West Virginia Whitewater Responsibility Act.

West Virginia Whitewater Responsibility Act. 

Chapter 20.  Natural Resources.

Article 3B. Whitewater Responsibility Act.

GO TO WEST VIRGINIA STATUTES ARCHIVE DIRECTORY

W. Va. Code Ch. 20, Art. 3B Notes (2014)

Article 3B. Whitewater Responsibility Act. Notes

A.L.R. references.

Validity, construction, and effect of agreement exempting operator of amusement facility from liability for personal injury or death of patron, 54 A.L.R.5th 513.

§ 20-3B-1.  Legislative purposes.

Every year, in rapidly increasing numbers, the inhabitants of the State of West Virginia and nonresidents are enjoying the recreational value of West Virginia rivers and streams. The tourist trade is of vital importance to the State of West Virginia and the services offered by commercial whitewater outfitters and commercial whitewater guides significantly contribute to the economy of the State of West Virginia. The Legislature recognizes that there are inherent risks in the recreational activities provided by commercial whitewater outfitters and commercial whitewater guides which should be understood by each participant. It is essentially impossible for commercial whitewater outfitters and commercial whitewater guides to eliminate these risks. It is the purpose of this article to define those areas of responsibility and affirmative acts for which commercial whitewater outfitters and commercial whitewater guides are liable for loss, damage or injury.

Exemption from tort liability.

Section 20-3B-3 imposes a standard of care, and a clause in an agreement purporting to exempt a party from tort liability to a member of the protected class for failure to conform to that statutory standard is unenforceable. Murphy v. North Am. River Runners, 186 W. Va. 310, 412 S.E.2d 504, 1991 W. Va. LEXIS 222 (1991).

Quoted in

River Riders, Inc. v. Steptoe, 223 W. Va. 240, 672 S.E.2d 376, 2008 W. Va. LEXIS 116 (2008).

Cited in

Lewis v. Canaan Valley Resorts, Inc., 185 W. Va. 684, 408 S.E.2d 634, 1991 W. Va. LEXIS 126 (1991).

W. Va. Law Review.

Fahey, “Landlord Liability in West Virginia for Criminal Acts on the Premises,” 98 W. Va. L. Rev. 659 (1996).

§ 20-3B-2.  Definitions.

Unless the context of usage clearly requires otherwise:

(a) “Commercial whitewater outfitter” means any person, partnership, corporation or other organization, or any combination thereof, as defined in section twenty-three [§ 20-2-23], article two of this chapter.

(b) “Commercial whitewater guide” means any person as defined in section twenty-three [§ 20-2-23], article two of this chapter.

(c) “Participant” means any person using the services of a commercial whitewater outfitter or commercial whitewater guide on any river, portions of rivers or waters of the State.

Quoted in

Murphy v. North Am. River Runners, Inc., 186 W. Va. 310, 412 S.E.2d 504, 1991 W. Va. LEXIS 222 (1991).

§ 20-3B-3.Duties of commercial whitewater outfitters and commercial whitewater guides.

(a) All commercial whitewater outfitters and commercial whitewater guides offering professional services in this State shall provide facilities, equipment and services as advertised or as agreed to by the commercial whitewater outfitter, commercial whitewater guide and the participant. All services, facilities and equipment provided by commercial white-water outfitters and commercial whitewater guides in this State shall conform to safety and other requirements set forth in article two [§§ 20-2-1 et seq.] of this chapter and in the rules promulgated by the commercial whitewater advisory board created by section twenty-three-a [§ 20-2-23a], article two of this chapter.

(b) In addition to the duties set forth in subsection (a) of this section, all commercial whitewater guides providing services for whitewater expeditions in this state shall, while providing such services, conform to the standard of care expected of members of their profession.

Exemption from tort liability.

This section imposes a standard of care, and a clause in an agreement purporting to exempt a party from tort liability to a member of the protected class for failure to conform to that statutory standard is unenforceable. Murphy v. North Am. River Runners, 186 W. Va. 310, 412 S.E.2d 504, 1991 W. Va. LEXIS 222 (1991).

Whitewater rafting not governed by maritime law.

In consolidated actions involving wrongful death and negligence arising from a commercial white water rafting accident against a commercial white water rafting outfitter and a guide (defendants), defendants’ petition for a writ of prohibition was granted to the extent of vacating the trial court’s determination that maritime law applied to the case. The trial court erred by determining that maritime law applied to the case as white water rafting, as a matter of law, did not constitute traditional maritime activity and was, therefore, not governed by maritime law. River Riders, Inc. v. Steptoe, 223 W. Va. 240, 672 S.E.2d 376, 2008 W. Va. LEXIS 116 (2008).

Cited in

Pingley v. Perfection Plus Turbo-Dry, LLC, 2013 W. Va. LEXIS 422 (Apr 26, 2013).

§ 20-3B-4.Duties of participants.

(a) Participants have a duty to act as would a reasonably prudent person when engaging in recreational activities offered by commercial whitewater outfitters and commercial whitewater guides in this State.

(b) No participant may:

(1) Board upon or embark upon any commercial whitewater expedition when intoxicated or under the influence of nonintoxicating beer, intoxicating beverages or controlled substances; or

(2) Fail to advise the trip leader or the trip guide of any known health problems or medical disability and any prescribed medication that may be used in the treatment of such health problems during the course of the commercial whitewater expedition; or

(3) Engage in harmful conduct or willfully or negligently engage in any type of conduct which contributes to or causes injury to any person or personal property; or

(4) Perform any act which interferes with the safe running and operation of the expedition, including failure to use safety equipment provided by the commercial whitewater outfitter or failure to follow the instructions of the trip leader or trip guide in regard to the safety measures and conduct requested of the participants; or

(5) Fail to inform or notify the trip guide or trip leader of any incident or accident involving personal injury or illness experienced during the course of any commercial whitewater expedition. If such injury or illness occurs, the participant shall leave personal identification, including name and address, with the commercial whitewater outfitter’s agent or employee.

§ 20-3B-5.Liability of commercial whitewater outfitters and commercial whitewater guides.

It is recognized that some recreational activities conducted by commercial whitewater outfitters and commercial whitewater guides are hazardous to participants regardless of all feasible safety measures which can be taken.

(a) No licensed commercial whitewater outfitter or commercial whitewater guide acting in the course of his employment is liable to a participant for damages or injuries to such participant unless such damage or injury was directly caused by failure of the commercial whitewater outfitter or commercial whitewater guide to comply with duties placed on him by article two [§§ 20-2-1 et seq.] of this chapter, by the rules of the Commercial Whitewater Advisory Board, or by the duties placed on such commercial whitewater outfitter or commercial whitewater guide by the provisions of this article.

(b) The limitations on liability created by this article apply only to commercial whitewater outfitters li-censed under the provisions of article two of this chapter and to commercial whitewater guides who are agents or employees of licensed commercial whitewater outfitters, and only when the commercial whitewater outfitter or commercial whitewater guide is acting within the course of his employment.

Exemption from tort liability.

Section 20-3B-3 imposes a standard of care, and a clause in an agreement purporting to exempt a party from tort liability to a member of the protected class for failure to conform to that statutory standard is unenforceable. Murphy v. North Am. River Runners, 186 W. Va. 310, 412 S.E.2d 504, 1991 W. Va. LEXIS 222 (1991).

Whitewater rafting not governed by maritime law.

In consolidated actions involving wrongful death and negligence arising from a commercial white water rafting accident against a commercial white water rafting outfitter and a guide (defendants), defendants’ petition for a writ of prohibition was granted to the extent of vacating the trial court’s determination that maritime law applied to the case. The trial court erred by determining that maritime law applied to the case as white water rafting, as a matter of law, did not constitute traditional maritime activity and was, therefore, not governed by maritime law. River Riders, Inc. v. Steptoe, 223 W. Va. 240, 672 S.E.2d 376, 2008 W. Va. LEXIS 116 (2008).

 

 

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Negligence suit over injuries from falling out of a raft that was rented from outfitter. Release was part of raft rental contract.

Federal District court grant’s motion for summary judgment on release language in a rental agreement with multiple signatures from renters on one page. Scary!

Wroblewski v. Ohiopyle Trading Post, Inc., 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 119206

Date of the Decision: August 22, 2013

Plaintiff: Cari J. Wroblewski

Defendant: Ohiopyle Trading Post, Inc.

Plaintiff Claims:

Defendant Defenses: release in raft rental agreement

Holding: for the defendant

The plaintiff had recently gone rafting on the Salt River in Arizona. Two months later she with her friends rented a raft and equipment from the defendant to a raft the Youghiogheny River. The Youghiogheny River is a Class III run although it allegedly borders on Class IV at certain water levels.

Once the water level rises above a certain level the defendant is allowed to operate as a guide service and run river guides with its customers.

While the plaintiff was taking a long time in the restroom, the rest of her group talked to the defendant’s employees about the high water and declined a guided service. The normal price of a guided trip is $60 per person. The rental cost is $20 per person. The defendant offered to add a guide to the trip for $40 per person, a $20 per person discount from the regular price.

After leaving the restroom the plaintiff testified that she was rushed to sign the release and get her “stuff.” The court took note that the plaintiff was not the last person to sign the release. “Plaintiff was not the last person in her group to sign the Rental Agreement, as her signature is the second to last signature on the Rental Agreement.”

After signing the release and getting her gear the plaintiff received a safety briefing and then was sent down the river. During one of the final rapids, the plaintiff fell out of the boat and “was dragged under water and struck her knee on a rock, sustaining serious injuries.”

The case was filed in Federal District Court, which is the trial court, and the opinion is the court’s which was used to grant the defendants motion for summary judgment.

Summary of the case

The court pointed out several issues that the court, and the plaintiff identified. The release started half-way down the page and was titled “Terms and Conditions.” Multiple lines were provided where the parties all signed the same document. Additional legal information was found under section identified as “SAFETY PRECAUTIONS” and “RECOMMENDATIONS.” The overall title of the document was “Rental Agreement.” The court did point out that the font used in the form was small but sufficient.

The plaintiff argued the release was not enforceable because:

…Plaintiff points out that the document was titled “Rental Agreement” and therefore does not provide adequate notice to signors that it is a release of liability. Furthermore, the exculpatory language is placed at the bottom left of the form and not directly above the signature line, is written in small font, and does not appear until paragraph 9 of the form. Plaintiff also argues that no one specifically informed her that she was entering into a contract that would affect her legal rights, and that she was “rushed along” by Defendant’s employees.

The court then went through the cases in Pennsylvania that had thrown the release out. However, in each case this court found the facts were different or the case was not applicable to this one.

The statement of the court as to the relationship between a party signing a release for recreational activities and one for other purposes sets recreational releases apart.

Plaintiff voluntarily chose to engage in the sport of white-water rafting purely for recreational purposes. Plaintiff signed the Release; she was not compelled, as a legal matter, to sign it, but chose to sign it so that she could go on the white-water rafting trip with her group. (“[R]ecreational sporting activities may be viewed differently in the context of exculpatory agreements, as each party is free to participate, or not, in the activity, and, therefore, is free to sign, or not, the release form.”)

