The Five Types of Ski Cases
- Ski collision cases:cases in which skiers or snowboarders collide and one skier sues the other;
- Ski lift cases: cases in which a skier is injured as a result of a faulty, defective, or improperly maintained or operated ski lift;
- Fall cases: cases which involve skiers who have an accident while on the mountain and the fault of the injury lies with an improperly designed, maintained, marked or groomed slope;
- Instructor cases: cases in which a skier, under the supervision
of an instructor, is led into unmanageable
terrain and injures himself, or when a skier, under the supervision of an
instructor, injures a third party and that injury is a result of inadequate supervision
or instruction;
- Equipment cases: cases in which injury is caused by a skier's equipment generally alpine release bindings.
COLLISION
CASES
Ski law is state law - so each case is governed by the ski laws of the state in which the accident occurs. Colorado law presumes that the uphill skier is at fault
in an accident, because the overtaking skier has the primary duty to avoid the skier below him or her. Thus, one of
the key issues in any skier/skier case is who was the
uphill or overtaking skier. The nature of the injury often
gives substantial clues as to how the accident occurred,
the speed at which the skiers were skiing, and the relative angles to each other. All skiers are under a general duty
to ski cautiously, within their ability and to maintain
control. The Colorado Ski Safety Statute provides that
skiers are obliged to maintain a lookout. If one fails
to ski in control or to maintain a lookout, the skier
is negligent and responsible for the injuries and damages
caused.
Colorado law, and ski safety acts in most other states, require individuals involved in skier/skier collisions to stop at the scene,
render aid and to give their name, local address, permanent address and identification. But do not rely on ski patrol or ski area operators to obtain this information because, as a principle of law, they are under no duty to obtain the information. Although
this absence of duty is under challenge, the courts are
reluctant to impose an enforceable duty upon ski area
operators to obtain identification information from reckless skiers.
Generally though, ski patrol will compile a relatively comprehensive
report concerning the nature, location, and causes of
a skier/skier collision which will then become evidence in the ski litigation.
>Case reports for recent ski collision cases.
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LIFT
CASES
Over 90% of all lift cases arise while the skier is either
loading or unloading and are a consequence of either Skier
error or lift operator error rather than a design defect.
The liability question is generally settled after balancing the operator's duty to exercise the highest
degree of care against the skier/ passenger's duty to pay
attention, have the requisite skills to board the lift,
and to heed all posted information and instructions. Unloading accidents can be the result of an operator's negligence
caused by an inadequate ramp and snow maintenance and/or
the failure to stop the lift when an obstacle is present on the onloading ramp or to allow known inexperienced
skiers to exit safely.
Ski lifts, in the main, are
relatively simple devices with established technology
and a high degree of safety. However, given the large
number of skiers annually using these lifts it is not
surprising that after significant and repetitive cycles,
design defects may catch up with the technology. Colorado
law provides that ski area operators are obliged to operate their lifts in accord with the highest degree of care
commensurate with the safety of the passengers. The issues
of liability in ski lift cases, when the injury occurs
after loading and before unloading, generally concern
who is responsible—for a failure, the ski area operator for poor
maintenance or an engineering, design or manufacturing
firm for a defect.
>Case reports for recent ski lift accident cases.
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SKI AREA NEGLIGENCE CASES
Prior to July 1, 1990, Colorado ski area operators were obliged
not only to operate their ski areas in compliance with
the specific requirements of the Ski Safety Statute (regarding
the marking of slopes, the padding and marking of man
made objects, and posting of specific warnings) but also
to exercise a reasonable duty of care in the design, maintenance
and operation of their slopes. The 1989-90 General Assembly
passed amendments to the Ski Safety Act which provided that no skier could recover for injuries resulting
from the inherent dangers of skiing; and, limiting damages
recoverable from a ski area operator for cases except
for lift accidents. In 1995, the Colorado Supreme Court
interpreted these amendments in Graven v. Vail Associates,
Inc. 909 P. 2d 514 (Colo. 1995) the Colorado Supreme Court
adopted a narrow construction of the inherent danger provisions
of the Colorado Ski Act. C.R.S. §33-44-101 et seq.
This precedent will allow some skiers, who are injured
while skiing, to advance a claim for injuries against
a ski area operator if the injury results not from a ski
area operator's breach of a specific duty set out in the
Ski Act, but, rather from a danger or risk which is found
to be not "integral" to the sport. Followed:
Dovey et al v. Victoria Breckenridge et al., 95 CV 1153,
District Court, City and County of Denver, State of Colorado
(Order denying Motion to Dismiss, 1/3/96).
>Case reports for recent ski area negligence cases.
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INSTRUCTOR
CASES
Ski instructors are under a general duty to exercise due
care when teaching. This generally means that ski instructors
should not encourage individuals to take blind jumps and
instructors should refrain from leading classes into terrain
beyond their ability.
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EQUIPMENT
CASES
Equipment cases generally concern the failure of alpine
bindings to release under circumstances in which the injured
person would have expected them to have opened and prevented
injury. Liability in these cases will hinge on whether
the ski bindings were properly set and/or whether the
bindings, if set correctly, were functioning properly.
The second issue of liability in these cases concerns
whether the fall which injured the person was of the nature
and type which exerted forces through the binding which,
if set and operating properly, should have opened the
binding. A number of injuries exist which are currently
not altogether preventable even by properly set and operating
bindings.
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For in-depth information on trends in ski law,
visit www.skilaw.com,
or call 800.221.5526 to speak to one of our experienced ski accident lawyers.