Types of Ski Accidents

Common types of ski accidents with links to significant ski cases involving collision accidents, lift accidents or ski area negligence.

 


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The Four Types of Ski Accident Cases

Overview of the most common types of ski accidents with links to significant ski cases involving collision accidents, lift accidents or ski area negligence.


Ski collision cases

Cases in which skiers or snowboarders collide with another on the ski slope. Liability determined by state law.

Read more about ski collision cases.

Read case summaries of ski collision accidents.

 


Manslaughter/Wrongful Death

In some states, if a fatal collision is caused by a reckless skier, the at-fault party may be criminally charged with manslaughter.

Read more about wrongful death ski accidents and case summaries.

 


Ski Lift Accidents

Cases in which a skier is injured as a result of a faulty, defective, or improperly maintained or operated ski lift. Though the responsible party is the ski area operator, the lift cases are distinguished from other ski area negligence claims because the operation of a ski lift, as a mode of public transport, typically demands a higher duty of care on the part of area operator.

Read more about ski lift accident cases and case summaries.

 


Ski Area Negligence

Accidents in a ski area resulting from improperly designed or maintained trails, marked man-made objects or groomed slopes. Accidents may also result from negligent operation ski patrol and snow maintenance vehicles such as snowmobiles or snow cats.

Read more about ski area negligence cases.

Read case summaries of ski area negligence.

 


Less Common Ski Accident Claims-

These cases are less common but, with facts demonstrating a breach of duty, may be pursued.


Negligence of Ski Instructor

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. 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.


Ski Equipment Failure

Cases in which injury is caused by a skier's equipment generally alpine release bindings. 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.