The court also took on issues the plaintiff did not identify, which is whether or not the plaintiff attempted to negotiate the release terms. As it has been pointed out several times in other cases, the opportunity or not to negotiate an activity without signing a release or to change a release may void the release.

There is no evidence that plaintiff sought to negotiate the terms of the Release or asked for additional time to read it, and to the extent she was “compelled” it was a compulsion arising solely from her personal desire to meet up with her group.

The court also eliminated the plaintiff’s argument she did not understand what she was signing in one sentence. “Under Pennsylvania law, the failure to read a contract does not nullify the contract’s validity.” The court stated the “Plaintiff could have requested additional time to read the agreement, or she could have chosen to not sign the Release and not go white-water rafting.”

The court held the release stopped the plaintiff’s claims.

The Release, even when construed against Defendant, clearly spelled out the parties’ intention to release defendant from liability and encompassed the risk of varying water levels and falling out of the raft. Consequently, the Release meets the enforceability test under Pennsylvania law. Plaintiff brings a claim for negligence. Negligence is explicitly encompassed within the Release, and Defendant’s motion for Summary Judgment is granted.

So Now What?

Remember a release that is involved in litigation is one that is poorly written. Well written releases do not end up in front of judges and juries. This court upheld the release but in doing so pointed out several issues that in other jurisdictions or maybe in Pennsylvania with different fact patterns would have held the other way.

First, the document was a rental agreement. It was labeled as such and most of the information the court pointed out was based on rental information. You may be able to combine a rental agreement and a release in one document; however, you should clearly label the document as such.

What was amazing is in the day and age when this accident happened, 2010, that a recreation business was still using a sign-in sheet as a release. You don’t buy a house on the same document as your neighbor used. Why would you risk your business by using a document signed by multiple people that defend against a multi-million dollar lawsuit?

Add to that the print size, the release language divided into three different columns in the document and the plaintiff’s arguments that she was hurried; this is a thank heaven’s decision.

What do you think? Leave a comment.

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By Recreation Law       Rec-law@recreation-law.com              James H. Moss               #Authorrank

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Tennessee Whitewater Rafting Professionals

Tennessee Whitewater Rafting Professionals

Title 70 Wildlife Resources 

Chapter 7 Liability for Activities 

Part 2 Whitewater Rafting Professionals

GO TO THE TENNESSEE ANNOTATED STATUTES ARCHIVE DIRECTORY

Tenn. Code Ann. § 70-7-201  (2013)

70-7-201. Part definitions.

As used in this part, unless the context otherwise requires:

(1) “Engages in whitewater activity” means whitewater rafting;

(2) “Inherent risks of whitewater activities” means those dangers or conditions that are an integral part of whitewater activities, including, but not limited to:

(A) Water;

(B) Rocks and obstructions;

(C) Cold water and weather; and

(D) The potential of a participant to act in a negligent manner that may contribute to injury to the participant or other, such as failing to follow instructions or not acting within the participant’s ability;

(3) “Participant” means any person who engages in a whitewater activity;

(4) “Whitewater” means rapidly moving water;

(5) “Whitewater activity” means navigation on rapidly moving water in a watercraft; and

(6) “Whitewater professional” means a person, corporation, LLC, partnership, natural person or any other entity engaged for compensation in whitewater activity.

HISTORY: Acts 2012, ch. 862, § 1.

NOTES: Compiler’s Notes.

For the Preamble to the act concerning the limitation of liability of those involved in whitewater activities, please refer to Acts 2012, ch. 862.

Former part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-204 (Acts 2004, ch. 952, § 1), concerning white water rafting, was repealed effective May 17, 2005, by Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 1, which also enacted present part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-207, in its place.

Former Part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-208 (Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 1), concerning the Tennessee White Water Rafting Responsibility Act, was repealed by Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 2, as amended by Acts 2007, ch. 85, § 1, effective July 1, 2010.

Effective Dates.

Acts 2012, ch. 862, § 2. May 1, 2012.

70-7-202.  Limitations on liability of whitewater professional.

Except as provided in § 70-7-203:

(1) A whitewater professional shall not be liable for an injury to or the death of a participant resulting from the inherent risks of whitewater activities; and

(2) No participant or participant’s representative shall make any claim against, maintain an action against, or re-cover from a whitewater professional, or any other participant for injury, loss, damages, or death of the participant resulting from any of the inherent risks of whitewater activities.

HISTORY: Acts 2012, ch. 862, § 1.

NOTES: Compiler’s Notes.

For the Preamble to the act concerning the limitation of liability of those involved in whitewater activities, please refer to Acts 2012, ch. 862.

Former part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-204 (Acts 2004, ch. 952, § 1), concerning white water rafting, was repealed ef-fective May 17, 2005, by Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 1, which also enacted present part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-207, in its place.

Former Part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-208 (Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 1), concerning the Tennessee White Water Rafting Responsibility Act, was repealed by Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 2, as amended by Acts 2007, ch. 85, § 1, effective July 1, 2010.

Effective Dates.

Acts 2012, ch. 862, § 2. May 1, 2012.

Section to Section References.

This section is referred to in § 70-7-203.

70-7-204.  Warning notice.

(a) Every whitewater professional shall either post and maintain signs that contain the warning notice prescribed in subsection (d) or give the warning in writing to participants. The signs shall be placed in clearly visible locations on or near places where the whitewater professional conducts whitewater activities, if the places are owned, managed, or controlled by the professional.

(b) The warning notice specified in subsection (d) shall appear on the sign in black letters, with each letter to be a minimum of one inch (1”) in height.

(c) Every written contract entered into by a whitewater professional for the purpose of providing professional services, instruction, or the rental of equipment to a participant, whether or not the contract involves activities on or off the location or site of the whitewater professional’s business, shall contain in clearly readable print the warning notice specified in subsection (d).

(d) The signs and contracts described in subsection (a) shall contain the following warning notice:

WARNING

Pursuant to Tenn. Code Annotated title 70, chapter 7, part 2, a whitewater professional is not liable for an injury to or the death of a participant in whitewater activities resulting from the inherent risks of whitewater activities.

HISTORY: Acts 2012, ch. 862, § 1.

NOTES: Compiler’s Notes.

For the Preamble to the act concerning the limitation of liability of those involved in whitewater activities, please refer to Acts 2012, ch. 862.

Former part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-204 (Acts 2004, ch. 952, § 1), concerning white water rafting, was repealed ef-fective May 17, 2005, by Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 1, which also enacted present part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-207, in its place.

Former Part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-208 (Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 1), concerning the Tennessee White Water Rafting Responsibility Act, was repealed by Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 2, as amended by Acts 2007, ch. 85, § 1, effective July 1, 2010.

Effective Dates.

Acts 2012, ch. 862, § 2. May 1, 2012.

70-7-203.  When liability of whitewater professional imposed.

Nothing in § 70-7-202 shall be construed to prevent or limit the liability of a whitewater professional, or any other person if the whitewater professional:

(1) Provided the equipment and knew or should have known that the equipment was faulty, and the equipment was faulty to the extent that it caused the injury;

(2) Owns, leases, rents, or otherwise is in the lawful possession and control of the land or facilities upon which the participant sustained injuries because of a dangerous latent condition that was known to the whitewater professional, or person and for which warning signs have not been conspicuously posted;

(3) Commits an act or omission that constitutes gross negligence or willful or wanton disregard for the safety of the participant, and the act or omission caused the injury; or

(4) Intentionally injures the participant.

HISTORY: Acts 2012, ch. 862, § 1.

NOTES: Compiler’s Notes.

For the Preamble to the act concerning the limitation of liability of those involved in whitewater activities, please refer to Acts 2012, ch. 862.

Former part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-204 (Acts 2004, ch. 952, § 1), concerning white water rafting, was repealed effective May 17, 2005, by Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 1, which also enacted present part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-207, in its place.

Former Part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-208 (Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 1), concerning the Tennessee White Water Rafting Responsibility Act, was repealed by Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 2, as amended by Acts 2007, ch. 85, § 1, effective July 1, 2010.

Effective Dates.

Acts 2012, ch. 862, § 2. May 1, 2012.

Section to Section References.

This section is referred to in § 70-7-202.

70-7-205. Written waivers, exculpatory agreements and releases.

Nothing in this part shall modify, constrict or prohibit the use of written waivers, exculpatory agreements or releases. This part is intended to provide additional limitations of liability for whitewater professionals, whether or not such agreements are used.

HISTORY: Acts 2012, ch. 862, § 1.

NOTES: Compiler’s Notes.

For the Preamble to the act concerning the limitation of liability of those involved in whitewater activities, please refer to Acts 2012, ch. 862.

Former part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-204 (Acts 2004, ch. 952, § 1), concerning white water rafting, was repealed ef-fective May 17, 2005, by Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 1, which also enacted present part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-207, in its place.

Former Part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-208 (Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 1), concerning the Tennessee White Water Rafting Responsibility Act, was repealed by Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 2, as amended by Acts 2007, ch. 85, § 1, effective July 1, 2010.

Effective Dates.

Acts 2012, ch. 862, § 2. May 1, 2012.


Down River Spring Boat Swap and Grand Re-Opening

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Spring Boat Swap & Grand Re-Opening

Friday, April 4 – 10am-5-pm, Saturday, April 5 – 10am-5pm, Sunday, April 6 – 10am-3pm

WIN a Raft!By entering ourDaily Gear Raffle

Get 1 raffle ticket for every $100 you spend

during the sale.

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Adventure 095 (green) $1,895.00 Value

Sunday’s

Grand Prize Winner

takes it home!

A Must Have Accessory!
barrel pump 125
4″ Barrell Pump $189.95 Value
One given away each day during ourGear Raffle
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$50.00Gift Certificate

One given away each day during our Gear Raffle

$$$$$$$$$$$$$

We’ll also be raffling off lots ofaccessories each day so hope to see you here!Must be present to win. Sorry, no substitutions. See contest desk during event for details.
While you’re here …don’t forget to check out Our NEW Clearance Center

&

2NDs and Demos from

Sawyer Paddles & Oars

Swap
GRAND RE-OPENINGDown River Equipment is now employee owned. We invite you to join us in celebrating our first season together by taking advantage of Store Wide Discounts and our first ever Daily Gear Raffle.Most everything will be marked down 10-30% (limited to in stock items only & excludes frames and other accessories requiring shop labor.)

And don’t miss out on the chance to win gear and accessories daily throughout the swap. One ticket for each $100 in purchases will be entered for you into our daily raffle. Participants must be present to win.

This event will happen rain or shine so come prepared to take advantage of savings inside and out!

BOAT SWAP

This bi-annual event is a great opportunity to upgrade your existing boat or affordably purchase your first inflatable. Our knowledgeable staff will be on hand to answer all your questions so you can purchase with confidence.

Boat Swap Info
If you plan to sell your boat in our swap,here’s what you need to know :

  • Drop off your boat by Wednesday, April 2nd between regular store hours – Monday-Friday 9:00am-6:00pm and Saturday 10:00am-5:00pm.
  • Only drop off your rubber (rafts, cat tubes, duckies or inflatable sport boats). You may sell additional items grouped into the price of the boat as a package (frame, oars, etc.), but please do not bring them. It’s a good idea to make an itemized list of things that are being sold with the boat and attach it. This way it’s clear to the buyer what they’re getting. (Pictures are great too!)
  • If your boat sells, you will receive a call from us. If you do not hear from us by Sunday afternoon, then we were unable to find your boat a new home and we will need you to pick up your boat by Sunday, April 6th between 2:00pm and 3:00pm.
  • You do not need to be present for your boat to sell.
  • If your boat sells you have the option to receive 100% In-Store credit, or we can cut you a check for 85% of the total selling amount.

