OPINION
HARVEY BROWN, Justice.
Shirley and Richard Martinez appeal from the trial court’s summary judgment on their premises liability and negligence claims against Houston McLane Company, LLC d/b/a Houston Astros Baseball Club. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Introduction
Shirley Martinez was hit and injured by a batting practice home run before a Houston Astros home game at Minute Maid Park. Leading up to the game, she requested and the Astros donated 250 tickets to benefit members of the 72nd Brigade Special Troops Battalion, a division of the Texas National Guard, and their families. The Astros selected the seat area, Section 153, and donated the tickets to the Texas National Guard Family Support Foundation. These seats are bleacher field level behind the right field wall, which is an area where a fly ball hit during the game would be a home run. Section 153 is not protected by a screen. There is no map or diagram located outside or in the stadium that identifies the section as unprotected.
Martinez and her husband, a member of the Brigade, arrived at the game almost an hour early. From where they entered the stadium, the lack of screening is not visible until a spectator locates the general area of the seats and looks across the field. She did not request seats in a particular section or seats in a screened area. Nor was she told by the Astros that Section 153 was not screened. The Astros web site also did not identify the areas that were protected or unprotected by screens. Minute Made Park has a seating capacity of almost 41,000 seats, of which over 5,000 (or almost one-eighth) are shielded by a protective screen behind home plate.
After entering the stadium, Martinez walked to Section 153 while accompanied by five children of military families she was caring for, including one young child she pushed in a stroller. The players were participating in batting practice at the time. As she was about to descend the stairs to her seat from the concourse, she was stopped by an usher who informed her that she could not take a stroller down to the seats; rather, the stroller had to be stored in a different, designated section of the stadium.
Instead of taking the stroller to the storage area, she left the stroller at the top of the aisle and escorted the four older children down to the seats. After seating the four children and arranging for another adult to watch them while she took the young child and stroller to the storage area, she began ascending the stairs while carrying the young child. While her attention was focused on climbing the stairs and her back was to the playing field, she heard someone yell a warning that a fly ball was coming toward her. She shielded the child with her arms and was struck in the face by the ball. She suffered an orbital fracture and corneal laceration.
Martinez and her husband sued the Ast-ros for negligence and premises liability. The Astros moved for a traditional summary judgment on all the Martinezes’ claims, which the trial court granted. This appeal ensued.
Standard of Review
We review a trial court’s summary judgment de novo.
Travelers Ins. Co. v. Joachim,
315 S.W.3d 860, 862 (Tex.2010);
Mann Frankfort Stein & Lipp Advisors, Inc. v. Fielding,
289 S.W.3d 844, 848 (Tex.2009). In conducting our review, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to
the nonmovant, crediting evidence favorable to that party if reasonable jurors could and disregarding contrary evidence unless reasonable jurors could not.
Fielding,
289 S.W.3d at 848. When, as here, the trial court’s summary judgment order does not specify the grounds on which it was granted, we must affirm the order if any of the asserted grounds for summary judgment are meritorious.
W. Invs., Inc. v. Urena,
162 S.W.3d 547, 550 (Tex.2005).
On a motion for traditional summary judgment, the movant has the burden to show that no genuine issue of material fact exists and that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
See
Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(c);
KPMG Peat Marwick v. Harrison Cnty. Hous. Fin. Corp.,
988 S.W.2d 746, 748 (Tex.1999). The movant may satisfy this burden by conclusively negating at least one essential element of each of the plaintiffs causes of action.
Sci. Spectrum, Inc. v. Martinez,
941 S.W.2d 910, 911 (Tex.1997).
Standard of Care/Protective Screening
1. Stadium owners and operators owe a limited duty
This Court held in
Friedman v. Houston Sports Association,
731 S.W.2d 572, 573 (Tex.App.-Houston [1st Dist.] 1987, writ ref'd n.r.e.), that a stadium owner owes only a limited duty to spectators to protect them from baseballs hit into the stands. Under the limited duty, the stadium owner must provide “adequately screened seats” for all those who wish to sit behind a screen.
Friedman
followed a line of Texas cases refusing to impose a duty on stadium owners to screen all seats or to warn about foul balls.
The Fort Worth Court of Appeals relied on
Friedman’s
holding two years later.
Thus, the “baseball rule,” as this limited duty is often referred to,
is well established in Texas.
The Martinezes ask us to overrule established precedent and abolish the baseball rule. They contend that it is a “bad rule” providing an “undeserved shield” to stadium owners and does not reflect the realities of baseball in “the modern era.” They argue that stadium owners’ limited duty is an outgrowth of “the old discarded” assumption-of-the-risk-rule and that “[t]he Texas comparative negligence scheme is well-equipped to examine the actions and inactions of all parties in determining each party’s level of culpability.” We decline to overrule precedent following the baseball rule for three reasons.
