Term or Phrase |
State
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Article that Defines the Term or Phrase
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Adhesion Agreement |
Colorado |
Colorado Federal District Court judge references a ski area lift ticket in support of granting the ski area’s motion for summary judgment and dismissing the lawsuit. |
Admiralty Law |
Nevada |
Admiralty law did not stop a release from barring a claim for negligence for a parasailing injury. |
Agency |
New Jersey |
The use of the PGA name was not enough to tire the PGA to a golf camp where they had no relationship or control. As such, they were dismissed from the suit because they had no duty to the injured minor. |
Amicus Curiae |
Colorado |
10th Circuit Court of Appeals upholds Colorado law concerning releases in a whitewater rafting fatality. |
Ambiguity |
Minnesota |
Plaintiff argues under Minnesota law the language on the back of the season pass created an ambiguity which should void the season pass release for a ski area. |
Apparent Authority |
New Jersey |
The use of the PGA name was not enough to tire the PGA to a golf camp where they had no relationship or control. As such, they were dismissed from the suit because they had no duty to the injured minor. |
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Pennsylvania |
Apparent Agency requires actual acts to hold a hotel liable for the injuries allegedly caused by a tour company |
Assumption of Risk |
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Assumption of the Risk http://rec-law.us/wMtiET |
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Assumption of Risk — Checklist |
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California |
Assumption of the Risk to be a bar to a claim the defendant must now owe a duty to the plaintiff that means the plaintiff must be involved in recreation or a sport. |
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Hawaii |
The risk of hiking over lava fields is an obvious risk; falling while hiking is also a possibility….so is suing when you do both…but you won’t win |
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Massachusetts |
Duty of care for a Massachusetts campground is to warn of dangerous conditions. |
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New York |
If you have a manual, you have to follow it, if you have rules you have to follow them, if you have procedures, you have to follow them or you lose in court.
Skier assumes the risk on a run he had never skied before because his prior experience. |
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Ohio |
Ohio Appellate decision defines assumption of the risk under Ohio law and looks at whether spectators assume the risk. |
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Pennsylvania |
The harder a court works to justify its decision the more suspect the reasoning. |
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Pennsylvania |
PA court upholds release in bicycle race. |
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Pennsylvania |
Scary and Instructional case on assumption of the risk in a climbing wall case in Pennsylvania |
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South Carolina |
Assumption of the risk is used to defeat a claim for injuries on a ropes course. |
Express Assumption of risk |
California |
BSA (Cub Scout) volunteer was not liable for injuries to cub because cub assumed the risk of his injuries. The BSA & Council were not liable because volunteer was not an agent. |
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Delaware |
If you agree to the rules you have to follow the rules |
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Pennsylvania |
Neither a release nor the Pennsylvania Equine Liability Act protects a stable for injuries when the stirrup broke. |
Implied Assumption of the risk |
Missouri |
Missouri decision about ski rental form and a release that does not conform to MO law spell a mess for the ski resort |
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Pennsylvania |
Neither a release nor the Pennsylvania Equine Liability Act protects a stable for injuries when the stirrup broke. |
Primary Assumption of Risk |
Delaware |
If you agree to the rules you have to follow the rules |
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Minnesota |
Assumption of Risk used to defend against claim for injury from snow tubing in Minnesota |
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Ohio |
In Ohio, Primary Assumption of the Risk is a complete bar to claims for injuries from hiking at night.
BSA (Cub Scout) volunteer not liable for injuries to cub because cub assumed the risk of his injuries. BSA & Council not liable because volunteer was not an agent.