A list of swap boats will be posted on our website www.downriverequip.com

Thursday night, April 3rd.

Hope to see you!Phil, Zach, Jason & The DRE CrewDown River Equipment Company

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Like us on Facebook

Down River Equipment Company | 12100 W 52nd Ave | Unit #101 | Wheat Ridge | CO | 80033

Release signed for whitewater rafting also works to stop claim for tripping getting out of raft bus. Tennessee release law broad enough to protect items enumerated in the release

Henderson v. Quest Expeditions, Inc. 174 S.W.3d 730; 2005 Tenn. App. LEXIS 334

Plaintiff: Nathan & Brandy Henderson

Defendant: Quest Expeditions, Inc.

Plaintiff Claims: negligence

Defendant Defenses: Release

Holding: for the defendant based on the release

This Tennessee case is quite interesting. The plaintiff was a first-time whitewater rafter. After the raft trip ended, he boarded the bus to ride back to the office. For some reason, not in the record, he was forced to get out of the first bus and board another bus. While disembarking from the first bus he slipped and fell sustaining injuries.

He filed this suit which was dismissed by the trial court based on a Motion for Summary Judgment. The plaintiff appealed arguing the release was barred by public policy and void because it was too excessive in its scope.

Summary of the case

The court looked at all arguments raised by the plaintiff on appeal. Some that I have reviewed and written about before and some new and “novel” theories.

The first issue was the plaintiff stated the release should be thrown out because the plaintiff “had no previous white-water rafting experience, and was given a pre-printed document to sign prior to the excursion which was not reviewed with him by an employee of defendant.”

Can you imagine the pile up in an office if you had to go over each release with each patron who came to purchase a trip from you?

The plaintiff also argued that “he was not advised whether there were any other rafting companies who would allow him to go rafting without having to sign a waiver, or whether he could pay additional money to not have to sign the waiver.”

This is a rare argument, but it has been used to defeat releases in a few cases. See Atkins v. Swimwest Family Fitness Center, 2005 WI 4; 2005 Wisc. LEXIS 2.

The next argument was the release was void because it violated public policy. The court first looked at whether releases were valid in Tennessee. The Tennessee Supreme Court upheld releases.

It is well settled in this State that parties may contract that one shall not be liable for his negligence to another but that such other shall assume the risk incident to such negligence. . . . Further, it is not necessary that the word ‘negligence’ appear in the exculpatory clause and the public policy of Tennessee favors freedom to contract against liability for negligence.

Of note is the statement by the court that the word negligence does not need to appear in the release. The Tennessee Supreme Court adopted the requirements of Tunkl v. Regents of University of California, 60 Cal. 2d 92, 383 P.2d 441, 32 Cal. Rptr. 33 (Ca. 1963) to determine if an activity should not be covered by a release.

(a.) It concerns a business of a type generally thought suitable for public regulation.

(b.) The party seeking exculpation is engaged in performing a service of great importance to the public, which is often a matter of practical necessity for some members of the public.

(c.) The party holds himself out as willing to perform this service for any member of the public who seeks it, or at least for any member coming within certain established standards.

(d.) As a result of the essential nature of the service, in the economic setting of the transaction, the party invoking exculpation possesses a decisive advantage of bargaining strength against any member of the public who seeks his services.

(e.) In exercising a superior bargaining power the party confronts the public with a standardized adhesion contract of exculpation, and makes no provision whereby a purchaser may pay additional reasonable fees and obtain protection against negligence.

(f.) Finally, as a result of the transaction, the person or property of the purchaser is placed under the control of the seller, subject to the risk of carelessness by the seller or his agents.

The court then looked at the factors as explained by the Tennessee Supreme Court. Generally, professionals are not allowed to receive a release for their negligence, where tradesmen could.

…not all of the factors had to be present in order to invalidate an exculpatory agreement, but generally, the factors were limited to circumstances involving “a contract with a profession, as opposed to ‘tradesmen in the marketplace’

Whitewater rafting is not a professional trade and as such the defendant could use a release. Whitewater rafting “is not a service of “great importance to the public, which is often a matter of practical necessity for some members of the public.” There is no necessity that one goes whitewater rafting.

The plaintiff then argued that because whitewater rafting was regulated it was of a public interest. Tennessee’s legislature passed 2005 Tenn. Pub. Acts 169 which regulated whitewater rafting in the state. However, the statute specifically allowed the use of releases. T.C.A. 70-7-205. Written waivers, exculpatory agreements and releases.

The final argument was the injury received by the plaintiff, slipping exiting a bus, which not an inherent risk of whitewater rafting and thus of outside the scope of the release. The plaintiff described the busses of the defendant in his complaint as: “…dilapidated school buses.” (Seems like a normal rafting company to me……

However, the court rejected that argument on two grounds. The first was the release was written broadly and covered all negligent acts of the defendant. The second was the release mentioned bus or van transportation. “Moreover, the Contract specifically mentions that plaintiffs are being furnished and participating in white-water rafting and “bus or van transportation” provided by the defendant.”

The court concluded:

The Contract under consideration is clear and unambiguous, and states that plaintiffs agreed to release defendant from any and all liability, including defendant’s own negligence. Moreover, the Contract specifically mentions that plaintiffs are being furnished and participating in white water rafting and “bus or van transportation” provided by the defendant. The Contract states that plaintiffs realize that they could be injured due to dangers from the rafting as well as the use of white water equipment, forces of nature, or even due to the negligence of defendant’s employees and other rafters. The Con-tract states that defendant is being relieved of any liability caused by its own negligence in no less than four places, the last of which is in bold print above the signature line. This Contract is plain, and enforceable as written.

So Now What?

First, never run the risk of having a release thrown out because it does not include the magic word negligence. Even though the Supreme Court may not require it today, your lawsuit tomorrow may set precedence on that issue. It is easy to put in and should be in every release.

To defeat the argument that you should be able to bargain your way out of the release or that whether there are any other companies offering trips without requiring a release to be signed you should put language in your release advising your clients about those issues. A release that states that the person is signing the release voluntarily and undertaking the activity voluntarily and is free to go, as in this case, whitewater rafting with someone else can eliminate this argument in most states.

To engage or purchase a trip with you without signing a release have your insurance company send you a letter stating how much your insurance would cost if a release is not signed. Then if asked you can show a patron the letter to support charging the normal price plus the increase in your insurance premium to go on a trip without signing a release. A $10,095.00 raft trip is probably not worth it for a day on the water.

If anyone asks if they can go rafting and not sign a release, the easiest way to respond is to send them to a competitor.

Whether or not transportation will be covered by a release will be different for each state. In some states if the transportation is incidental to the activity it may be covered. Here the release was written broadly, and releases are interpreted broadly to allow the scope of the release to cover transportation.

In some states, however, transportation is an activity that cannot be released because it is protected by public policy.

 

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Jim Moss

Jim Moss is an attorney specializing in the legal issues of the outdoor recreation community. He represents guides, guide services, and outfitters both as businesses and individuals and the products they use for their business. He has defended Mt. Everest guide services, summer camps, climbing rope manufacturers, avalanche beacon manufacturers, and many more manufacturers and outdoor industries. Contact Jim at Jim@Rec-Law.us

Jim is the author or co-author of six books about the legal issues in the outdoor recreation world; the latest is Outdoor Recreation Insurance, Risk Management

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To see Jim’s complete bio go here and to see his CV you can find it here. To find out the purpose of this website go here.

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Liability for Activities Whitewater Rafting Professionals

Tennessee Whitewater Rafting Statute

TENNESSEE CODE ANNOTATED

Title 70           Wildlife Resources

Chapter 7      Liability for Activities

Part 2  Whitewater Rafting Professionals

GO TO THE TENNESSEE ANNOTATED STATUTES ARCHIVE DIRECTORY

Tenn. Code Ann. § 70-7-204         (2013)

70-7-201. Part definitions.

As used in this part, unless the context otherwise requires:

(1) “Engages in whitewater activity” means whitewater rafting;

(2) “Inherent risks of whitewater activities” means those dangers or conditions that are an integral part of whitewater activities, including, but not limited to:

(A) Water;

(B) Rocks and obstructions;

(C) Cold water and weather; and

(D) The potential of a participant to act in a negligent manner that may contribute to injury to the participant or other, such as failing to follow instructions or not acting within the participant’s ability;

(3) “Participant” means any person who engages in a whitewater activity;

(4) “Whitewater” means rapidly moving water;

(5) “Whitewater activity” means navigation on rapidly moving water in a watercraft; and

(6) “Whitewater professional” means a person, corporation, LLC, partnership, natural person or any other en-tity engaged for compensation in whitewater activity.

HISTORY: Acts 2012, ch. 862, § 1.

NOTES: Compiler’s Notes.

For the Preamble to the act concerning the limitation of liability of those involved in whitewater activities, please refer to Acts 2012, ch. 862.

Former part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-204 (Acts 2004, ch. 952, § 1), concerning white water rafting, was repealed ef-fective May 17, 2005, by Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 1, which also enacted present part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-207, in its place.

Former Part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-208 (Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 1), concerning the Tennessee White Water Rafting Responsibility Act, was repealed by Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 2, as amended by Acts 2007, ch. 85, § 1, effective July 1, 2010.

Effective Dates.

Acts 2012, ch. 862, § 2. May 1, 2012.

70-7-202. Limitations on liability of whitewater professional.

Except as provided in § 70-7-203:

(1) A whitewater professional shall not be liable for an injury to or the death of a participant resulting from the inherent risks of whitewater activities; and

(2) No participant or participant’s representative shall make any claim against, maintain an action against, or re-cover from a whitewater professional, or any other participant for injury, loss, damages, or death of the participant resulting from any of the inherent risks of whitewater activities.

HISTORY: Acts 2012, ch. 862, § 1.

NOTES: Compiler’s Notes.

For the Preamble to the act concerning the limitation of liability of those involved in whitewater activities, please refer to Acts 2012, ch. 862.

Former part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-204 (Acts 2004, ch. 952, § 1), concerning white water rafting, was repealed ef-fective May 17, 2005, by Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 1, which also enacted present part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-207, in its place.

Former Part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-208 (Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 1), concerning the Tennessee White Water Rafting Responsibility Act, was repealed by Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 2, as amended by Acts 2007, ch. 85, § 1, effective July 1, 2010.

Effective Dates.

Acts 2012, ch. 862, § 2. May 1, 2012.

Section to Section References.

This section is referred to in § 70-7-203.

70-7-203. When liability of whitewater professional imposed.