First, the doctrine of stare decisis creates a strong presumption that precedents should be followed to foster “efficiency, fairness, and legitimacy.”
If courts did not follow precedent, “no issue could ever be considered resolved. The potential volume of speculative relitigation under such circumstances alone ought to
persuade us that stare decisis is a sound policy.”
Stare decisis is important to “give due consideration to the settled expectations of litigants ... who have justifiably relied on” precedent.
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OPINION
HARVEY BROWN, Justice.
Shirley and Richard Martinez appeal from the trial court’s summary judgment on their premises liability and negligence claims against Houston McLane Company, LLC d/b/a Houston Astros Baseball Club. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Introduction
Shirley Martinez was hit and injured by a batting practice home run before a Houston Astros home game at Minute Maid Park. Leading up to the game, she requested and the Astros donated 250 tickets to benefit members of the 72nd Brigade Special Troops Battalion, a division of the Texas National Guard, and their families. The Astros selected the seat area, Section 153, and donated the tickets to the Texas National Guard Family Support Foundation. These seats are bleacher field level behind the right field wall, which is an area where a fly ball hit during the game would be a home run. Section 153 is not protected by a screen. There is no map or diagram located outside or in the stadium that identifies the section as unprotected.
Martinez and her husband, a member of the Brigade, arrived at the game almost an hour early. From where they entered the stadium, the lack of screening is not visible until a spectator locates the general area of the seats and looks across the field. She did not request seats in a particular section or seats in a screened area. Nor was she told by the Astros that Section 153 was not screened. The Astros web site also did not identify the areas that were protected or unprotected by screens. Minute Made Park has a seating capacity of almost 41,000 seats, of which over 5,000 (or almost one-eighth) are shielded by a protective screen behind home plate.
After entering the stadium, Martinez walked to Section 153 while accompanied by five children of military families she was caring for, including one young child she pushed in a stroller. The players were participating in batting practice at the time. As she was about to descend the stairs to her seat from the concourse, she was stopped by an usher who informed her that she could not take a stroller down to the seats; rather, the stroller had to be stored in a different, designated section of the stadium.
Instead of taking the stroller to the storage area, she left the stroller at the top of the aisle and escorted the four older children down to the seats. After seating the four children and arranging for another adult to watch them while she took the young child and stroller to the storage area, she began ascending the stairs while carrying the young child. While her attention was focused on climbing the stairs and her back was to the playing field, she heard someone yell a warning that a fly ball was coming toward her. She shielded the child with her arms and was struck in the face by the ball. She suffered an orbital fracture and corneal laceration.
Martinez and her husband sued the Ast-ros for negligence and premises liability. The Astros moved for a traditional summary judgment on all the Martinezes’ claims, which the trial court granted. This appeal ensued.
Standard of Review
We review a trial court’s summary judgment de novo.
Travelers Ins. Co. v. Joachim,
315 S.W.3d 860, 862 (Tex.2010);
Mann Frankfort Stein & Lipp Advisors, Inc. v. Fielding,
289 S.W.3d 844, 848 (Tex.2009). In conducting our review, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to
the nonmovant, crediting evidence favorable to that party if reasonable jurors could and disregarding contrary evidence unless reasonable jurors could not.
Fielding,
289 S.W.3d at 848. When, as here, the trial court’s summary judgment order does not specify the grounds on which it was granted, we must affirm the order if any of the asserted grounds for summary judgment are meritorious.
W. Invs., Inc. v. Urena,
162 S.W.3d 547, 550 (Tex.2005).
On a motion for traditional summary judgment, the movant has the burden to show that no genuine issue of material fact exists and that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
See
Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(c);
KPMG Peat Marwick v. Harrison Cnty. Hous. Fin. Corp.,
988 S.W.2d 746, 748 (Tex.1999). The movant may satisfy this burden by conclusively negating at least one essential element of each of the plaintiffs causes of action.
Sci. Spectrum, Inc. v. Martinez,
941 S.W.2d 910, 911 (Tex.1997).
Standard of Care/Protective Screening
1. Stadium owners and operators owe a limited duty
This Court held in
Friedman v. Houston Sports Association,
731 S.W.2d 572, 573 (Tex.App.-Houston [1st Dist.] 1987, writ ref'd n.r.e.), that a stadium owner owes only a limited duty to spectators to protect them from baseballs hit into the stands. Under the limited duty, the stadium owner must provide “adequately screened seats” for all those who wish to sit behind a screen.
