Maine Code § 14-159-A

Limited liability for recreational or harvesting activities
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1. Definitions. As used in this section, unless the context indicates otherwise, the following terms
have the following meanings.
A. "Premises" means improved and unimproved lands, private ways, roads, any buildings or
structures on those lands and waters standing on, flowing through or adjacent to those lands.
"Premises" includes railroad property, railroad rights-of-way and utility corridors to which public
access is permitted. [PL 2005, c. 375, §1 (AMD).]
B. "Recreational or harvesting activities" means recreational activities conducted out-of-doors,
including, but not limited to, hunting, fishing, trapping, camping, environmental education and
research, hiking, rock climbing, ice climbing, bouldering, rappelling, recreational caving, sight-
seeing, operating snow-traveling and all-terrain vehicles, skiing, hang-gliding, noncommercial
aviation activities, dog sledding, equine activities, boating, sailing, canoeing, rafting, biking,
picnicking, swimming or activities involving the harvesting or gathering of forest, field or marine
products. It includes entry of, volunteer maintenance and improvement of, use of and passage over
premises in order to pursue these activities. "Recreational or harvesting activities" does not include
commercial agricultural or timber harvesting. [PL 2015, c. 20, §1 (AMD).]
C. "Occupant" includes, but is not limited to, an individual, corporation, partnership, association
or other legal entity that constructs or maintains trails or other improvements for public recreational
use. [PL 2003, c. 509, §1 (NEW).]
[PL 2015, c. 20, §1 (AMD).]
2. Limited duty. An owner, lessee, manager, holder of an easement or occupant of premises does
not have a duty of care to keep the premises safe for entry or use by others for recreational or harvesting
activities or to give warning of any hazardous condition, use, structure or activity on these premises to
persons entering for those purposes. This subsection applies regardless of whether the owner, lessee,
manager, holder of an easement or occupant has given permission to another to pursue recreational or
harvesting activities on the premises.
[PL 1995, c. 566, §1 (AMD).]
3. Permissive use. An owner, lessee, manager, holder of an easement or occupant who gives
permission to another to pursue recreational or harvesting activities on the premises does not thereby:
A. Extend any assurance that the premises are safe for those purposes; [PL 1979, c. 253, §2
(NEW).]
B. Make the person to whom permission is granted an invitee or licensee to whom a duty of care
is owed; or [PL 1979, c. 253, §2 (NEW).]
C. Assume responsibility or incur liability for any injury to person or property caused by any act
of persons to whom the permission is granted even if that injury occurs on property of another
person. [PL 2007, c. 260, §1 (AMD).]
[PL 2007, c. 260, §1 (AMD).]
4. Limitations on section. This section does not limit the liability that would otherwise exist:
A. For a willful or malicious failure to guard or to warn against a dangerous condition, use,
structure or activity; [PL 1979, c. 253, §2 (NEW).]
B. For an injury suffered in any case where permission to pursue any recreational or harvesting
activities was granted for a consideration other than the consideration, if any, paid to the following:
(1) The landowner or the landowner's agent by the State;
(2) The landowner or the landowner's agent for use of the premises on which the injury was
suffered, as long as the premises are not used primarily for commercial recreational purposes
and as long as the user has not been granted the exclusive right to make use of the premises for
recreational activities; or

(3) The landowner or grantor who grants, and the holder or grantee who accepts, an easement
or other legal instrument that makes an express grant of perpetual public access over premises
for the public to pursue recreational or harvesting activities; or [PL 2025, c. 256, §§1, 2
(AMD).]
C. For an injury caused, by acts of persons to whom permission to pursue any recreational or
harvesting activities was granted, to other persons to whom the person granting permission, or the
owner, lessee, manager, holder of an easement or occupant of the premises, owed a duty to keep
the premises safe or to warn of danger. [PL 1995, c. 566, §1 (AMD).]
[PL 2025, c. 256, §§1, 2 (AMD).]
5. No duty created. Nothing in this section creates a duty of care or ground of liability for injury
to a person or property.
[PL 1993, c. 622, §1 (AMD).]
6. Costs and fees. The court shall award any direct legal costs, including reasonable attorneys'
fees, to an owner, lessee, manager, holder of an easement or occupant who is found not to be liable for
injury to a person or property pursuant to this section.
[PL 1995, c. 566, §1 (AMD).]
7. Perpetual grant of public access. A landowner or other grantor who grants, and a holder or
grantee who accepts, an easement or other legal instrument that includes a perpetual right of public
access over premises for the public to pursue one or more recreational or harvesting activities, in
reliance on the protections from liability established by this section as they exist at the time of the grant,
as evidenced by an instrument recorded in the registry of deeds for the county in which the premises
are located, acquires a permanent vested property right to those protections for any rights so granted,
which runs to their heirs, successors and assigns.
[PL 2025, c. 256, §3 (NEW).]

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