Nothing in § 70-7-202 shall be construed to prevent or limit the liability of a whitewater professional, or any other person if the whitewater professional:

(1) Provided the equipment and knew or should have known that the equipment was faulty, and the equipment was faulty to the extent that it caused the injury;

(2) Owns, leases, rents, or otherwise is in the lawful possession and control of the land or facilities upon which the participant sustained injuries because of a dangerous latent condition that was known to the whitewater professional, or person and for which warning signs have not been conspicuously posted;

(3) Commits an act or omission that constitutes gross negligence or willful or wanton disregard for the safety of the participant, and the act or omission caused the injury; or

(4) Intentionally injures the participant.

HISTORY: Acts 2012, ch. 862, § 1.

NOTES: Compiler’s Notes.

For the Preamble to the act concerning the limitation of liability of those involved in whitewater activities, please refer to Acts 2012, ch. 862.

Former part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-204 (Acts 2004, ch. 952, § 1), concerning white water rafting, was repealed ef-fective May 17, 2005, by Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 1, which also enacted present part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-207, in its place.

Former Part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-208 (Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 1), concerning the Tennessee White Water Rafting Responsibility Act, was repealed by Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 2, as amended by Acts 2007, ch. 85, § 1, effective July 1, 2010.

Effective Dates.

Acts 2012, ch. 862, § 2. May 1, 2012.

Section to Section References.

This section is referred to in § 70-7-202.

70-7-204. Warning notice.

(a) Every whitewater professional shall either post and maintain signs that contain the warning notice prescribed in subsection (d) or give the warning in writing to participants. The signs shall be placed in clearly visible locations on or near places where the whitewater professional conducts whitewater activities, if the places are owned, managed, or controlled by the professional.

(b) The warning notice specified in subsection (d) shall appear on the sign in black letters, with each letter to be a minimum of one inch (1”) in height.

(c) Every written contract entered into by a whitewater professional for the purpose of providing professional services, instruction, or the rental of equipment to a participant, whether or not the contract involves activities on or off the location or site of the whitewater professional’s business, shall contain in clearly readable print the warning notice specified in subsection (d).

(d) The signs and contracts described in subsection (a) shall contain the following warning notice:

WARNING

Pursuant to Tenn. Code Annotated title 70, chapter 7, part 2, a whitewater professional is not liable for an injury to or the death of a participant in whitewater activities resulting from the inherent risks of whitewater activities.

HISTORY: Acts 2012, ch. 862, § 1.

NOTES: Compiler’s Notes.

For the Preamble to the act concerning the limitation of liability of those involved in whitewater activities, please refer to Acts 2012, ch. 862.

Former part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-204 (Acts 2004, ch. 952, § 1), concerning white water rafting, was repealed effective May 17, 2005, by Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 1, which also enacted present part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-207, in its place.

Former Part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-208 (Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 1), concerning the Tennessee White Water Rafting Responsibility Act, was repealed by Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 2, as amended by Acts 2007, ch. 85, § 1, effective July 1, 2010.

Effective Dates.

Acts 2012, ch. 862, § 2. May 1, 2012.

70-7-205. Written waivers, exculpatory agreements and releases.

Nothing in this part shall modify, constrict or prohibit the use of written waivers, exculpatory agreements or releases. This part is intended to provide additional limitations of liability for whitewater professionals, whether or not such agreements are used.

HISTORY: Acts 2012, ch. 862, § 1.

NOTES: Compiler’s Notes.

For the Preamble to the act concerning the limitation of liability of those involved in whitewater activities, please refer to Acts 2012, ch. 862.

Former part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-204 (Acts 2004, ch. 952, § 1), concerning white water rafting, was repealed ef-fective May 17, 2005, by Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 1, which also enacted present part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-207, in its place.

Former Part 2, §§ 70-7-201 — 70-7-208 (Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 1), concerning the Tennessee White Water Rafting Responsibility Act, was repealed by Acts 2005, ch. 169, § 2, as amended by Acts 2007, ch. 85, § 1, effective July 1, 2010.

Effective Dates.

Acts 2012, ch. 862, § 2. May 1, 2012.

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Are You Familiar with the Dolores River? Then you should be a member of the Dolores River Boating Advocates

Recreation, conservation, agriculture and river management

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River Management

Description: https://gallery.mailchimp.com/4e65386f5e96006b34ac94841/images/DSC_0282e5f4a37497fd.JPGLast month, the long-awaited San Juan National Forest Plan and the Bureau of Land Management’s Tres Rios Resource Management Plan were released. These plans will help guide the management of the Dolores River for the next twenty years and beyond. Local stakeholder efforts will also play into the fate of the Dolores. And while the federal government is “shutdown,” local discussions about Dolores River management continue on subjects as varied as Land Use Codes, the Dolores River Valley Plan, and the Lower Dolores River Implementation, Monitoring and Evaluation Plan (Implementation Plan). This month, we at DRBA are diving deeper into the topic of native fish in the Lower Dolores River, and how enhanced flows can improve their natural habitat while simultaneously providing recreational opportunities. Re-establishing a flow regime that mimics historical hydrography is a vital step towards restoring the natural balance of the river. Colorado Parks and Wildlife Biologist Jim White joined us on The River Trip on KSJD this month to discuss the status of native fish in the Dolores River. Jim’s research and experience illustrates that mindful management of the river is warranted to save native species and habitat. He also pointed out the need to do this in concert with community water allocation needs. These efforts are symbiotic. As a civilization, we need to support healthy rivers, clean water, and strong natural processes as all of that, in turn, supports us. Native fish flows and whitewater rafting flows are also symbiotic in terms of being mutually beneficial, as discussed in the following feature by DRBA Board Member Sam Carter. Management plans offer prime opportunities to actualize a balance for the cultural ecology of the Dolores River watershed. Read on, and join us in our efforts and enthusiasm in protecting the Dolores River. *Links for italicized plans are at the bottom of the page.

View from the Board

By DRBA Board Member Sam Carter

Tropical Storm Ivo brought just shy of two inches of rain to much of the Dolores River Basin near the end of August. The rain provided a dichotomous situation for the thirsty land of Southwest Colorado. Along with the welcome moisture came a flash flood on the Lower Dolores River in Slickrock Canyon. The Dolores River rose from 11cfs (cubic feet/second) to 400cfs from Ivo’s rains washing out immense amounts of accumulated silt. The silt had built up because, aside from a few minor flash floods, there has not been a sustained strong flush through the Dolores River canyon since the summer of 2011, and these important flushing flows have been irregular since McPhee Dam was developed. When Ivo’s rains came through, this silt became a muddy slurry that was uninhabitable to the fish in the river. Scores of them died, starved of the oxygen they need to survive. Observing all of this was a Cortez Journal reporter and a team of fish biologists from Colorado Parks and Wildlife who were conducting an annual native fish survey.

While the rain was welcome for the thirsty lands of Southwestern Colorado, the unfortunate die-off of the fish was a striking eye-opener concerning the state of the Dolores River below McPhee Reservoir. It is understood that the water in the lake provides a great deal of life for Montezuma and Dolores counties through municipal and agricultural uses. Yet, the removal of this water at the current levels is harming the ecosystem of the river itself, as seen through the decline of native fish species. The scientific investigations from the Dolores River Dialogue and the “A Way Forward” native fish studies clearly state that without change to flows, the health of the fish will only further deteriorate.

This recent flash flood event in the Slickrock Canyon highlights the urgency of the situation. The native fish in the Dolores River are not reproducing well, the population is aging, their habitat is being reduced, and they are under predation from non-native fish. Time is of the essence for the survival of these species.

Fortunately, a diverse group of stakeholders has been working to meet the various social and ecological needs of the water of the Dolores River. The native fish research from the A Way Forward project has been translated into a flow management plan that accommodates agricultural, municipal, and recreational uses. Supporting this effort benefits all of us.

Dolores River Boating Advocates (DRBA) supports efforts to improve flows that support native fish. We encourage managing base flow releases out of McPhee dam to provide for significant springtime flushes. Such flushes would enhance eco-system conditions for native fish populations, as well as allow for a whitewater boating season to occur. We believe this can be done while honoring the needs of our municipalities and of agricultural irrigation users. DRBA understands the challenges involved with this pursuit, and is actively working to assist in the process of developing flows that sustain fish health, whitewater opportunities, and municipal and agricultural use. DRBA encourages residents of Montezuma and Dolores counties to attend to the needs of the Dolores River’s health while also respecting the water needs of residents.


Say What?

San Juan National Forest/BLM Tres Rios Field Office Management Plans: Plans that address long-term management of 2.4 acres of public lands. More info can be found at http://www.fs.usda.gov/main/sanjuan/landmanagement/planning.

The River Trip: DRBA’s monthly radio show on KSJD that focuses on stories and issue of the Dolores River. This month’s show with Colorado Parks and Wildlife Biologist Jim White can be heard at: http://www.ksjd.org/audio.cfm?mode=detail&id=1360871370101.

Implementation Plan: Short for the “Lower Dolores River Implementation, Monitoring and Evaluation Plan” which is the culmination of the native fish research project, “A Way Forward” (see below) and a general assessment of community water needs. The Implementation Plan addresses the dynamics and critical components of improving flows in the lower Dolores River. Draft reports can be found at http://ocs.fortlewis.edu/drd/implementationTeamReports.htm.

A Way Forward: A report conducted by three independent scientists to evaluate the status of native fish in the Lower Dolores River. The Report can be found at: http://ocs.fortlewis.edu/drd/way-forward.htm.

Cultural Ecology: The study of human adaptations to social and physical environments. Human adaptation refers to both biological and cultural processes that enable a population to survive and reproduce within a given or changing environment.

Our mission: Dolores River Boating Advocates seeks to optimize flows, restore the natural environment, and permanently protect the Dolores River for whitewater boating.

Native_Fish_images.1.1.jpg

Upcoming Events

10/29-11/1
River Watch Training, Cedaredge, CO
River Watch is a statewide volunteer water quality-monitoring program operated by the Colorado Watershed Assembly in cooperation with Colorado Parks and Wildlife. River Watch trains voluntary stewards to monitor water quality and other indicators of watershed health, and utilizes this high quality data to educate citizens and inform decision makers about the condition of Colorado’s waters. Please contact us if you are interested in attending the training and helping us with water quality monitoring on the Dolores River.

11/1
Water 101, 8am-5pm, Holiday Inn Express, 2121 East Main Street, Cortez, CO

The Seminar features a line-up of experts, including keynote speaker Colorado Supreme Court Justice Gregory Hobbs, as well as representatives from federal, state, and local agencies who will provide an understanding of local water law and related issues including: local water sources, water administration, irrigation conservation, environmental concerns and answers to key questions pertaining to the acquisition and use of water, as well as water related real estate transactions.

11/12
Montezuma County BOCC Special Meeting on Land Use Codes and the Dolores River Plan, 1:30 PM, Montezuma County Courthouse, 109 Main Street, Cortez

LDolores5188.2.jpg

Dolores River Facts

The Dolores River is 230 miles long from the headwaters in the San Juan Mountains near Rico, Colorado to the confluence with the Colorado River at Dewey Bridge near Moab, Utah.

The lower Dolores River is home to five species of native fish including the Flannelmouth sucker, the Bluehead sucker, the Roundtail chub, the Speckled dace and the Mottled sculpin.

McPhee Dam increased the amount of irrigated land from 37,500 acres to 73,600 acres while also increasing water delivery up to two months.

