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Ski safety legislation, enacted with great urgency in many states in the late 1970s and early
1980s, has in more recent years been subject to reinterpretation by the courts, and to amendment
in state legislatures. Most statutes began as so-called "inherent danger" statutes that exculpated
ski area operators from liability for those hazards considered inherent to skiing. This begged the
question of how to define the sport's "inherent dangers." Some states, including Colorado,
construed and do construe their statutes to require a jury to determine the nature and extent of the
duty owed by a ski area operator relative to an alleged "inherent danger." Others, notably Idaho,
hold as a matter of law that any injury not caused by an enumerated, statutory operator duty is a
risk "inherent" in the sport. A reasonable standard of care, with or without statutorily-defined
duties, has been imposed in a number of states by legislative act, or common law.
The question of what duty of care skiers owe to one another remains in dispute. Many states
now include risk of skier/skier collision and, specifically, risk of another skier failing to ski
within their ability, within a statutory list of potential inherent dangers. Within the context of
litigation between skiers, those courts considering it have agreed that this does not include a
skier-employee of the operator negligently colliding with a skier guest. While a few states, such
as Alaska, have statutes that expressly provide for recovery in true skier/skier cases, those that
have failed to directly address the issue have varying court records. Some courts have rejected
altogether applicability of what they view as an immunity act for the sole benefit of ski area
operators to these cases, while others have permitted both common law and per se negligence
claims where such a statute is present.
While skiers' potential civil liability has been widely expanded in recent years, recognition of
skiers' potential criminal liability is also presently on the rise. Conduct on the slope was the
basis for a criminally negligent homicide prosecution in Colorado, upheld by its Supreme Court
in 2000. In 2003, another Colorado court sentenced to jail for 240 days a 20-year-old
snowboarder who, while intoxicated, had crashed into a group of children, injuring two. For
lesser offenses, a handful of states have begun adding teeth to their skier safety statutes, creating
misdemeanor charges for skiers who conduct themselves recklessly, or fail in other statutory
duties.
As to lift incidents, many states have declared tramway operators not common carriers.
However, the question of whether ordinary or the highest duty of care is owed to passengers
remains in dispute among the states. The declarations that tramway operators are not common
carriers reflects a big picture of the industry's relation over time to the legislature and to the
public. As the sport of skiing itself has changed to include different types and styles of snow
sports, many in the industry have found themselves with antiquated statutes that have failed to
account for the sport's development.
The industry has rushed back to the legislatures demanding a statutory fix to unfavorable, and
occasionally unpredictable, decisions. In addition to express inclusion of snowboarders and
"extreme" styles, the industry has discretely pushed to have their entire property areas subject to
liability protection, and to have parental waivers of all types validated. A few other areas of
emerging interest include avalanche liability, and helmet use. The growth in helmet use on the
slopes, and in the supporting research, has reached a point where providing and expecting helmet
use, particularly in the children's ski school context, fairly defines operator reasonable care.
Ski Law Overview by State |
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