Ohio Appellate decision defines assumption of the risk under Ohio law and looks at whether spectators assume the risk. |
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New York |
New York Decision explains the doctrine of Primary Assumption of the Risk for cycling. |
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South Carolina |
South Carolina Supreme Court writes a clear decision on Assumption of the Risk for sporting activities. |
Secondary
Assumption of Risk |
Arkansas |
Proof of negligence requires more than an accident and injuries. A Spectator at a rodeo needed proof of an improperly maintained gate. |
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California |
Most references in case law to assumption of the risk are to this California decision |
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Ohio |
Ohio Appellate decision defines assumption of the risk under Ohio law and looks at whether spectators assume the risk. |
Business Invitee |
Pennsylvania |
Release lacked language specifying the length of time it was valid. Since the court could not determine the time the case was sent to a jury for that determination. |
|
Ohio |
Poorly written release on a sign in sheet barely passes protecting Ohio defendant swimming area from suit. |
Causation |
Indiana |
An ugly case balancing the marketing program to make people feel safe, which is then used to prove the incident giving rise to the negligence claim, was foreseeable. |
Certiorari |
Colorado |
Colorado Supreme Court rules that an inbounds Avalanche is an inherent risk assumed by skiers based upon the Colorado Skier Safety Act. |
Common Carrier |
California |
Balloon ride in California is not a common carrier, and the release signed by the plaintiff bars the plaintiff’s claims even though she did not read or speak English |
Contracts |
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Meeting of the Minds |
North Carolina |
When is a case settled? When all parties (and maybe their attorneys) agree it is settled |
Consideration |
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What is a Release? |
Concurring Opinion |
Utah |
The safety precautions undertaken by the defendant in this mountain bike race were sufficient to beat the plaintiff’s claims of gross negligence in this Utah mountain bike fatality |
Contribution |
Massachusetts |
Industry standards are proof of gross negligence and keep defendant in lawsuit even with good release |
Declaratory Judgment |
New Hampshire |
What happens if you fail to follow the requirements of your insurance policy and do not get a release signed? In New Hampshire you have no coverage. |
Derivative Claim |
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Sign in sheet language at Michigan health club was not sufficient to create a release. |
Duty of Care |
California |
Balloon ride in California is not a common carrier, and the release signed by the plaintiff bars the plaintiff’s claims even though she did not read or speak English |
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New Jersey |
Is a negligent act to open a car door into a bike lane when a cyclists is in the lane in New Jersey |
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South Carolina |
South Carolina Supreme Court writes a clear decision on Assumption of the Risk for sporting activities. |
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Washington |
Summer Camp, Zip line injury and confusing legal analysis in Washington
Good News ASI was dismissed from the lawsuit |
Essential Public Services |
Colorado |
10th Circuit Court of Appeals upholds Colorado law concerning releases in a whitewater rafting fatality. |
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New Hampshire |
New Hampshire court upholds release and defines the steps under NH law to review a release. |
Expert Witness |
Connecticut |
Summer camp being sued for injury from falling off horse wins lawsuit because the plaintiff failed to find an expert to prove their case. |
Failure to Warn |
New York |
“Marketing makes promises Risk Management has to pay for” in this case the marketing eliminated the protection afforded by the warning labels |
Foreseeability |
Colorado |
Be Afraid, be very afraid of pre-printed forms for your recreation business |
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Illinois |
When there is no proof that the problem created by the defendant caused the injury, there is no proximate causation, therefore no negligence |
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New Jersey |
Is a negligent act to open a car door into a bike lane when a cyclists is in the lane in New Jersey |
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Ohio |
Liability of race organizer for State Park Employees? |
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Washington |
Dive Buddy (co-participant) not liable for death of the diver because the cause of death was too distant from the acts of the plaintiff. |
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Idaho |
Federal Court in Idaho holds camp not liable for assault on third party by runaway minors. |
Forum non conveniens |
Kansas |
If you fall down in a foreign country, and you have paid money to be there, you probably have to sue there. |
Fraud |
Colorado |
10th Circuit Court of Appeals upholds Colorado law concerning releases in a whitewater rafting fatality |
Fraudulent Inducement |
New Hampshire |
Did a Federal District Court in New Hampshire allow a release to bar a minor’s claims? |
Fraudulent Misrepresentation |
Georgia |
Lying in a release can get your release thrown out by the court. |
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California |
Defendant tells plaintiff the release has no value and still wins lawsuit, but only because the plaintiff was an attorney |
Gross Negligence |
California |
Release saves riding school, even after defendant tried to show plaintiff how to win the case. |
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Idaho |
Statements made to keep a sold trip going come back to haunt defendant after whitewater rafting death. |