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Please send your Dolores River stories for our newsletter to: info, and check out our website (www.doloresriverboating.org) and Facebook page where you can post your comments, photos, and stories.
Copyright © 2013 Dolores River Boating Advocates, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you opted in at our website or provided us with your contact information at an event.
Our mailing address is:Dolores River Boating AdvocatesPO Box 1173

Dolores, CO 81323

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Summer 2013 Commercial Fatalities 8/26/13

This list is not guaranteed to be accurate. The information is found from web searches and news dispatches. Those references are part of the chart. If you have a source for information on any fatality please leave a comment or contact me. Thank you.

If this information is incorrect or incomplete please let me know.  This is up to date as of August 14, 2013. Thanks.

Rafting, Mountaineering and other summer sports are probably still safer than your kitchen or bathroom. This information is not to scare you away from any activity but to help you understand the risks and to study.

Red is a probable death due to medical issues.

Dark blue is a death of an employee while working.

Date Activity State Location What Age Sex Home Ref
5/27 Whitewater Rafting AK

Kenai Peninsula’s Six Mile Creek, Zig Zag Rapid

washed out of a boat filled with clients and a guide as they entered rapid

47 M Cambridge, UK

http://rec-law.us/12iqD0n

6/8 Whitewater Rafting TN Chattooga River boat flipped 58 M Nashville, TN

http://rec-law.us/11GgUSN & http://rec-law.us/14qmZ7N

6/20 Mountaineering WY Lower Saddle of the Grand Teton slipped on snowfield and slid 55 M Colorado Springs, CO

http://rec-law.us/11wr9wp

7/3 Summer Camp CA Camp Tawonga Tree fell 21 F Santa Cruz, CA http://rec-law.us/16RpK3K & http://rec-law.us/124h7TI
7/6 Whitewater Rafting PA Youghiogheny River, Ohiopyle State Park Foot entanglement with rope 22 M Lancaster, PA http://rec-law.us/12dNcIz & http://rec-law.us/1btCuRC
7/9 Summer Camp UT Mt. Dell Scout Ranch, UT Run over by flat bed truck 14 M Cedar Hills, UT http://rec-law.us/159p1tz
8/14 Whitewater Rafting WV New River, WV washed out of boat into “meat grinder” area 16 M Germany http://rec-law.us/1dfgQl8
8/24 Whitewater Rafting TN Ocoee River, TN fell out in Grumpy’s rapid 52 F Rex, GA http://rec-law.us/17fRPnc & http://rec-law.us/1dJZYTU
8/25 Whitewater Rafting TN Ocoee River, TN fell out in Grumpy’s rapid 36 F Smyrna, TN http://rec-law.us/17fRPnc & http://rec-law.us/12FJFmh

Our condolences go to the families of the deceased. Our thoughts extend to the families and staff at the areas who have to deal with these tragedies.

Overall it has been a low fatality year! 

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Plaintiff tried multiple ways to sue whitewater rafting company

Plaintiff premises claims do not apply to a whitewater rafting company.

Sanders v. Laurel Highlands River Tours, Incorporated, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 15094 (4th Cir 1992)

Plaintiff: James A. Sanders

Defendant: Laurel Highlands River Tours, Incorporated; Laurel Highlands River Tours of Maryland, Incorporated

Plaintiff Claims: (1) he properly presented a “failure to warn claim”; (2) Laurel was strictly liable as a common carrier; (3) the district court abused its discretion in refusing to permit him to supplement the medical expert’s affidavit; (4) the district court erred in finding that the original affidavits were insufficient; and (5) the district court erred in finding that he failed to offer proof from which a reasonable jury could find Laurel negligent in failing to rescue him sooner

Defendant Defenses: no duty to warn Sanders of the dangers of the white-water rafting trip; that he failed to produce evidence that Laurel breached a duty to rescue him at the earliest opportunity; and that he failed to establish causation as to his claim that Laurel failed to adequately treat his injury

Holding: for the defendant

The plaintiff in this case went whitewater rafting previously with the defendant. During his second trip, he fell out of the raft injuring his knee. He later developed a staph infection from the injury. Cases where the plaintiff argues the first aid care was improper or negligent are extremely rare. However, the court rules on a technicality that throws out the plaintiff’s first aid claim and does not provide us with any direction in this area of the law.

During the trip, the plaintiff fell out of the raft and swam about 100 yards until he was rescued. During the swim, he was injured when he struck his knee on something. An employee of the defendant applied an ice bag and an elastic bandage on the trip. The Plaintiff eventually went to a hospital where he was diagnosed with a laceration and a fractured knee cap. The plaintiff later had surgery but developed a staph infection.

The plaintiff asserted the raft guide had the opportunity to rescue him but “the raft guide instructed his companions not to attempt to retrieve him until they got to calmer water.”

The plaintiff filed suit claiming, “that Laurel breached a duty to warn him of the dangers of rafting and that Laurel failed to rescue him at the earliest opportunity. His main claim, as the district court perceived it, was that Laurel failed to render proper first aid, and this was the cause of his subsequent infection.”

Summary of the case

The Plaintiff was a citizen of Alabama. The defendant raft company was located in Pennsylvania. The river where the accident occurred is the upper Youghiogheny in Maryland. The plaintiff sued the defendant in Federal District Court. The parties agreed that a Maryland court, the state where the accident occurred was the proper site for the venue of the case.

This section of the Youghiogheny was described by the court as “most difficult of all categories of river runs.” The court made that determination by using a book that describes the rivers and ratings in the east. The court is silent on how this book was accepted by the court and introduced into evidence.

Most books like this are brought into the evidentiary change through the Federal Rule of Evidence (F.R.E.) 803(18) Learned Treatises. The rules of evidence control what evidence is introduced at trial both as documents or things and what witnesses may say. F.R.E. 803(18) states:

(18) Learned treatises. To the extent called to the attention of an expert witness upon cross-examination or relied upon by the expert witness in direct examination, statements contained in published treatises, periodicals, or pamphlets on a subject of history, medicine, or other science or art, established as a reliable authority by the testimony or admission of the witness or by other expert testimony or by judicial notice. If admitted, the statements may be read into evidence but may not be received as exhibits.

Normally, the rules of evidence require a person to prove the document or book as what the evidence is, and that it is real. If you were trying to introduce the raft company brochure as a piece of evidence, you would have to have the owner or a corporate officer of the company on the stand and testify that the brochure was the brochure.

A Learned Treatise is different in two ways. The first is you do not need the author or the publisher to admit the treatise, the book into evidence. If the treatise is relied upon by an expert witness, testified as a reliable authority in the field or recognized as the authority by the court or the general public, the information in the treatise is accepted in the case. The second issue is everything in the treatise is accepted without additional testimony. Normally, it might take two or three experts to examine a river section and applying the American Whitewater Associations rating system determine the river rating. However, a book that is generally accepted in the whitewater community or by a recognized expert in the field is accepted by the court as a learned treatise under F.R.E. 803(18). Once the book is admitted, every page and statement in the book is admitted.

An important point in most recreational cases is what information the plaintiff had to assist him in his decision to engage in the sport. If the information is lacking the plaintiff introduces the evidence to prove the defendant was hiding things or did not give proper notice of the release or the dangers. If the brochure does a good job of pointing out the risks and the requirements, the defense introduces the brochure into trial. In this case, the plaintiff was mailed a brochure by the defendant. The brochure was reviewed by the court, and the Court pointed out three points in the brochure.

1) Although we spare no effort to assure you a safe trip, it must be understood that whitewater rafting does include some danger. We can assume no responsibility for personal safety . . . . We will ask that you sign a liability form.

2. Experience is a must everyone in your group should have rafted the Cheat [a river classified as lower in difficulty than the upper Youghiogheny] several times at various water levels.

3. Upper Youghiogheny – advanced to expert level. The upper Youghiogheny . . . is the ultimate challenge in white-water rafting.

The defendant also gave the trip participants a safety talk, oral warnings as the court described them at the meeting point and at the river put in. The plaintiff denies hearing the warnings. However, the court referenced the warnings in the opinion giving credibility to them. Finally, the plaintiff signed a release for this trip; the second release signed by the defendant, which the court quoted from:

As a condition of acceptance, I certify that I am an able swimmer, in good health, and understand the sport of white-water rafting. I further understand the potential hazards of the sport of white-water touring and realize that I could fall out of the raft or even capsize in a raft in rough water (rapids). I realize this could possibly result in serious injury. I relieve and save harmless Laurel Highland River Tours, Inc., their Directors, Officers, Stockholders, Employees and Helpers, of any responsibility for all claims of any nature whatsoever . . . .

Failure to Rescue

The Appellate court adopted the District Court’s analysis and finding regarding the claim that the defendant was not rescued quickly. Because the only testimony about whether the rescue was quick enough was the plaintiff’s there was no proof to validate the claim. The court stated an expert witnesses needed to testify that the plaintiff should have been rescued sooner. The plaintiff’s statements were insufficient under Maryland law to prove a claim of negligence.

This claim and the court’s review did not investigate the issue of keeping the majority safe at the expense of one. In a raft and in some cases on a mountain, the guide must evaluate the risk of the rescue to the entire boat, not to the swimming customer. If rescuing the one customer in the river will put the entire boat at risk, the customer will swim a while longer. This point must be made and explained to your guests both in writing and in any safety talk. It is important for the customer in the water to know that their rescue is up to them. It is important for the people in the boat to understand they have to get the boat to a safe area and then rescue so they do not risk themselves needlessly or just quit paddling believing they should grab the swimmer.

Negligent in failing to render first aid.

The claim of negligently failing to properly render first aid is an extremely rare claim. The court again looked at the evidence presented and ruled the evidence was insufficient to meet a claim of negligence; “that the medical evidence failed to show that the infection was caused by improper first aid.” By this court the court stated, there was nothing but the plaintiff’s allegations about how he was injured. Courts want expert testimony from people in the field to rule on scientific, technical or areas of information outside of the general knowledge of the public.

Failure to Warn

The plaintiff argued that the defendant failed to “warn Sanders [the plaintiff] of the extreme danger of the particular section of river they would be traversing.”

The court first examined whether there was a general duty to warn in a non-landowner liability case. The court found that a general duty to warn exists in numerous situations. The court used the example that a stable had a duty to warn a rider of a horse with dangerous propensities.

To establish a duty to warn, the court must look at the following factors: “foreseeability and certainty of harm; policy of preventing harm; closeness of connection between conduct and harm; moral blame; burden on defendant; and insurability.” Looking at the factors the court determined that “A white-water outfitter who arranges and guides customers on rafting trips owes a general duty of care to its customers. The general duty may require, in some circumstances, that Laurel provide a warning to its patrons.”

The warnings that the defendant gave the plaintiff were adequate as a matter of law according to the court. Warnings only need to be reasonable, not the best warnings possible. The court also found the plaintiff had notice of the risks because he had taken a prior whitewater rafting trip and because the risks of whitewater rafting are obvious: “…the general danger of white-water rafting is a risk apparent to anyone about to embark on such a trip.”

Finally, the court determined that the plaintiff’s claim that whitewater rafting was a common carrier, and thus due to a higher standard of care was without merit. By this the court meant, there was no legal or factual basis to discuss the issue.

