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PUBLISHED OPINION

COURT OF APPEALS

DECISION

DATED AND FILED

NOTICE

April 16, 1998

This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports.

Marilyn L. Graves

Clerk, Court of Appeals

of Wisconsin

A party may file with the Supreme Court a petition to review an adverse decision by the Court of Appeals. See § 808.10 and Rule 809.62, Stats.

"Recreational activity" means any outdoor activity undertaken for the purpose of exercise, relaxation or pleasure, including practice or instruction in any such activity. "Recreational activity" includes, but is not limited to, hunting, fishing, trapping, camping, picnicking, exploring caves, nature study, bicycling, horseback riding, bird-watching, motorcycling, operating an all-terrain vehicle, ballooning, hang gliding, hiking, tobogganing, sledding, sleigh riding, snowmobiling, skiing, skating, water sports, sight-seeing, rock-climbing, cutting or removing wood, climbing observation towers, animal training, harvesting the products of nature and any other outdoor sport, game or educational activity, but does not include any organized team sport activity sponsored by the owner of the property on which the activity takes place.

Although a walk in the park for the purpose of exercise, relaxation or pleasure is an activity for which the owner is immune, the legislature did not intend to create a corridor of immunity from the ball field to the parking lot when the walk is inextricably connected to a non-immune activity. Section 895.52(1)(g), Stats., excepts from its definition of recreational activities "any organized team sport activity sponsored by the owner ...." Hupf was not participating in an organized team sport at the moment of his injury. If, however, as his argument presupposes, he were traveling directly from this excepted activity by the only available avenue for the purpose of exiting the premises, the exception to immunity endures. (Emphasis added.)

Hupf, 165 Wis.2d at 221, 477 N.W.2d at 72. Although we decided that summary judgment in the city's favor was in error, we also decided that we could not grant summary judgment to Hupf because it was disputed that he was traveling directly from a non-immune activity (organized team sport) by the only available avenue to exit the park. Id.

Sec.1. Legislative intent. The legislature intends by this act to limit the liability of property owners toward others who use their property for recreational activities under circumstances in which the owner does not derive more than a minimal pecuniary benefit. While it is not possible to specify in a statute every activity which might constitute a recreational activity, this act provides examples of the kinds of activities that are meant to be included, and the legislature intends that, where substantially similar circumstances or activities exist, this legislation should be liberally construed in favor of property owners to protect them from liability.

1983 Wis. Act 418, §1.

    The Sievert court then examined whether the activity at issue was "substantially similar" to the circumstances of a recreational activity. This entails an examination of all aspects of the activity, including the injured person's subjective assessment of the activity, and the intrinsic nature, purpose and consequence of the activity. Sievert, 190 Wis.2d at 631, 528 N.W.2d at 416. Whether the person intended to engage in recreational activities is not dispositive, but why the person is on the property is pertinent. Id. The court concluded that considering the nature and purpose of Sievert's activity, he was not engaged in a recreational activity: his objective behavior and his testimony showed that the sole reason for being on the dock was to greet his neighbor. While the court recognized that "an activity can be both recreational under the statute and social," it concluded that Sievert's activity of walking to greet a neighbor was not a recreational activity. Id. at 633, 528 N.W.2d at 417.

    Sievert does not support the conclusion that Lasky was not engaged in a recreational activity. Lasky acknowledged that he was walking in the park to exercise, whereas in Sievert the sole purpose of walking on to the dock was to greet a neighbor, not a recreational purpose. The fact that Lasky had a purpose for his walk besides exercise-doing errands-does not, as the court in Sievert makes clear, mean that Lasky's walking cannot be a recreational activity.

    Following the method of analysis established in Sievert, we conclude that Lasky was engaged in a recreational activity. Walking for exercise through a park on the way to do errands is included in the initial broad definition of "[an] outdoor activity for the purpose of exercise...." Assuming for purposes of argument that Lasky's walking is not "hiking," one of the enumerated twenty-eight activities, and is not included in the second broad definition, "any other outdoor sport," we consider whether it is substantially similar to the activities enumerated.