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Maryland |
Sky Diving Release defeats claim by Naval Academy studenthttp://rec-law.us/1tQhWNN |
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Massachusetts |
Colleges, Officials, and a Ski Area are all defendants in this case. |
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Massachusetts |
Industry standards are proof of gross negligence and keep defendant in lawsuit even with good release |
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Michigan |
Good Release stops lawsuit against Michigan bicycle renter based on marginal acts of bicycle renter
Allowing climber to climb with harness on backwards on health club climbing wall enough for court to accept gross negligence claim and invalidate release. |
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Nebraska |
In Nebraska a release can defeat claims for gross negligence for health club injury |
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New Hampshire |
In this mountain biking case, fighting each claim pays off. |
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New Jersey |
New Jersey upholds release for injury in faulty bike at fitness club |
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New York |
New York judge uses NY law to throw out claim for gross negligence because the facts did not support the claim |
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Pennsylvania |
Scary and Instructional case on assumption of the risk in a climbing wall case in Pennsylvania |
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Pennsylvania wrongful death statute is written in a way that a split court determined the deceased release prevented the surviving family members from suing. |
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Tennessee |
75 Ft waterfall, middle of the night, no lights and a BAC of .18% results in two fatalities and one lawsuit. However, facts that created fatalities were the defense |
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Texas |
Suit against a city for construction retaining wall in City Park identifies defenses to be employed to protect park patrons. |
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Utah |
Utah’s decision upholds a release for simple negligence but not gross negligence in a ski accident.
The safety precautions undertaken by the defendant in this mountain bike race were sufficient to beat the plaintiff’s claims of gross negligence in this Utah mountain bike fatality |
Inherently Dangerous |
Missouri |
Here is another reason to write releases carefully. Release used the term inherent to describe the risks which the court concluded made the risk inherently dangerous and voids the release. |
Inherent Risks |
California |
This California decision looks at assumption of the risk as it applies to non-competitive long distance bicycle rides and also determines that assumption of the risk also overcomes a violation of a statute (negligence per se). |
Interlocutory Appeal |
Tennessee |
Tennessee still does not allow a parent to sign away a minor’s right to sue, but might enforce a jurisdiction and venue clause, maybe an arbitration clause |
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Utah |
Utah courts like giving money to injured kids |
Invitee |
Missouri |
Missouri decision about ski rental form and a release that does not conform to MO law spell a mess for the ski resort |
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Mississippi |
Mississippi retailer not liable for injury to a child who rode a bicycle through aisles he found on the store floor. |
Joint Venture |
Missouri |
Here is another reason to write releases carefully. Release used the term inherent to describe the risks which the court concluded made the risk inherently dangerous and voids the release. |
Judgment Notwithstanding the Verdict (JNOV or J.N.O.V.) |
Maryland |
Skiing collision in Utah were the collision was caused by one skier falling down in front of the other skier |
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Missouri |
Here is another reason to write releases carefully. Release used the term inherent to describe the risks which the court concluded made the risk inherently dangerous and voids the release. |
Lex loci contractus |
Tennessee |
Tennessee still does not allow a parent to sign away a minor’s right to sue, but might enforce a jurisdiction and venue clause, maybe an arbitration clause |
Long Arm Statute Requirements |
New York |
To sue a Vermont ski area there must be more than a web presence to sue in New York |
Material Breach of a Contract |
Texas |
University climbing wall release along with Texas Recreational Use Act and Texas Tort Claims Act defeat injured climber’s lawsuit |
Motion to Dismiss |
Colorado |
Colorado Premises Liability act eliminated common law claims of negligence as well as CO Ski Area Safety Act claims against a landowner. |
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Illinois |
When an organization makes rules and regulations that a subsidiary organization is supposed to obey, and then fails to follow, both organizations are liable to any plaintiff injured due to the failure to follow or enforce the organizational rules, policies, regulations or standards. |
Negligence |
Georgia |
Georgia court finds no requirement for employee to interview when higher trained first aid providers are present |
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Idaho |
Idaho Supreme Court holds is no relationship between signs posted on the side of the trampoline park in a duty owed to the injured plaintiff |
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Illinois |
When an organization makes rules and regulations that a subsidiary organization is supposed to obey, and then fails to follow, both organizations are liable to any plaintiff injured due to the failure to follow or enforce the organizational rules, policies, regulations or standards. |
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Indiana |
Indiana decision upholds release signed by mother for claims of an injured daughter for the inherent risks of softball.