So Now What?

There is no real information you can take from this case that we have not previously discussed. However, it does show how far some plaintiffs will go to get around and sue for an injury. The defendant had done a good job of putting out to the public information on the risks of the activity which allowed the court to make the decisions to deny the plaintiff’s claims.

Other Common Carrier Cases

WA Zip line lawsuit dismissed because the plaintiff admitted he should have understood the risk            http://rec-law.us/L3IfG1

Electronic release upheld in Florida federal court for surfing on a cruise ship       http://rec-law.us/LPSLWS

New Hampshire season pass release protects ski area from claim for injury due to snowmobile accident                       http://rec-law.us/XaQSpf

What do you think? Leave a comment.

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Sanders v. Laurel Highlands River Tours, Incorporated, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 15094 (4th Cir 1992)

Sanders v. Laurel Highlands River Tours, Incorporated, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 15094 (4th Cir 1992)

James A. Sanders, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Laurel Highlands River Tours, Incorporated; Laurel Highlands River Tours of Maryland, Incorporated, Defendants-Appellees.

No. 92-1060

United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit

1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 15094

May 5, 1992, Argued

June 29, 1992, Decided

Notice: Rules of the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals may limit citation to unpublished opinions. Please refer to the rules of the United States Court of Appeals for this circuit.

Subsequent History: Reported as Table case at 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 22122

Prior History: Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, at Baltimore. Frederic N. Smalkin, District Judge. (CA-91-1507-S)

Disposition: Affirmed

Counsel: Argued: Richard Evan Jordan, Washington, D.C., for Appellant.

Howard J. Schulman, Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellee.

Judges: Before Ervin, Chief Judge, Hamilton, Circuit Judge, and Howard, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of North Carolina, sitting by designation.

Opinion by: Per Curiam

Opinion

Opinion

Per Curiam:

James A. Sanders appeals the order of the district court granting summary judgment in favor of Laurel Highlands River Tours, Inc. (Laurel) on his claims arising from injuries he received while on a white-water rafting trip. Sanders also appeals the district court’s denial of his motion for reconsideration of the judgment. The district court granted summary judgment on the grounds that Laurel had no duty to warn Sanders of the dangers of the white-water rafting trip; that he failed to produce evidence that Laurel breached a duty to rescue him at the earliest opportunity; and that he failed to establish causation as to his claim that Laurel failed to adequately treat his injury.

Although the district court erred in ruling that the theory of failure to warn, other than as applied to landowners, does not arise outside of the product liability context, we affirm its decision on the grounds that, as a matter of law, the warnings given to Sanders were adequate and he assumed the risk of undertaking the white-water rafting trip.

I

Laurel is a corporation engaged in the business of outfitting and guiding customers who wish to raft down rivers and their rapids in the Pennsylvania area. One of the guided white-water tours is on the upper portion of the Youghiogheny River in Western Maryland. This portion of the Youghiogheny is classified, according to an industry guide, as within the most difficult of all categories of river runs, suitable for experts. Armstead, Whitewater Rafting in Eastern North America, (2d ed. 1989).

Sanders contracted with Laurel for himself and three of his friends. This trip was not the first Sanders took. On October 24, 1987, Sanders went on a rafting trip with Laurel on the lower Youghiogheny, a run classified as lower in difficulty than the upper Youghiogheny. Prior to the lower Youghiogheny trip, Sanders signed a release of liability which stated in part that he “realized I could fall out of the raft or even capsize in rough water (rapids). I realize this could result in serious injury.” (Exhibit, Joint Appendix (J.A.) 34). On July 20, 1988, Sanders made the reservation for the upper Youghiogheny trip. Sanders concedes that he received, prior to this trip, a brochure that stated, in relevant part:

1)Although we spare no effort to assure you a safe trip, it must be understood that whitewater rafting does include some danger. We can assume no responsibility for personal safety . . . . We will ask that you sign a liability form. (J.A. 44).

2.Experience is a must everyone in your group should have rafted the Cheat [a river classified as lower in difficulty than the upper Youghiogheny] several times at various water levels. (J.A. 40).

3.Upper Youghiogheny – advanced to expert level. The upper Youghiogheny . . . is the ultimate challenge in white-water rafting.

Sanders denies, and we accept for purposes of reviewing this summary judgment, that he heard the oral warnings that Laurel submits it gave about the dangers of white-water rafting in general and the upper Youghiogheny in particular. Laurel asserts that it gave such warnings at the meeting point for participants and the embarkation point at the river. There is no question, however, that Sanders signed a waiver and release card, before both the first trip and the ill-fated one. The card stated, directly above his signature and directly below information he filled out:

As a condition of acceptance, I certify that I am an able swimmer, in good health, and understand the sport of white-water rafting. I further understand the potential hazards of the sport of white-water touring and realize that I could fall out of the raft or even capsize in a raft in rough water (rapids). I realize this could possibly result in serious injury. I relieve and save harmless Laurel Highland River Tours, Inc., their Directors, Officers, Stockholders, Employees and Helpers, of any responsibility for any and all claims of any nature whatsoever . . . . (J.A. 34).

Laurel transported the customers to the drop-off point. At the drop-off point, the customers were given further instructions and outfitted with helmets and life preservers.

Early in the trip, Sanders fell out of the raft and claims he was forced to traverse approximately 100 yards of the rapids bodily. He asserts that, prior to his injury, there was an opportunity for him to be safely retrieved, but that the raft guide instructed his companions not to attempt to retrieve him until they got to calmer water. Sanders injured his knee at some point when he struck a rock and claims that he also suffered an open wound on the knee at that time. A Laurel employee rendered first aid which consisted of applying an ice cap and an elastic bandage to the injured area.

The next morning, Sanders went to an emergency room where he was treated and told to seek further care closer to home. The emergency room records indicate that he had an abrasion and a fractured knee cap. He later had surgery performed on his knee to repair the fracture. Four days later, Sanders developed a staph infection in the upper thigh.

Sanders does not claim that Laurel owed him a duty to prevent him from falling out of the raft. He does assert that Laurel breached a duty to warn him of the dangers of rafting and that Laurel failed to rescue him at the earliest opportunity. His main claim, as the district court perceived it, was that Laurel failed to render proper first aid and this was the cause of his subsequent infection.

The parties focused much of their pre-trial efforts on the purported release which Sanders signed prior to the trip. The district court, however, found it unnecessary to consider this issue.

First, the district court found that the only basis for the claim that he should have been rescued sooner was Sanders’ opinion. The district court ruled that such an opinion concerning when it was safe to get Sanders back into the raft probably required the testimony of an expert, but even if it did not, Sanders’ statements were mere “adjectival descriptions” which, under Maryland law, would be insufficient to prove negligence. (Order, J.A. 254). Sanders’ second claim for relief was that Laurel’s employee was negligent in failing to properly render first aid to him because his wound was not properly cleaned. Here the district court focused on the medical evidence concerning causation, finding that the medical evidence failed to show that the infection was caused by improper first aid.

Sanders filed a motion for reconsideration and attached a supplemental affidavit from one of his medical experts in which the expert specifically opined that the lack of first aid was the cause of the subsequent staph infection. Sanders also claimed that the district court failed to consider his “failure to warn claim.” This failure to warn claim was based on Laurel’s supposed duty to warn Sanders of the extreme danger of the particular section of river they would be traversing.

The district court in its order on reconsideration noted that a “failure to warn” theory of recovery, outside of the landowner liability context, was limited in application to product liability cases. In addition, the district court refused to give Sanders a”second bite at the apple” by supplementing the medical expert’s affidavit. To do so, the court felt, would substantially diminish the purpose and utility of summary judgment.

Sanders appeals on the grounds that: (1) he properly presented a “failure to warn claim”; (2) Laurel was strictly liable as a common carrier; (3) the district court abused its discretion in refusing to permit him to supplement the medical expert’s affidavit; (4) the district court erred in finding that the original affidavits were insufficient; and (5) the district court erred in finding that he failed to offer proof from which a reasonable jury could find Laurel negligent in failing to rescue him sooner.

Laurel argues on appeal against these assertions. It also contends that it was not liable as a matter of law because Sanders knew of the danger and voluntarily assumed the risk, because Sanders agreed, before his injury, to unconditionally release Laurel from any liability, and because Laurel adequately warned Sanders of the dangers involved.

II

Sanders, a citizen of Alabama, brought this suit in federal court against Laurel, a corporate citizen of Pennsylvania, on the basis of diversity. The parties agreed that the law of the locus, Maryland, applied to the action.

[HN1] Appellate review of the granting of a party’s motion for summary judgment is de novo, and the court of appeals uses the same standard as the district court. Charbonnages de France v. Smith, 597 F.2d 406 (4th Cir. 1979).

Initially, it must be noted that the district court erred in holding that a defendant can have no duty to warn outside of landowner and product liability law. See, e.g., Eisel v. Bd. of Educ. of Montgomery Co., 597 A.2d 447 (Md. 1991) (holding that the failure of a school counselor to inform parents of a student’s suicide ideation was grounds for liability of the school); B.N v. K.K., 538 A.2d 1175 (Md. 1988) (holding that the failure of a person to warn his sexual partner that he had genital herpes was grounds for liability for transmission of the disease). [HN2] A duty to warn does extend beyond product liability or landowner liability cases if a warning is called for as a result of one party’s general duty to another.

For example, the owner of a horse with a known dangerous propensity must warn a rider of that danger since that is the appropriate way for him to respond to his duty to his customer. See, e.g., Bass v. Quinn Robins Co., 216 P.2d 944 (Idaho 1950). An airline has a duty to warn a passenger of turbulence it knows is likely to occur. Brittain v. Piedmont Aviation, Inc., 120 S.E.2d 72 (N.C. 1961). An airline may have a duty to warn of conditions of flight if it knows they may affect a passenger with a particular sensitivity to those conditions. Paolone v. American Airlines, Inc., 706 F. Supp. 11 (S.D. N.Y. 1989).

In Eisel, the court discussed [HN3] the factors under which a tort duty arises; these factors are: foreseeability and certainty of harm; policy of preventing harm; closeness of connection between conduct and harm; moral blame; burden on defendant; and insurability. 597 A.2d at 452-55. A white-water outfitter who arranges and guides customers on rafting trips owes a general duty of care to its customers. The general duty may require, in some circumstances, that Laurel provide a warning to its patrons. We decline to hold, as the district court effectively does, that Laurel has no duty to warn of the danger of the rafting trip it sells to its customers.

In this case, however, the error proved harmless because the warnings given, as a matter of law, were adequate. * The district court based its opinion on the proposition that there was no duty to warn. Because the record is clear and the facts apparent, however, we need not remand for consideration. Cf. Federal Deposit Insur. Corp. v. Jones, 846 F.2d 221 (4th Cir. 1988).* The district court correctly noted that the warnings Laurel gave were adequate as a matter of law and that the general dangers of white-water rafting are apparent. However, it assumed for purposes of summary judgment that this was not the case and based its holding on other grounds.