Friedman
followed a line of Texas cases refusing to impose a duty on stadium owners to screen all seats or to warn about foul balls.
The Fort Worth Court of Appeals relied on
Friedman’s
holding two years later.
Thus, the “baseball rule,” as this limited duty is often referred to,
is well established in Texas.
The Martinezes ask us to overrule established precedent and abolish the baseball rule. They contend that it is a “bad rule” providing an “undeserved shield” to stadium owners and does not reflect the realities of baseball in “the modern era.” They argue that stadium owners’ limited duty is an outgrowth of “the old discarded” assumption-of-the-risk-rule and that “[t]he Texas comparative negligence scheme is well-equipped to examine the actions and inactions of all parties in determining each party’s level of culpability.” We decline to overrule precedent following the baseball rule for three reasons.
First, the doctrine of stare decisis creates a strong presumption that precedents should be followed to foster “efficiency, fairness, and legitimacy.”
If courts did not follow precedent, “no issue could ever be considered resolved. The potential volume of speculative relitigation under such circumstances alone ought to
persuade us that stare decisis is a sound policy.”
Stare decisis is important to “give due consideration to the settled expectations of litigants ... who have justifiably relied on” precedent.
Stare decisis “results in predictability in the law, which allows people to rationally order their conduct and affairs.”
That interest is particularly acute here, since the rule announced in
Friedman
also arose out of a spectator’s injuries from a fly ball at an Astros game. Moreover, the rule has been in effect “since the early days of modern baseball.”
The Astros, therefore, had good reason to rely on this rule in making decisions about protective screening.
While the Martinezes argue that these precedents are not binding because they conflict with subsequent case developments, we disagree. The first of these developments — Texas’s adoption of a comparative negligence scheme — does not justify us overruling
Friedman
because in that same case our court specifically rejected the plaintiffs contention that the limited-duty rule should be rejected in favor of comparative negligence.
Other courts have also held that the baseball rule has a sound basis despite the abolition of the assumption-of-the-risk doctrine.
The second of the legal developments relied upon by the Martinezes — the Texas Supreme Court’s abolition of the no-duty rule in 1978
— is also not a solid ground for displacing this line of cases because the baseball rule does not abolish a duty. As stated by the Fort Worth Court of Appeals in rejecting a similar argument, “a stadium owner
does
have a duty,”
albeit a limited one. As described by the Michigan Court of Appeals, the baseball rule does not abrogate premises liability principles; rather, it identifies the stadium owner’s duty “with greater specificity than the usual” premises liability standards.
As explained by the New Jersey Supreme Court, the baseball rule “establishes a fact-specific standard of care for injuries caused by errant balls at baseball stadiums by accounting for the open and obvious nature of the risk that batted balls pose to fans.”
The limited duty doctrine establishes the “ ‘outer limits’ of liability”
and allows the stadium owner to “fulfill[] its duty of care as a matter of law.”
Second, these precedents are not out of step with modern developments in the law. The rule recognized by Texas courts is the
majority rule.
It continues to be applied by courts across the country in the last twelve years.
After weighing many of these policies, at least two state legislatures have likewise recognized that stadium owners and operators owe a limited duty.
Third, we do not overrule long-settled precedent and create a split between sister courts of concurrent appellate jurisdiction “unless there is an extremely compelling reason to do so.”
No compelling reasons exist here. On the contrary, these precedents and legislative acts are supported by public policy considerations that strike a balance among multiple interests and presumptions about attendance at a baseball game. First, there is the interest of fans who desire the intimate feeling from sitting as close to the action as possible with the possibility of snagging a ball.
Second, there is the interest of fans who want protection from injury due to wayward balls.
Third, the risk of injury from a ball is considered an inherent risk of the game.
Fourth, most fans who
attend the games are aware that objects may leave the playing field with the potential to cause injury.
As summarized by the Michigan Court of Appeals,
The limited duty rule comports more nearly with that everyday reality than would usual invitor-invitee principles of liability. While requiring that protected seats be provided for those who want them, the limited duty rule leaves the baseball stadium owner free, without fear of liability, to accommodate the majority of fans who prefer unobstructed and uninsulated contact with the game.... [T]he limited duty doctrine represents a good accommodation of the interests that must be balanced in this case ...
Admittedly, the Martinezes identify other interests that cut against the limited-duty rule: considerations of human safety (which are incorporated into traditional premises liability standards) and equal treatment of all premises owners (as opposed to a earved-out rule for stadium owners).