An ugly case balancing the marketing program to make people feel safe, which is then used to prove the incident giving rise to the negligence claim, was foreseeable. |
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Louisiana |
Louisiana State University loses climbing wall case because or climbing wall manual and state law. |
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Maryland |
Plaintiff failed to prove that her injuries were due to the construction of the water park slide and she also assumed the risk. |
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Massachusetts |
Industry standards are proof of gross negligence and keep defendant in lawsuit even with good release |
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Mississippi |
Mississippi decision requires advance planning and knowledge of traveling in a foreign country before taking minors there. |
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Pennsylvania |
Pennsylvania Supreme Court decision on duty to have and use an AED defines how statutes are to be interpreted and when liability can attach and cannot attach to a statute |
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South Dakota |
Great analysis of the “Rescue Doctrine” in a ballooning case from South Dakota |
|
Texas |
University climbing wall release along with Texas Recreational Use Act and Texas Tort Claims Act defeat injured climber’s lawsuit |
Negligence (Collateral) |
Missouri |
Here is another reason to write releases carefully. Release used the term inherent to describe the risks which the court concluded made the risk inherently dangerous and voids the release. |
Negligence Per Se |
Colorado |
Instructional Colorado decision Negligence, Negligence Per Se and Premises Liability |
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Florida |
Motion for Summary Judgement failed because the plaintiff’s claim was based upon a failure to follow a statute or rule creating a negligence per se defense to the release in this Pennsylvania sailing case. |
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South Dakota |
Great analysis of the “Rescue Doctrine” in a ballooning case from South Dakota |
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Illinois (does not exist) |
When an organization makes rules and regulations that a subsidiary organization is supposed to obey, and then fails to follow, both organizations are liable to any plaintiff injured due to the failure to follow or enforce the organizational rules, policies, regulations or standards. |
Negligent Misrepresentation |
New York |
The basics of winning a negligence claim is having some facts that show negligence, not just the inability to canoe by the plaintiff |
No Duty Rule |
Pennsylvania |
The harder a court works to justify its decision the more suspect the reasoning. |
Open and Obvious |
Michigan |
The assumption of risk defense is still available when the claim is based on a condition of the land. This defense is called the open and obvious doctrine. |
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New York |
“Marketing makes promises Risk Management has to pay for” in this case the marketing eliminated the protection afforded by the warning labels |
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Pennsylvania |
Release lacked language specifying the length of time it was valid. Since the court could not determine the time the case was sent to a jury for that determination. |
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Rhode Island |
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Passive-Retailer Doctrine |
Utah |
Retailers in a minority of states may have a defense to product liability claims when they have nothing to do with the manufacture of the product |
Premises Liability |
Colorado |
Instructional Colorado decision Negligence, Negligence Per Se and Premises Liability |
|
Mississippi |
Mississippi retailer not liable for injury to a child who rode a bicycle through aisles he found on the store floor. |
Prima facie |
New Jersey |
New Jersey does not support fee shifting provisions (indemnification clauses) in releases in a sky diving case. |
Prior Material Breach |
Texas |
University climbing wall release along with Texas Recreational Use Act and Texas Tort Claims Act defeat injured climber’s lawsuit |
