Foronda v. Hawaii International Boxing Club

25 P.3d 826, 96 Haw. 51, 2001 Haw. App. LEXIS 117
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 24, 2001
Docket21703
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 25 P.3d 826 (Foronda v. Hawaii International Boxing Club) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foronda v. Hawaii International Boxing Club, 25 P.3d 826, 96 Haw. 51, 2001 Haw. App. LEXIS 117 (hawapp 2001).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

LIM, J.

On September 14, 1923, in New York City, the fabled heavyweight boxing champion Jack Dempsey defended his title against Luis “Angel” Firpo, who outweighed him by well over twenty pounds. Dempsey, a veritable hatchet, chopped his man down in the second round, but not before the ursine Firpo knocked him through the ropes and out of the ring. Boxing lore has it that ringside reporters helped Dempsey back into the ring, enabling him to complete the tale that has borne countless repetitions. 1

On March 30, 1995, young amateur boxer Jeffrey Foronda (Foronda) was hit in the stomach while sparring at the Waiakea Recreation Center. Doubled over, Foronda sat on a ring rope to catch his breath, but then slipped down backward between the ropes and hit his head, losing consciousness. He never regained his senses and died three days later.

Foronda’s parents, Plaintiffs-Appellants Reynaldo and Candida Foronda (Plaintiffs), commenced this action in the circuit court of the third circuit against Defendants Hawai'i International Boxing Club (HIBC), Foron-da’s amateur boxing club, and the County of Hawai'i (County), the owner and operator of the Waiakea Recreation Center boxing ring, alleging that the Defendants had negligently constructed, maintained and supervised the Waiakea Recreation Center boxing ring, causing the death of their son.

Circuit court judge Riki May Amano granted motions for summary judgment in favor of both HIBC and the County based upon the doctrine of assumption of risk. The court also found that “[t]he County of Hawaii had no knowledge or notice of any condition of its boxing ring posing an unreasonable risk of harm.”

*54 Plaintiffs appeal the courts June 10, 1998 judgment, the underlying findings of fact, conclusions of law and order granting the motions for summary judgment, and the order denying their motion for reconsideration.

Plaintiffs present two issues on appeal. They argue, first, that the court granted summary judgment in favor of both HIBC and the County based upon the erroneous conclusion that Foronda assumed all risks that contributed to his death. They also contend the court granted the County summary judgment based upon the erroneous finding that the County had no knowledge of any dangerous condition of the ring.

We hold, as a matter of law under the doeti'ine of primary implied assumption of risk, that Foronda assumed all risks that contributed to his death. We therefore affirm the judgment.

I. Background.

On March 30, 1995, the twenty-five-year-old Foronda, an amateur boxer, was spaning at the Waiakea Recreation Center under the supervision of his coach Walter F. Carvalho, Sr. (Carvalho) and his trainer John Lopez (Lopez). In order to prepare Foronda for an upcoming fight, Carvalho had wanted him to spar two rounds with Lopez, then two with fellow amateur Anthony Pagan (Pagan). Each round was to last three minutes, with a one-minute rest between rounds. Although Lopez was a professional boxer, Carvalho considered him a “novice” because Lopez had only “about eight or nine fights” under his belt.

After sparring with Lopez, Foronda told Carvalho that he was ready to box some more, so he proceeded to spar with Pagan. As Carvalho described it, “[Foronda] looked great because he came back to the corner in the second round [against Lopez] and he was ready to go another three if I wanted him to.” Pagan, also twenty-five years old, was about twenty pounds lighter than Foronda. He was, according to Carvalho, “below [Fo-ronda’s] caliber.” Although Pagan had been boxing about as long as Foronda and had one or two more amateur bouts under his belt than Foronda, Carvalho opined that Foronda was “way better than [Pagan] is.”

Halfway through his first round of sparring, Pagan hit Foronda with a straight, right-hand punch to the stomach. Pagan remembered that the blow was not a hard punch, but that he caught Foronda in the right place. As soon as he got-hit, Foronda stopped boxing and curled over for a bit, then stood up to stretch his stomach in order to catch his breath. He then backed up and sat on a rope of the ring, bent over with his head down.

The rope was the second highest of four ropes strung around the perimeter of the ring above the ring canvas. Unburdened, the second rope was 27 inches from the canvas. When Foronda sat on the second rope, it “sagged some under his weightf.]”

Carvalho said that after a boxer absorbs a body punch, he might lean or sit on the ropes to catch his breath, sometimes for thirty seconds or more, and in such instance it is normal practice to instruct the boxer to raise his hands to open his lungs. In this instance, Foronda appeared -to have the wind knocked out of him, so Carvalho and Lopez instructed him in accordance with the normal practice. Foronda smiled and waved to acknowledge the instructions.

After sitting on the rope for about thirty seconds, Foronda leaned forward a little, then to the side, and finally slipped down backward between the second and third ropes. As he put out his hand as if to brace his fall, his rear end touched the floor; then his shoulders and next his head hit the thin carpet covering the floor outside the ring. Carvalho related that Foronda “went down real slow then barely hit his head.” Carval-ho said he was surprised at the ton of events because he had never seen anyone hurt in a similar manner. In contrast, Car-valho recalled:

I’ve seen [boxers] dive through [the ropes], guys push them through or he come running at the guy and the guy side-step him and he fly through.
I’ve seen them fall off [rings raised four feet off the floor], hit his head on the table, bang his head on the concrete and get up and walk out or get back in the ring and start fighting. I’ve seen that.
*55 Never have I seen a [ring flush to the floor] like this that somebody sits down, lay down and goes into a seizure.

Caiwalho added that nothing unusual occurred during the sparring before the accident.

Throughout the sparring session, Foronda wore protective head gear with extra-heavy padding, a protective cup and a fitted mouthpiece. For added safety, the boxers were using sixteen-ounce gloves, the largest gloves permitted. Despite the safety precautions, Foronda lost consciousness. He was taken to Hilo Hospital, then transferred to Straub Hospital, where he died three days later. The autopsy report found that Foronda died of a “severe intracranial injury, consistent with striking the head on a hard surface.” The report also noted a “[s]mall area of bruising of the right diaphragm, anteriorly.”

HIBC was a local, nonprofit, amateur boxing club formed by Carvalho. At the time of the accident, Carvalho had been a registered boxing coach and a certified boxing official tor over thirty years, and was the president of HIBC. He was also a referee, judge and promoter.

HIBC was affiliated and registered with a national organization, United States Amateur Boxing, Inc. (USA Boxing). The 1993-1995 USA Boxing official rules provided that boxing rings, regardless of size, “shall be equipped with at least 4 ropes.

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Bluebook (online)
25 P.3d 826, 96 Haw. 51, 2001 Haw. App. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foronda-v-hawaii-international-boxing-club-hawapp-2001.