There can be no real dispute that Laurel gave Sanders adequate warnings of the hazards of white-water rafting in general and the enhanced hazards of rafting the upper Youghiogheny in particular. Warnings need only be reasonable, they need not be the best possible warnings in the circumstances. Nolan v. Dillon, 276 A.2d 36 (Md. 1971). In this case, Laurel provided several warnings of the general risks and at least one specific warning that Sanders could fall out and be injured. A more specific or adequate warning could not be required.

Furthermore, it is uncontestable that Sanders had previously been on a white-water rafting experience and had twice signed release cards that specifically warned of the dangers of falling out, capsizing and injury. Even if Sanders neither heard nor read the many warnings given him, the general danger of white-water rafting is a risk apparent to anyone about to embark on such a trip. See Saenz v. Whitewater Voyages, Inc., 226 Cal. 3d 768, 276 Cal. Rptr. 672 (1st Dist. 1990).

Given the obviousness of the general risks involved, the warnings given of the specific risk from which Sanders was injured, and his previous rafting experience, Sanders assumed the risk of his injury. [HN4] Under Maryland law, participants assume the obvious and apparent risks of engaging in such sports. Nesbitt v. Bethesda Country Club, 314 A.2d 738 (Md. App. 1974). Clearly under Maryland law, if a plaintiff, as here, voluntarily exposes himself to a known danger of which he was warned or otherwise knows of, he has assumed the risk that danger poses. Gibson v. Beaver, 226 A.2d 273 (Md. 1967).

III

With regard to the claims that Laurel failed to rescue Sanders at the earliest opportunity and that it failed to render proper first aid, we have considered the briefs and the arguments of the parties and affirm on the reasoning of the district court. Sanders v. Laurel Highlands River Tours, Inc., No. CA-91-1507-S (D. Md. Nov. 15, 1991). We further find the claim that Laurel was strictly liable as a common carrier to be without merit. Accordingly, the decision of the district court is affirmed.

AFFIRMED

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Fish and Wildlife Service in Vernal – Looking For Whitewater Boatmen

Fish & Wildlife Service – Vernal – Looking For Boatmen

The FWS offices in Vernal and Grand Junction are recruiting people for seasonal work operating boats for fish work. In particular, we are looking for folks with solid whitewater rafting skills who can operate heavy oar rafts. This job is not the same as our seasonal fish tech job, so it focuses on boat operation, although all staff will eventually be proficient on the fish end of things. The link for the announcement is below. The announcement will be open for 2 weeks, starting today.

If you know any boaters looking to have a long season, are maybe a little burned out on taking care of guests, or want to see what’s been living under their boat all these years, please pass this along. There may also be an opportunity for guides looking for early season work before they go to their guiding job for the summer. We really need people in April and May.

From: FWS HR Sent: Friday, January 04, 2013 10:00 AM Subject: Seasonal Small Craft Operator link to USA Jobs

Good morning, below is a link to the Small Craft Operator announcement, which opened today on USA Jobs:

R6-13-813050-D https://www.usajobs.gov/GetJob/ViewDetails/334857400

Outdoor Industry Jobs

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George Wendt, Founder of OARS will receive the Mark Dubois Award

George deserves it!

The Mark Dubois Award is given by the Friends of the River for accomplishments in saving rivers in California.

This is what the award announcement says about George.

George Wendt’s passion for running rivers was born in the 60’s when he became one of the first 1100 people to descend the seldom-traveled Colorado River through the Grand Canyon.  In the decades since, his rafting company, O.A.R.S., has been an industry leader in environmentally and culturally responsible travel on over 35 rivers and coastlines worldwide. In 2008 and 2009 the company was recognized by National Geographic Adventure as “The Best River & Sea Outfitter on Earth” and George was a recent recipient of the Adventure Travel Trade Association’s Lifetime Achievement award. Over the past four decades, George has donated countless hours and river trips in support of youth, community and conservation causes and his company has introduced more than half a million travelers to the beauty of rivers and the natural world.

The announcement misses a couple of big points.

First, George is a nice guy. You cannot walk into a room and find George and not get a smile on your face. He is always glad to see you, and he is genuine.

First, 2, George made whitewater rafting a business. He took a hobby by many introduced it to 500,000 people over the past 50 years. George started out taking Boy Scouts down the river and has taken everyone from 11 Scouts to heads of state, Hollywood celebrities and everyone in between.

First, 3, George was the first rafting company owner to realize that the voices necessary to keep rivers open and free flowing where on his rafts.

George’s “Firsts” don’t stop there, they go on for five decades.

George is a great guy and deserves this like no one else. His work in saving rivers, his understanding of the connection between his guests and keeping rivers free flowing, his commitment to his staff is amazing.

To watch George talk about his accomplishments see http://rec-law.us/P7qZrt.

Send George a congratulations: george@oars.com

Congratulations George.

What do you think? Leave a comment.

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Posts will keep coming but I’m in the Grand Canyon

Sorry, but you can’t turn down a Grand Canyon Trip

My posts will keep coming, I’ve scheduled them in advance and however comments will not get approved.

I’ll be back after May 13th.

What do you think? Leave a comment.

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Poster for Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona...

Poster for Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona, USA (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

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The Long Term Experimental and Management Plan for the Grand Canyon scoping deadline has been extended

Glen Canyon Dam

Image via Wikipedia

If you have been down the Grand Canyon, peered over the side of those beautiful walls or dreamed of doing it some day, now is the time to act.

January 31, 2012 is the New Scoping Deadline!

The scoping deadline for the Long Term Experimental and Management Plan (LTEMP) has been extended from December 30, 2011 to January 31, 2012, giving you time to emerge after the holidays, get focused, and submit your own comments! This is THE important plan, folks – one that will determine the flows you boat on and the state of the resource for the next 15 years or so.

Consequently this EIS is on par in importance with the initial Glen Canyon Dam EIS in the early 1990s. The current scoping effort is an outstanding opportunity for the public to inform the NPS and the Bureau of Reclamation (co-lead agencies) on the development of the LTEMP draft EIS – the scope, what should be considered, what the important issues are, and possible alternatives.

The official website for the LTEMP can be found at: http://ltempeis.anl.gov/ .

Thanks to the Grand Canyon River Guides Association for their help and information. If you are not a member, you should be!  Go here to become a member of the GCRGA!

What do you think? Leave a comment.

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International Whitewater Hall of Fame Induction

2011 Inductees are a stellar list.

The 2011 International Whitewater Hall of Fame annual induction will occur October 15, 2011 at the Sierra Nevada House, Coloma California.

2011 Inductees are:

Richard Bangs               Explorer
Jean-Pierre Burny         Champion
Oliver Cock                 Advocate

If you cannot attend, please donate!

What do you think? Leave a comment.

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It’s time for my Annual Working vacation

Rowing a Grand Canyon River trip for OARS!

I’ll be disappearing from the communication and electronic community June 4 for 16 days. No doubt the Grand Canyon and Grand Canyon National Park are some of the most beautiful places on the earth. The work is hard however the people I work with and customers of OARS are the greatest in the world.

Consequently if you post a comment, it will be a while before it appears. I hate to do that, but it is amazing the amount of crap (spam) that gets posted if I do not moderate the comments.

As much as I’ll be having fun, I sometimes think that I enjoy the trip because I can’t be found, I don’t have a keyboard and there is no phone in my ear. J

clip_image002

My Office for the next 17 days!

What do you think? Don’t even think about Leaving a comment.

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Fort Collins and Rafting: Bring in money and put out press

Another study shows that whitewater rafting is a major economic and visitor draw to the Fort Collins area.

40% of the visitors to the Fort Collins area attractions were outside of the Fort Collins area. The “average income for those visitors ranged from $50,800 at the mall to $95,094 at the hotels.”

The survey showed that whitewater rafting was a major draw to the Fort Collins area. Fifty percent of those that came for rafting said they would also dine or shop while they were in the area. About one-third of the rafting visitors stayed overnight. 42% when shopping after rafting and 50% dined in the area.

Whitewater rafting is a major draw to the Fort Collins area with numerous other businesses benefiting from the rafting.

See Fort Collins visitor study shows rafters lead the way

Do Something

If you run a tourist centric recreation business work with your local chambers of commerce and visitors bureaus to determine what your economic value to the community is. You can then use this information with the legislature or just the country road paving department to help your business and the community succeed.

Let the world know how you work together with the community and let the community know that you have value to them.

What do you think? Leave a comment.

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Whitewater Rafting in Colorado on the Poudre River brings in money.

Poudre River whitewater rafting brought $11 million to the region in 2010.

2010 was the third best year for whitewater rafting in the last 20 years. 37,400 people rafted on the Poudre River an increase of 400 over the prior year.

Recreation can still be great, even when the economy is bad.

$4.2 million in direct money from rafting on the Poudre translates into $11 million overall.

See Rafting on the Poudre River brought $11 million to region in 2010.

What do you think? Leave a comment.

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Whitewater rafting suit stopped because deceased signed a release.

A well written release creates in a jurisdiction that supports releases creates short appellate court decisions.

Schoeps v. Whitewater Adventures LLC; 136 Fed. Appx. 966; 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 13181

The plaintiffs are the parents of the deceased. The deceased went rafting with the defendant Whitewater Adventures LLC and died. The parents sued the rafting company and its owner.

Prior to the raft trip the plaintiff signed a release. The plaintiffs argued the deceased had non time to read the release and was forced to sign the release. If she did not sign the release the deceased would not have been able to go rafting and would have been stuck in an “isolated area.” The court stated the deceased would have also lost her pre-paid ticket price if she failed to sign the release. The court commented on all of these issues and found them unpersuasive. However, the fact the court commented on the issues is important and something to be aware of in the future.

The court held that the deceased was informed that she had to sign a release and the fact she might be stuck in an isolated area was not oppression to force a signature on the release by the deceased.

However, this is not sufficient to constitute oppression or lack of meaningful choice, particularly insofar as Sandra had been given a brochure before the rafting trip in which Whitewater Adventures stated: “[w]e require all trip participants to sign a liability release*968 waiver before embarking on your trip.”

The plaintiffs are also argued the release was unconscionable. The court found that unconscionability is a two part test. Failing to find both tests are met will violate the release. Here the court found:

Substantively, it is not unreasonable or unexpected for an organizer of adventure sports to reallocate risk to the participants through a liability waiver. Procedurally, there were no hidden terms in the liability release….

So?

Give your guests plenty of time to read and sign the release

Give your guests their money back if they don’t sign the release

Let your guests know, in advance, that they must sign a release before they can go rafting.

When a court lists items raised by the plaintiff as issues and comments about them, it is good for the immediate case. However it can also be picked up by other plaintiffs and other courts and used as a way to void your release in other decisions.

On a moral basis if you are as an operator of a business or program and someone finds out they do not want to engage in your activity, happily give them back their money.

Put on your website that participants will have to sign a release and put the release on the website also. With the new laws concerning electronic signatures of contracts you can even have your guests sign the release online. Let your customers know in advance what they are going to be undertaking so they do not have issues or questions in your office the day of the activity.

What do you think? Leave a comment.

Copyright 2010 Recreation Law (720) Edit Law, Recreation.Law@Gmail.com

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Criminal charges for rafting problems.

Angry and Upset customers from some trips lead to an investigation which resulted in charges from other trips.