Product Liability |
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Georgia Federal Court finds that assumption of the risk is a valid defense in a head injury case against a bicycle helmet manufacturer. |
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Tennessee |
Pacific Cycle not liable for alleged defective skewer sold to plaintiff by Wal-Mart |
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Utah |
Retailers in a minority of states may have a defense to product liability claims when they have nothing to do with the manufacture of the product |
Negligent Product Liability |
Illinois |
Plaintiff fails to prove a product liability claim because she can’t prove what tube was the result of her injury |
Public Policy |
California |
Defendant tells plaintiff the release has no value and still wins lawsuit, but only because the plaintiff was an attorney |
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Delaware |
Delaware Supreme Court decision quickly determines a health club release is not void because of public policy issues and is clear and unequivocal |
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Oregon |
Oregon Supreme Court finds release signed at ski area is void as a violation of public policy. |
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Pennsylvania |
Release lacked language specifying the length of time it was valid. Since the court could not determine the time the case was sent to a jury for that determination. |
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New Hampshire |
New Hampshire court upholds release and defines the steps under NH law to review a release.
Did a Federal District Court in New Hampshire allow a release to bar a minor’s claims? |
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Tennessee |
Tennessee still does not allow a parent to sign away a minor’s right to sue, but might enforce a jurisdiction and venue clause, maybe an arbitration clause |
Punitive Damages |
New York |
“Marketing makes promises Risk Management has to pay for” in this case the marketing eliminated the protection afforded by the warning labels |
Rescue Doctrine |
South Dakota |
Great analysis of the “Rescue Doctrine” in a ballooning case from South Dakota |
Recklessness |
Missouri |
Here is another reason to write releases carefully. Release used the term inherent to describe the risks which the court concluded made the risk inherently dangerous and voids the release. |
|
New Jersey |
New Jersey does not support fee shifting provisions (indemnification clauses) in releases in a sky diving case. |
|
Ohio |
BSA (Cub Scout) volunteer was not liable for injuries to cub because cub assumed the risk of his injuries. The BSA & Council were not liable because volunteer was not an agent.
Ohio Appellate decision defines assumption of the risk under Ohio law and looks at whether spectators assume the risk. |
|
Pennsylvania |
Neither a release nor the Pennsylvania Equine Liability Act protects a stable for injuries when the stirrup broke. |
Release |
Connecticut |
Connecticut court rejects motion for summary judgment because plaintiff claimed he did not have enough time to read the release before he signed it |
|
Colorado |
10th Circuit Court of Appeals upholds Colorado law concerning releases in a whitewater rafting fatality
Colorado Federal District Court judge references a ski area lift ticket in support of granting the ski area’s motion for summary judgment and dismissing the lawsuit. |
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New Hampshire |
New Hampshire court upholds release and defines the steps under NH law to review a release. |
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Oklahoma |
Oklahoma Federal Court opinion: the OK Supreme Court would void a release signed by the parent for a minor. |
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New Hampshire |
Did a Federal District Court in New Hampshire allow a release to bar a minor’s claims? |
|
Pennsylvania |
Tubing brings in a lot of money for a small space, and a well-written release keeps the money flowing
Release lacked language specifying the length of time it was valid. Since the court could not determine the time the case was sent to a jury for that determination.