    Lasky was walking through the park in order to get exercise, a recreational purpose and a recreational setting. Although the characteristic of the property is not dispositive, Sievert, 190 Wis.2d at 632, 528 N.W.2d at 416, it is one aspect of Lasky's activity. See Linville v. City of Janesville, 184 Wis.2d 705, 717, 516 N.W.2d 427, 430 (1994). Since Lasky's ultimate destinations were business establishments, there was no reason for him to park his car at Bukolt Park and walk on the Riverfront Trail except for exercise, and he testified that the reason he parked there and took the trail was for exercise. We conclude that Lasky's walking on the trail in the park is an activity that is substantially similar to the other listed activities and is therefore a recreational activity.

    The Laskys argue that even if Lasky were engaged in a recreational activity, the City is not immune because it has a duty to maintain the bridge. Section 81.15, Stats., imposes liability on a municipality for injuries that occur on its public highways and sidewalks due to the insufficiency or want of repairs by the municipality. In Bystery v. Village of Sauk City, 146 Wis.2d 247, 251-52, 430 N.W.2d 611, 613 (Ct. App.1988), we reconciled the conflict between §§81.15 and 895.52, Stats., holding that a municipality is immune from liability under §895.52 for the lack of repair of a highway or public sidewalk only when the municipality has withdrawn the highway or sidewalk from transportation uses, in whole or in part; has devoted it to recreational activities; and the claimed activity is a recreational activity.

    In Bystery, the plaintiff was injured while riding a bicycle on a city sidewalk. We rejected her claim that the test should turn on the subjective intent of the individual. Bystery, 146 Wis.2d at 254, 430 N.W.2d at 614. Since there was no claim in Bystery that the sidewalk was withdrawn in whole or in part from transportation purposes, we did not address that requirement in much detail. However, that requirement was based on our reading of the purpose of §895.52, Stats., which is to encourage landowners to make their land available for recreational purposes, and, we observed, municipalities were included within the protection of §895.52. Id. at 252, 430 N.W.2d at 613.

    The wooden bridge where Lasky fell spans Moss Creek on the Riverfront Trail. The Riverfront Trail is closed to all motor vehicles except park vehicles and is used by pedestrians, skaters and bicyclists. It is maintained by the Stevens Point Park and Recreation Department and is not kept open during the winter. Since we are to consider under Bystery whether the highway or sidewalk has been withdrawn for transportation purposes "in whole or in part," we consider the Riverfront Trail and not the entire Green Circle Trail, which in portions incorporates municipal sidewalks. We conclude that the Riverfront Trail was withdrawn from transportation uses and devoted to recreational activities. The City is therefore entitled to immunity under Bystery.

    This conclusion is consistent with Kostroski, on which the Laskys rely. In Kostroski, we applied Bystery to a fact situation in which an individual fell through a loose board on a portable wooden sidewalk in a park, while walking from a picnic area to a ball diamond within the park. We concluded that the sidewalk was sufficiently withdrawn from transportation uses and devoted to recreational uses to meet the Bystery test. Kostroski, 158 Wis.2d at 204, 462 N.W.2d at 543. We did observe that the location of the wooden sidewalk in the park was not dispositive; the dispositive feature of the sidewalk was its solitary purpose to "serve only those attempting to enter or leave the ballpark otherwise surrounded and enclosed by the race track." Id. at 204-05, 462 N.W.2d at 543-44. We noted that if the "sidewalk was available for general transportation by the public, the mere fact that the injured user was engaged in recreational activity within the park would not provide immunity." Id. The Riverfront Trail is not kept open in the winter. It is therefore unavailable for general transportation, and has been devoted instead by the City to recreational purposes.

    By the Court.-Judgment affirmed.

    Not recommended for publication in the official reports.