Patrick Cunningham, the owner of Hudson River Rafting Co and an employee Heath Bromley were charged with second-degree misdemeanor reckless endangerment for allegedly endangering rafters and a kayaker this summer.

The specific allegations leading to the charges are sending customers out without a licensed guide and deceiving customers about the need for licensed guides.

The allegation of sending a customer out without a licensed guide stems from having a customer paddle an inflatable kayak. Pretty hard to stick a guide in most inflatable kayaks……

The second charge was based on a trip that went out with a guide.

However, the article is full complaints and problems the company had this summer.

The investigation came after three people were injured this year on Hudson River Rafting Co. rafting trips, Curry said, and at least one group that included children was stranded on the Hudson River and had to hike several miles out of the woods to find help.
That stranding occurred when the rafters did not time the water release correctly, and wound up stuck in low water conditions, officials said.
….
Cunningham was charged for an Aug. 12 incident in which he allegedly failed to provide a guide and sent a man down the river in an inflatable kayak despite the fact the man told him he did not have any experience rafting or kayaking, Ovitt wrote in court records.
Cunningham, though, said the man “insisted” on trying to get through difficult rapids on his own despite his lack of experience. He was unable to make it through mid-level “Class 3” rapids, Cunningham said.

If every allegation is true and if this is worst raft company in the history of mankind, why are there criminal charges in this case? Just yank the permits so the 32 year old company can no longer operate. No one was hurt. What is the criminal part of this that warrants the filing of criminal charges?

I believe the relevant statute is:

ARTICLE 11. FISH AND WILDLIFE
TITLE 5. FISH AND WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT PRACTICES COOPERATIVE PROGRAM; PROHIBITIONS; TAKING OF FISH, WILDLIFE, SHELLFISH AND CRUSTACEA FOR SCIENTIFIC OR PROPAGATION PURPOSES; DESTRUCTIVE WILDLIFE; RABIES CONTROL; GUIDES; ENDANGERED SPECIES
Go to the New York Code Archive Directory
NY CLS ECL § 11-0533 (2010)
§ 11-0533. Licensing of guides
1. As used in this section, the term “guide” shall mean a person who offers services for hire part or all of which includes directing, instructing, or aiding another in fishing, hunting, camping, hiking, white water canoeing, rafting or rock and ice climbing.
2. All guides engaging in the business of guiding on all lands and waters of the state shall possess a license issued by the department, except for any persons operating or assisting upon a public vessel for hire (passenger carrying vessels), licensed by the United States Coast Guard or New York state, upon the Atlantic Ocean and all other marine and coastal waters, tidal waters including the Hudson river up to the Troy barrier dam, St. Lawrence river, Great Lakes and the navigable portion of their tributaries, and other navigable waters, as determined by the department.
3. Except while guiding for the purposes of hunting and/or fishing, no license as defined in section 11-0701 is required for such acts.
4. Employees of children’s camps as defined in subdivision one of section one thousand four hundred of the public health law shall be exempt from the provisions of subdivisions one and two of this section, provided such activities are carried out within the scope of said employment.
5. A license as required under subdivision two of this section shall be issued for a period of five calendar years and the fee therefor shall be established by the department, not to exceed two hundred dollars.
6. Every licensed guide while engaged in guiding shall wear in plain sight identification furnished by the department. Licensed guides shall be at least eighteen years of age. They shall be skilled in the use of boats and canoes whenever use of these craft is required and shall be persons competent to guide one or more of the following: camping, hunting, fishing, hiking, white water canoeing/rafting, rock or ice climbing or other similar activities. The department shall by regulation establish standards and procedures for testing and licensing of guides.
7. Any licensed guide who violates any provision of this chapter or who makes any false statement in his application for a license shall in addition to any other penalties, immediately surrender his license to the department, which may be revoked by the department for up to one year following the date of such surrender.
8. The department shall publish a list of guides annually.
 
The statute does not define a guide as someone who guides on rafts or kayaks in its definition, in section 1. However, the statute requires knowledge about whitewater rafting and canoeing in section 6.

The lessons to be learned here are simple.

  1. Take care of all of your customers. Any angry customer may come back to haunt you.
  2. Know the laws affecting your business or operation.
  3. Be very wary when the district attorney is running for office and trying to get more time in the media.

See Rafting company owner charged with endangering customers
 

What do you think? Leave a comment.

 
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© 2010 James H. Moss

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West Virginia recorded a 9% drop in Whitewater rafting in 2009

This is a decade-long drop in Whitewater rafting West Virginia.

The 9% drop in Whitewater rafting and was meant only 164,871 people went Whitewater rafting on the state’s rivers. This was a 13% drop on the Gauley River and 8% drop on the New River.
The peak year was 1995 when 257,400 or he six people went Whitewater rafting in.

This drop was compared with 10% drop over two years in Colorado and 11% increase in rafting in Tennessee. The increase in Tennessee was attributed to the proximity to the great Smoky Mountains.

See W.Va. rafting industry records another down year

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YOU HAVE GOT TO BE KIDDING

A raft guide was arrested the other day because he rescued a stranded girl.

A 13 year old girl was rafting with Arkansas Valley Adventures. She ended up stranded on a rock in the river. A raft guide from Arkansas Valley Adventures against the sheriff’s orders jumped into the river and rescued the girl.

The sheriff arrested the raft guide for obstructing government operations.
Let’s look at this without going nuts…….

Who has the most experience in whitewater?
1. The raft guide
2. Any raft guide
3. Alpine Search and Rescue
4. Clear Creek County Sheriff’s department

I’m pretty confident the correct answer is 1; however credit will be given for answer 2. I’ve done legal work for alpine Search and Rescue and know a lot of them. A great group of dedicated rescuers who do not have any whitewater experience.

Who is going to affect the rescue quickly and safely?

1. The raft guide
2. Any raft guide
3. Alpine Search and Rescue
4. Clear Creek County Sheriff’s department

Let’s see, this is a tough one. The raft guide who is right there, the sheriff who is trying to figure out what to do or Alpine SAR who are volunteers that have to be organized. Raft Guide wins again.

Are there a lot of questions that need to be answered here other than how low is the IQ of the Clear Creek County Sheriff? Or maybe it is an ego issue.

Clear Creek County just spent thousands of dollars on a kayak park. Who is going to go there if you risk being arrested if you attempt to help a friend? Hold on, I’ll get your paddle for you and a $150 ticket from the ego with the badge.

What can you do?

Support Arkansas Valley Adventures because they are standing behind their guide.

Notify the sheriff and let him know what you think: webadmin@clearcreeksheriff.us or call (303) 679-2376
Notify the Clear Creek County District Attorney and let them know what you think: 303-569-2567.

Let Clear Creek County know how you feel by posting on their Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Georgetown-CO/Clear-Creek-County-Colorado/130701711250.

See Raft guide arrested after helping stranded rafter on Clear Creek

What do you think? Leave a comment.

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Editorial wants the Government to put an upper limit on rafting water levels

Part of me is against this, part of me is not sure.

An article Time For Sensible Whitewater Rafting Regulation has postulated that the state should tell whitewater rafters in West Virginia at what water levels they can open rafting to commercial customers. Part of my concern is the reasoning that the state has or is the expert in whitewater rafting. We all know that is not true. When you are the power to arrest or fine or limit, a government and/or individual always abuses those powers.

Commercial operators want to make money so they may set those limits to far apart. (On one section of the Arkansas all of the deaths occurred at low water, not high water levels.)

Who should set these limits? If limits are to be set, then a committee of government, commercial and whitewater experts should make those decisions. (That should stall the proposal for at least 10 years.)
Twenty years ago, economics would have forced an outfitter to impose personal limits. The press about a fatality would drop the number of people going to an outfitter considerably and the outfitter in response would make changes. An example of that is the first outfitter on the Arkansas to use helmets (bicycle helmets) did so after a fatality. People going rafting would be concerned about the risks and not go with a dangerous outfitter.
I also think that outfitters would change because they did not dealing with a fatality. Not the legal issues but the personal issues of having someone die on a trip with you.

Both issues have gone by the wayside. Go marketing and so many people have all but eliminated the issues that a fatality would cause. Any I believe that once someone dies, you deal successfully; you maybe grow a little immune to the issues of dealing with a fatality. I hope not though.

So where does this go. Probably the issue of setting limits will grow legs and the state will take it on. Probably the state will take credit for limiting fatalities. Probably those people who want to push the limits will find some way of doing so not matter what someone sitting on the side line believes. No matter who believes they have the right to tell you how to die.

What do you think? Leave a comment.

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Comments about the Eastern Washington University sued over student death on a rafting trip

More thoughts about the post Lawsuit filed over death of university student during school sponsored rafting trip.


Eastern Washington University is being sued over the death of a student on a whitewater rafting trip on the Clark Fork River in Montana. The freshman student fell from the raft and was trapped by a strainer.

A EPIC Adventure conducted the trip. The suit claims EPIC Adventure failed to understand the dangerous of the trip and had been informed of the strainer the day before the trip.

There are going to be no winners in this litigation except the attorneys.

The family will not get their daughter back and will attempt to confuse or substitute money, if they receive any for their daughter. That may also come as a sense of relief to find someone else was at fault for their daughter’s death, but I doubt it. The family will not win, even if they win. Litigation is a grueling wearing grinding way to achieve “justice.”

The university and all other students will lose, even if they win because the university will probably pull back from offering any more opportunities for the students to stretch and grow. This appears to be a freshman orientation program, which studies have shown, can increase the graduate rates of participants significantly.

So the only people who will win are the defense attorneys, they will be paid an hourly rate probably and possibly the plaintiff’s lawyers who may receive a percentage of any settlement or payment to the family.

No mention has been made of any defenses to the suit or if the student signed a release. What will probably never learn is, was there an indemnification agreement between the university and the outfitter for this type of issue.

Strainers kill people. Do you stop rafting, canoeing, kayaking, living every time a tree falls into a river? I hope not. However, that is what the lawsuit is claiming. Life should be put on hold until the world is perfectly safe and no one can get hurt. Therefore, after you read this, we should all climb back under the bed, turn on our little lights and then heave we are alive…..if you can call that living.

See Family sues university after daughter’s death

For other posts about fatalities and strainers, see Large Jury Award in death of 9 year old Camper and Common Mistakes made by Outfitters and Insurance Companies.

For other posts about suits against colleges and universities see Middlebury College getting sued over climbing wall accident by student, Ohio University settles lawsuit brought by injured student, Settlement reached in suit against Idaho State University group CW Hogs

For Outdoor Recreation Law Review Articles on cases against colleges or universities see Court decides participant cannot assume the risk of a team building exercise, College successfully defends student high altitude fatality, College loses suit by parents of deceased student from snow skiing class, Assumption of Risk and Inherent Risk in Higher Outdoor Education, Case Brief: Release Protects Gonzaga University from Lawsuit Following Student Death and State Law Prohibiting Releases.


A lawsuit settles before jury has opportunity to reach a decision

We first commented on this in The word “Safe” comes back to haunt outfitter and travel agent.

The Federal District Court judge announced that the parties in this lawsuit had settled the case. The trial was scheduled for four weeks and settled after two weeks. The amount of the settlement was not announced.

See Parties Settle Lawsuit In Fatal Wyo. Raft Accident.