Neither a release nor the Pennsylvania Equine Liability Act protects a stable for injuries when the stirrup broke. |
|
Texas |
University climbing wall release along with Texas Recreational Use Act and Texas Tort Claims Act defeat injured climber’s lawsuit |
Release Fair Notice Requirement under Texas law |
Texas |
Federal Court in Texas upholds clause in release requiring plaintiff to pay defendants costs of defending against plaintiff’s claims. |
Remittitur |
Missouri |
Here is another reason to write releases carefully. Release used the term inherent to describe the risks which the court concluded made the risk inherently dangerous and voids the release. |
res ipsa loquitur |
Illinois |
When an organization makes rules and regulations that a subsidiary organization is supposed to obey, and then fails to follow, both organizations are liable to any plaintiff injured due to the failure to follow or enforce the organizational rules, policies, regulations or standards. |
Respondeat superior |
Missouri |
US Army and BSA not liable for injured kids on Army base. No control by the BSA and recreational use defense by US Army. |
|
New Jersey |
The use of the PGA name was not enough to tire the PGA to a golf camp where they had no relationship or control. As such, they were dismissed from the suit because they had no duty to the injured minor. |
Restatement (Second) of Torts |
Pennsylvania |
The harder a court works to justify its decision the more suspect the reasoning. |
Standard |
Colorado
California |
Words: You cannot change a legal definition |
|
New York |
New York Decision explains the doctrine of Primary Assumption of the Risk for cycling |
|
Ohio |
In Ohio, Primary Assumption of the Risk is a complete bar to claims for injuries from hiking at night |
|
Rhode Island |
Rhode Island, applying New Hampshire law states a skier assumes the risk of a collision. |
Standard of Review |
Pennsylvania |
Pennsylvania Supreme Court decision on duty to have and use an AED defines how statutes are to be interpreted and when liability can attach and cannot attach to a statute |
Sudden Emergency Doctrine |
New York |
Eighteen year old girl knocks speeding cyclists over to protect children; Sudden Emergency Doctrine stops suit |
Summary Judgment |
Connecticut |
Connecticut court rejects motion for summary judgment because plaintiff claimed he did not have enough time to read the release before he signed it |
|
Pennsylvania |
Pennsylvania Supreme Court decision on duty to have and use an AED defines how statutes are to be interpreted and when liability can attach and cannot attach to a statute |
Superseding or Intervening Causation |
Indiana |
An ugly case balancing the marketing program to make people feel safe, which is then used to prove the incident giving rise to the negligence claim, was foreseeable. |
Tort |
Louisiana |
Louisiana court holds a tubing operation is not liable for drowning or failure to properly perform CPR |
Unconscionable |
Delaware |
Delaware Supreme Court decision quickly determines a health club release is not void because of public policy issues and is clear and unequivocal |
United States Constitution |
Fourteenth Amendment |
Buy something online and you may not have any recourse if it breaks or you are hurt |
Willful, Wanton or Reckless |
Illinois |
When an organization makes rules and regulations that a subsidiary organization is supposed to obey, and then fails to follow, both organizations are liable to any plaintiff injured due to the failure to follow or enforce the organizational rules, policies, regulations or standards. |
|
Ohio |
Ohio Appellate decision upholds the use of a release for a minor for a commercial activity. |
|
Ohio |
Poorly written release on a sign in sheet barely passes protecting Ohio defendant swimming area from suit. |
|
Minnesota |
Plaintiff argues under Minnesota law the language on the back of the season pass created an ambiguity which should void the season pass release for a ski area. |
|
Missouri |
Missouri decision about ski rental form and a release that does not conform to MO law spell a mess for the ski resort |
|
Nebraska |
Fees are charged, recreation is happening, but can the recreational use act still protect a claim, yes, if the fees are not for the recreation |
|
Washington |
Dive Buddy (co-participant) not liable for death of the diver because the cause of death was too distant from the cause of the death. |
|
Wyoming |
Rental agreement release was written well enough it barred claims for injuries on the mountain at Jackson Hole Mountain Resort in Wyoming |
Wrongful Death |
Ohio |
Poorly written release on a sign in sheet barely passes protecting Ohio defendant swimming area from suit. |
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