.
B. Foreseeability
At the outset, we acknowledge the distinction between foreseeability in the duty context and foreseeability in the proximate cause context, as concisely stated by Judge Kirsch in Goldsberry v. Grubbs, 672 N.E.2d 475 (Ind.Ct.App.1996), trans. denied (1999).
By logical deduction, the foreseeability component of the duty analysis must be something different than the foreseeability component of proximate cause. More precisely, it must be a lesser inquiry; if it was the same or a higher inquiry it would eviscerate the proximate cause element of negligence altogether. If one were required to meet the same or a higher burden of proving foreseeability with respect to duty, then it would be unnecessary to prove foreseeability a second time with respect to proximate cause. Additionally, proximate cause is normally a factual question for the jury, while duty is usually a legal question for the court. As a result, the foreseeability component of proximate cause requires an evaluation of the facts of the actual occurrence, while the foreseeability component of duty requires a more general analysis of the broad type of plaintiff and harm involved, without regard to the facts of the actual occurrence.
Id. at 479 (citations omitted). Without regard to the City’s specific factual allegations, we conclude that it is indeed foreseeable that a municipality, such as the City, will incur costs because of the misuse of handguns within its municipal limits.
C. Public Policy
In ascertaining public policy, “we first look to the Constitution, the legislature, and the judiciary for explicit declarations of public policy.” Trotter v. Nelson, 684 N.E.2d 1150, 1152-53 (Ind.1997). Article I, Section 32 of the Indiana Constitution provides that “[t]he people shall have a right to bear arms, for the defense of themselves and the State.” In its most recent pronouncement, our supreme court [387]*387recognized that the right to bear arms is a personal right enjoyed by private citizens:
Article I, § 32 of the Indiana Constitution is entitled “Bearing arms” and provides as follows:
The people shall have a right to bear arms, for the defense of themselves and the State.
Indiana Const., Art. I, § 32. Our Court of Appeals recognized this substantive right in Schubert v. DeBard (1980), Ind.App., 398 N.E.2d 1339, when it stated:
We think it clear that our constitution provides our citizenry the right to bear arms for their self-defense.
Id. at 1341 .... We agree with the Court of Appeals’ analysis in Schubert, and now find that this right of Indiana citizens to bear arms for their own self-defense and for the defense of the state is an interest in both liberty and property which is protected by the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution. This interest is one of liberty to the extent that it enables law-abiding citizens to be free from the threat and danger of violent crime. There is also a property interest at stake, for example, in protecting one’s valuables when transporting them, as in the case of a businessman who brings a sum of cash to deposit in his bank across town.
Kellogg v. City of Gary, 562 N.E.2d 685, 694 (Ind.1990).14
The fact that the United States Congress and the Indiana General Assembly have pervasively regulated the manufacture, distribution, sale, and use of handguns suggests that those legislatures have already evaluated the public policy concerns regarding these activities. The misuse of handguns, whether criminal or merely accidental, imposes great costs on society, of which all legislators are undoubtedly aware. In an attempt to minimize the costs of handgun misuse, legislatures have passed laws designed to curtail handgun ownership by those who are more likely to misuse them, including known criminals, children, intoxicated persons, and mentally ill persons. We must presume that Congress and the General Assembly, as elected representatives of the people, have struck the appropriate balance between the societal costs of handguns and the historical right to bear arms.
It is worth noting, however, that the costs of the misuse of firearms in Indiana are substantial, perhaps nowhere more so than in the City. In 1999, homicide was the second-leading cause of death of all Hoosiers between the ages of fifteen and twenty-four.15 Of those homicides, 84.9% were committed with firearms.16 According to [388]*388the City, over seventy persons were murdered with handguns in the City in 1997, and another fifty-four were murdered with handguns in 1998. Appellant’s App. at 9-10. In 2001, the City had the highest per-capita murder rate in the nation, at 59.4 murders per 100,000 population.17 In contrast, the 2001 murder rates per 100,000 population for other Indiana cities were 27.8 for Hammond, 12.5 for Indianapolis, 11.9 for South Bend, 9.9 for Fort Wayne, and 7.2 for Evansville.18 While we recognize that public policy, as expressed in our constitution and by our legislature and judiciary, favors the availability of firearms, including handguns, we would be remiss if we failed to note some of the societal costs of firearm misuse.
D. Balancing of the Factors
As previously mentioned, none of the Appellees have close relationships with the City, and public policy clearly favors the availability of handguns. We conclude that these two factors substantially outweigh foreseeability, even though we recognize that it is reasonably foreseeable that the City will incur costs related to the misuse of handguns in the City.19 We therefore conclude that none of the Appel-lees owes a duty of care to the City. Absent a duty, there can be no negligence.Thus, we must affirm the trial court’s dismissal of the City’s negligence claims against all Appellees.
III. Proposed Settlement Agreement
The City contends that the trial court erred in granting manufacturer Appellees’ motion to strike a proposed settlement agreement between the City and Smith & Wesson attached to the City’s first amended complaint. See Appellant’s App. at 40-60. The City claims that the proposed settlement agreement tends to show feasibility, i.e., that Appellees “could ... both control the distribution and sale of their dangerous products, and incorporate feasible, life-saving design features into their handguns.” Appellant’s Br. at 47.
Indiana Trial Rule 12(F) provides in relevant part that “the court may order stricken from any pleading any insufficient claim or defense or any redundant, immaterial, impertinent, or scandalous matter.” Simply put, whether handgun manufacturers could in fact reform their business practices to reduce the costs of handgun misuse to society is immaterial at the pleadings stage, in which we are merely [389]*389evaluating the legal sufficiency of the City’s claim. The trial court properly struck the proposed settlement agreement.20
In summary, we reverse the trial court’s dismissal of the City’s public nuisance claim as to dealer Appellees Cash America, Ameri-Pawn, and Blythe’s, affirm the trial court’s judgment in all other respects, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Affirmed in part and reversed and remanded in part.
MATHIAS, J., concurs.
RILEY, J., concurs in part and dissents in part, with opinion.
Defendants indicated with an asterisk (" t*l") are not parties to this appeal, as they were not named in the City’s first amended complaint.