But given the strong presumption that exists in favor of following precedent and the policy considerations supporting the baseball rule, we decline to balance these interests anew and conclude that we should continue to follow our precedent.
2. The baseball rule applies equally to the Martinezes’ claims of negligence and premises liability
The Martinezes base their claims on negligence and premises liability. The elements of a negligence cause of action are the existence of a duty, a breach of that duty, and damages proximately caused by the breach.
Premises liability is a special form of negligence where the duty owed to the plaintiff depends upon the status of the plaintiff — such as the status of an invitee — at the time the incident occurred.
Thus, in the usual case, the duty analyses for negligence and premises liability claims are closely related but distinct.
In a case where the baseball rule applies, however, the limited duty of the stadium owner is the same regardless of whether the plaintiffs cause of action sounds in negligence or premises liability.
Therefore, when the uncontroverted summary-judgment evidence shows that the stadium owner has satisfied its limited duty to provide adequately screened seats for all those desiring them, there is no issue of material fact as to whether the stadium owner fulfilled its limited duty and the trial court may grant summary judgment on both negligence and premises liability claims.
3. The Astros demonstrated its compliance with its limited duty
a. The Astros’ summary-judgment evidence demonstrated that it provided adequately screened seats
The Martinezes contend that
Friedman
requires the stadium owner
to prove the adequacy of both the quality of the screens and the quantity of the seats
protected by those screens. They argue that fact issues exist regarding both. The Astros contend that
Friedman
only requires proof of an adequate number of seats and that it proved that the stadium had an adequate number of seats. In
Friedman,
we declared that a stadium owner owes a duty to “provide[] ‘adequately screened seats’ for
all
those desiring them.”
It is unnecessary for us to determine whether the Astros proved that the quality and quantity of the screened seats were adequate because, first, the quality of the existent screens was not a factor in causing Shirley Martinez’s injuries and, second, the Martinezes never requested screened seating.
On the quality of the screens, the Mar-tinezes suggest that the requirement of “adequate” seats refers to the quality of the screen, and that the screen provided by the Astros behind home plate was inadequate in quality because it is a vertical screen that does not provide protection for fly balls that are hit over the top of the screen. We are not aware of any Texas court having considered what type of screen design provides adequate protection for those sitting behind it. We note that the Washington Supreme Court and a North Carolina appellate court have rejected a rule requiring a horizontal or overhead screen.
We need not decide this legal issue because of the facts here; Martinez was not
sitting behind home plate nor was the fly ball hit behind home plate; rather, the fly ball was a home run ball hit into the bleachers. For the area where the Mar-tinezes were seated, the quality of the screen is simply not at issue because no screen was erected to protect the area where the ball landed.
On the number of seats, the Martinezes argue that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment because the Astros did not present evidence that any of its screened seats were available to Martinez and did not show that the screened area “was sufficient for a reasonable public demand.” The Astros did not present any evidence regarding the number of requests it typically receives for screened seats, the sufficiency of the number of protected seats to fill the typical requests for screened seats, or the frequency with which it has to turn away or provide refunds to customers because of the unavailability of screened seating. Nor did it present any evidence regarding whether any seats in the screened area were available to the public on the day in question. The Astros’ appellate brief contends that spectators are also protected in the upper deck because foul balls “seldom, if ever, reach” there, but it offered no evidence on how often fly balls reach various areas of the upper deck. Instead, through the affidavit of the Astros’ Senior Director of Risk Management, the Astros proved that almost one-eighth of the seats were shielded by a screen located behind home plate. It also submitted photographs depicting that the screen extended from near the part of the first base dugout closest to home plate to near the part of the third base dugout closest to home plate. The Martinezes do not contend that they requested but were denied a screened seat. On the contrary, the evidence establishes that screened seats were available for purchase for the game in question. Therefore, the Astros demonstrated the availability of screened seats for the Martinezes.
b. The summary-judgment evidence demonstrates that the Astros did not distract Shirley Martinez
On appeal, the Martinezes contend that that a second duty exists: a stadium owner cannot “actively divert[ a spectator’s] attention” from the action on the field. According to the Martinezes, the Astros breached such a duty when an usher “instructed [Shirley] Martinez to take certain actions that the usher knew would require Martinez to turn her back to the playing field. The Astros should not hide behind [a] rule of limited duty that imposes an unyielding obligation upon the spectator to pay attention at all times while at the same time the Astros distract the spectator.”
We are not aware of any Texas court decision considering whether stadium owners and operators have a duty, apart from their limited duty to provide adequate screened seating, to not distract spectators. The New Mexico Supreme Court recently adopted a rule that includes an inquiry into whether the stadium owner took action to increase the risk to a spectator beyond that inherent in attending a baseball game.
