OPINION OF THE COURT
Plaintiff’s son, then 13 years old, was injured in April 1991 while riding a motorized dirt bike on property owned by defendant Harlen W. Metz, Jr. From 1976 through 1988, Metz had mined gravel from the property, which resulted in the creation of earthen berms that ran along three sides of the property. Pursuant to a permit issued by the Department of Environmental Conservation in 1988, Metz began to use the property as a construction and demolition debris landfill. Metz contracted with a hauler who ceased hauling debris in late 1990, when most of the mined area had been filled.
On the day of the accident, plaintiff’s son accessed the Metz property by crossing adjacent property and riding along a path that went up the earthen berm that ran along the north side of the Metz property. Upon cresting the top of the hill created by the berm, the bike and its rider plunged down a steep slope on the opposite side. According to plaintiff’s son, he had ridden the same path the previous day, when there was a substantial flat area at the top of the earthen berm. Plaintiff alleges that the steep slope was created by Metz’s excavation work done during the intervening 24-hour period, an allegation that Metz denies.
To recover damages for the injuries sustained by her son when he was thrown from the dirt bike as it plunged down the steep slope, plaintiff commenced this action against Metz, his family-owned business (hereinafter Metz Contracting) and a third party. After issue was joined, Metz and Metz Contracting moved for summary judgment dismissing the complaint. The motion was granted, resulting in this appeal by plaintiff.
Although a landfill operation obviously involves certain potential hazards which could increase the risk of harm from riding a motorized dirt bike on the property, similar potential hazards present in Iannotti v Consolidated Rail Corp. (74 NY2d 39) were insufficient to render the property at issue therein unsuitable for recreational use. "When the Iannotti case came to this Court (Iannotti v Consolidated Rail Corp., 137 AD2d 62, revd 14 NY2d 39, supra), we concluded that the right-of-way where the injury occurred was unsuitable for the recreational use not merely because the property had been developed for a commercial use, but because the particular commercial use as an operating railroad involved inherent potential hazards (supra, at 67). Because of the potential hazards inherent in a commercial railroad operation, which could increase the risk of harm from recreational use, we concluded that the right-of-way was not the type of property the Legislature intended to open up for public recreational use by enacting General Obligations Law § 9-103 and its various amendments (supra, at 67). The Court of Appeals rejected our analysis, which focused on
Here, as in Iannotti, there is abundant evidence of prior public recreational use of the Metz landfill to ride dirt bikes and other motorized vehicles. As in Iannotti, there are potential hazards inherent in the particular commercial operation on the property (a railroad in Iannotti, a landfill here), but there is no evidence that the particular operation actually detracted from the suitability of the property for recreational use demonstrated by the prior public use. There is no evidence that the landfill operation affected either the nature or the frequency of the public’s recreational use of the property. Nor is there any evidence that the landfill operation resulted in changes to the property such that it was no longer physically conducive to the recreational activity. Plaintiff contends that a landfill is a "heavily regulated” operation, but a railroad operation is also subject to substantial regulation (see, Railroad Law § 50 et seq.; 17 NYCRR parts 900-924). In short, there is no evidence that the landfill operation actually rendered the property at issue any less suitable for riding motorized dirt bikes than a right-of-way which is used as an integral part of an operating railroad.
Those who are not dirt bike aficionados might not consider a landfill an appropriate place to recreate, but the undisputed evidence of past public use of the landfill to ride dirt bikes cannot be ignored (see, Iannotti v Consolidated Rail Corp., 74 NY2d 39, 46-47, supra; Wiggs v Panzer, 187 AD2d 504, 505; Jacobs v Northeastern Indus. Park, 181 AD2d 720, 721; Hoffman v Joseph R. Wunderlich, Inc., 147 AD2d 807, 809, lv denied 74 NY2d 612; compare, Ackermann v Town of Fishkill, 201 AD2d 441, 443). Based upon the undisputed evidence of the past public recreational use of the Metz landfill to ride dirt bikes and
Plaintiff implicitly concedes that the property was suitable for the particular recreational use when her son safely negotiated the same path the day before the accident, but seeks to impose liability based upon intervening excavation activity which allegedly created a dangerous condition. In Bragg v Genesee County Agric. Socy. (84 NY2d 544, supra), the Court of Appeals held that a similar claim was subject to the immunity created by the recreational use statute and we see no reason to reach a different conclusion here.
Plaintiff contends that even if her negligence cause of action is subject to the recreational use statute, the statute does not apply to her "statutory” causes of action. The "statutory” causes of action are apparently based upon plaintiff’s claims that Metz breached various statutory and/or regulatory obligations imposed upon him as a result of the construction and demolition debris landfill permit issued to him by the Department of Environmental Conservation. It is the general rule that if a statute "does not explicitly provide for a private cause
We also reject plaintiffs argument that Metz Contracting is not entitled to the protection of the recreational use statute. Although Metz Contracting is not an owner of the property, the statute also refers to occupants (General Obligations Law § 9-103 [1] [a]). There is nothing in the record to suggest that the potential liability of Metz Contracting to plaintiff could have arisen out of anything other than its occupancy of the property. To the extent that Adams v Rochester Gas & Elec. Corp. (191 AD2d 960), cited by plaintiff, can be read as holding that the recreational use statute does not apply to an occupant who does not have the authority to exclude others from using the property or to permit others to recreate on the property, we disagree. The Adams Court concluded that the authority to permit or exclude others from the property is essential because the sole purpose of the recreational use statute is to induce property owners to permit persons to come on their property to pursue specified activities (supra). The statutory purpose is fully realized, however, if the injured party is engaged in one of the specified activities and the property is suitable for the activity (Bragg v Genesee County Agric. Socy., supra, at 551). Whether the occupant has consented or been induced to consent to the use of the land is irrelevant (see, supra) and, therefore, whether the occupant has the authority to do so is also irrelevant.
Metz and Metz Contracting are both entitled to the protection of the recreational use statute and in the absence of any evidence that plaintiff’s son was injured as the result of malice or willful intent, Supreme Court correctly dismissed the complaint as to Metz and Metz Contracting.