Arizona 2022 2022 Regular Session

Arizona House Bill HB2130 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 02/03/2022

                      	HB 2130 
Initials PAB 	Page 1 	Caucus & COW 
 
ARIZONA HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 
Fifty-fifth Legislature 
Second Regular Session 
House: LARA DP 6-5-0-0 
 
HB 2130: recreational users; property 
Sponsor: Representative Griffin, LD 14 
Caucus & COW 
Overview 
Limits a landowner's liability for injuries to recreational or educational users that occur on the 
owner's land and declares that these users are liable for any damage they cause to the owner's 
land. 
History 
The recreational-use immunity statute limits liability for injuries that occur on another's land. 
Specifically, an individual who legally possesses land is not liable for a recreational or educational 
user's injury on the land unless the individual was guilty of willful, malicious or grossly negligent 
conduct that directly led to the user's injury. Under this statute, grossly negligent conduct entails 
having a knowing or reckless indifference to others' health and safety. By contrast, conduct is 
willful or malicious if done with knowledge that another person will likely be seriously injured or 
with reckless disregard to any potential injuries.  
This statute does not limit liability for maintaining an attractive nuisance, which is a dangerous 
and artificial condition on landowner's property that often attracts children, such as an abandoned 
car or empty swimming pool. (In tort law, the attractive nuisance doctrine generally places liability 
on a landowner for such a nuisance.) However, under the recreational-use immunity statute, an 
exception exists for open water infrastructure such as canals (A.R.S. § 33-1551). 
A duty of care in tort law is a legal obligation that requires an individual to adhere to a standard of 
reasonable care while performing acts that could foreseeably harm others. 
Provisions 
1. Asserts that recreational or educational users accept the risks created by their activities and 
must exercise reasonable care in those activities. 
2. Declares that:  
a) Someone who legally resides on land does not owe a duty of care to keep the land safe 
for entry by recreational or educational users or to warn of any dangerous conditions on 
the land; and 
b) Any warning of a dangerous condition on the land, modifications made to improve the 
safety of others, or failing to maintain any warning of a dangerous condition on the land 
does not create any liability on the legal resident if there is no other basis for the liability.  
3. Stipulates that these declarations apply to the duties and liability of any governmental entity, 
nongovernmental organization or individual that provides monies, reasonably performs 
maintenance, reasonably makes improvements or takes similar reasonable action for land 
made available for recreation or education. 
4. Clarifies that these declarations do not:  
☐ Prop 105 (45 votes)     ☐ Prop 108 (40 votes)      ☐ Emergency (40 votes) ☐ Fiscal Note    	HB 2130 
Initials PAB 	Page 2 	Caucus & COW 
a) Create a duty of care or basis of liability for injury to persons or property; or 
b) Relieve an individual using another's land for recreation or education from any obligation 
the individual may have to exercise care in using the land, in activities on the land or legal 
consequences for failing to exercise care. 
5. States that an individual who uses another's land for recreation or education is liable for any 
damage to the land, property, livestock or crops the individual may cause. 
6. Makes technical and conforming changes.