On the other hand, the
New Jersey Supreme Court recently rejected such a rule, stating that “the limited duty rule imposed on a sports venue owner or operator applies when a spectator is located in the stands — and not based on the arbitrary circumstances of whether the spectator is otherwise distracted.”
The specific issue of whether a stadium owner should protect a spectator from the risk of injury from a fly ball while walking in an aisle was addressed by a New York court of appeals forty years ago.
In that case, the spectator was struck while being conducted by an usher through an aisle leading to his reserved seat in an un-screened section of the stadium. The court, citing earlier New York cases and cases from other jurisdictions, held that the baseball rule applies equally “absent any extraordinary circumstance,” when the spectator “is in the aisle and moving to or from his seat.”
The court reasoned that “[i]f plaintiff is chargeable with knowledge of the risk of injury from a batted ball while he is in his unprotected seat, there would seem no logical basis for considering that he may reasonably be less aware of the same danger in the aisle by which he approaches his seat.”
In this case, we need not decide the legal issue of whether the Astros, besides having a limited duty to provide adequate screening, also have a duty to not distract spectators. Even if such a duty exists, the summary-judgment evidence demonstrates that the Astros did not distract Shirley Martinez at the time in question. Shirley Martinez’s affidavit states:
... After entering the indoor section of the baseball park and locating the section of seating assigned to us by the Astros, I approached the section of seating and was stopped by an usher who informed me that I was not allowed to enter the seating area of section 153 with a stroller. The usher informed me that I must take the stroller to a different section of the ballpark, on the opposite end of the ballpark. The usher offered no further assistance.
The usher allowed me to leave the stroller at the top of section 153 while I seated the four older children. I descended the stairs while carrying the baby in my arms. I seated the other four children and left them in the care of another responsible adult with the 72nd Brigade group. I immediately began ascending the stairs with the baby in my arms. My intent was to comply with the usher’s instructions and return to take it to the section of the ballpark instructed by the usher. As I began my way up the stairs of section 153, and while my attention was focused on climbing the stairs to comply with the usher’s instructions and retrieve the stroller, I heard someone yell a warning that a fly ball was coming toward me. I reacted by shielding the baby I was holding with my arms and body, but was struck in the face by the ball. I held onto the baby and fell to the ground.
Although this evidence demonstrates that Shirley Martinez was ascending the stairs in accordance with an Astros employee’s request, it does not demonstrate that the Astros or an Astros agent distracted her at the time that the ball struck her. The facts here are quite unlike those in a California case where a fan was distracted by the antics of the team mascot and the court held that the stadium owner “had a duty
not to increase
the inherent risks to which spectators at professional baseball games are regularly exposed.”
Rather, the summary-judgment evidence shows that Martinez was simply walking up the aisle, a task that spectators perform frequently during a professional baseball game.
Accordingly, we conclude that the baseball rule applies to the facts presented here. On both negligence and premises liability, the Astros met its summary-judgment burden to prove that it complied with its limited duty to provide an adequate number of screened seats. Additionally, regardless of whether the Astros had an additional duty not to distract spectators, the summary-judgment evidence demonstrates that the Astros did not distract Martinez and thereby increase her risk of injury.
Duty to Inform of Availability of Screened Seats
The Martinezes also contend that the Astros failed to “inform or otherwise make [Shirley] Martinez or other customers aware of the existence of screened seating” and that the availability of those seats is “not discernible” until a spectator arrives at the stadium. Implicit within this contention is an assertion that the Astros had a duty to advise customers of the existence of such seats. We conclude that the Astros did not have any duty to provide information regarding this well-known condition of professional baseball parks.
The Fort Worth Court of Appeals considered and rejected this same argument in
Dent v. Texas Rangers, Ltd.,
764 S.W.2d 345, 346 (Tex.App.-Fort Worth 1989, writ denied). In that case, the spectator invited the court “to impose an additional duty on the stadium owner of informing spectators of the availability of the screened seats.”
The court declined to do so, stating that “[t]he availability of screened seats is apparent and discernible to all who attend.”
We agree. As Martinez acknowledged in her affidavit, the screened seating area was visible upon entering the stadium and looking across the field from an aisle.
Conclusion
We decline to overrule our court’s precedent in
Friedman
which adheres to established Texas law adopting the baseball rule. The summary-judgment evidence demonstrated that the Astros complied with its limited duty by providing adequately screened seats. The summary-judgment evidence also demonstrated that the Astros did not distract Martinez. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s order
granting summary judgment. All outstanding motions are overruled as moot.