Hiibschman Ex Rel. Welch v. City of Valdez

821 P.2d 1354, 1991 Alas. LEXIS 140
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1991
DocketS-3678, S-3679
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 821 P.2d 1354 (Hiibschman Ex Rel. Welch v. City of Valdez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hiibschman Ex Rel. Welch v. City of Valdez, 821 P.2d 1354, 1991 Alas. LEXIS 140 (Ala. 1991).

Opinion

OPINION

RABINOWITZ, Chief Justice.

INTRODUCTION

Heather Hiibschman sued the City of Valdez in tort for injuries incurred as she went over a ski bump-jump at a city ski hill. The superior court granted part of the City’s summary judgment motion and let part of Hiibschman’s ease go to the jury, which found against her. She appeals and the City cross-appeals, both primarily questioning the interpretation of Alaska’s 1980 Limitations on Claims Arising From Skiing Act (“Ski Act”), AS 09.65.135. 1

*1356 STATEMENT OF FACTS

Salmonberry Ridge, the only downhill ski facility in Valdez, opened to the public in January 1986. It is considered a beginner’s hill, measuring 1,300 feet from top to bottom with a 208 foot vertical rise. From the base of the hill, one can view almost the entire hill.

Several bump-jumps could be found on the hill at the time of Hiibschman’s accident. 2 The jump at issue was located at the lower left side of the hill if one looked at the hill from its bottom. The jump was located on a relatively flat area of the hill, although there was a steeper area just uphill of the jump. The jump was estimated to be from two feet to four feet in height. It was the only jump in that area of the hill and was a “focal point” of the run on that side of the hill.

On March 13, 1986, Heather Hiibschman, a fifteen year old, went skiing at Salmon-berry Ridge. Hiibschman was a beginner skier. She had gone downhill skiing approximately six to ten times prior to the accident, although she had also cross-country skied. Prior to March 13, Hiibschman had been skiing at Salmonberry every day of the week.

Hiibschman had never taken the jump in question. She said, “Most of the time I just didn’t feel like I was ready ... I couldn’t find anybody who would teach me, show me how to do it, and I wanted to be shown how to do it before I went and just tried it myself.” The day of her accident, she decided to try the jump. Hiibschman watched at least four of her friends take the jump. While they were slightly more advanced than Hiibschman, she also ob-servéd people of her ability level go off the jump. Her friend Aaron Kelly specifically showed her how to ski the jump. He advised her, “stay down, stay forward.” Hi-ibschman stated that she felt fairly familiar with the approach and the takeoff, gaining that familiarity from watching people as she skied beside them, looking at the jump, and reading ski magazines to learn what she was supposed to do.

Hiibschman stood in line to take this jump. As she approached the jump, she concentrated on what she was doing. Hi-ibschman states that she snowplowed all the way to keep her speed as low as possible and that she was going slower than the skiers on the other side of the hill. As she approached the jump, she leaned forward. She also straightened out her skis so they would not cross when she hit the jump. 3 However, Hiibschman stated, the jump

threw me way high, higher than I thought it would, and threw me back. And I was — still upside down in the air, and I was struggling to get forward, lean forward as hard as I could and I just didn’t have enough time. My butt and the backs of my skis hit the ground at about the same time and then I rolled down the hill — slid actually.

Others confirmed that the jump “lofted you straight up into the air....” Hiibschman testified that when she landed, her skis “were almost perpendicular to the ground.” She fell and landed on her tail bone, resulting in permanent paralysis from the waist down.

At the time Hiibschman jumped, a big pit existed at the base of the jump, where *1357 people had been landing. The ski lift operator explained, “[A]t the end of the day you have this pit right here, this is an average distance where everybody’s going to land, and they always fall and hit their butts on the snow and it just keeps digging it out and digging it out.” Hiibschman never observed the landing area nor did anyone mention to her anything about it. The lift operator further explained, “as you landed it was kind of a flat surface, not too much incline so you had ... a hard landing ... because if you have an incline it tends to be more soft because you glide off it, but instead you kind of landed hard, boom, you know.” Another lift attendant also said the jump was dangerous because the landing was too flat and a skier would get too much air time for the jump. About half the people taking the jump fell, some of whom were beginners. 4 Some skiers who fell also landed on their rear or back.

During testimony, when asked whether he thought the jump was dangerous, the ski lift operator answered, “Yes.” He admitted that “I should have told them not to take the jump until they had learned how to ski better, because they kept getting behind on their skis....” 5 However, while the ski patrol would destroy jumps it considered unsafe or mark them as out of bounds, this jump was not so destroyed or marked. An expert in ski area design and planning thought it was inappropriate to have this jump, or any jump, on a beginner’s hill unless the jump were marked as appropriate only for more advanced skiers.

One other key fact exists regarding the accident. Before skiing, Hiibschman and her friends stopped at the Valdez Bottle Stop Liquor Store. Hiibschman estimated that she had consumed between one and one-half and three beers before the accident. She believed that she was in control at all times while skiing and that the beers made no difference to her skiing performance. Hiibschman asserted that she had taken four runs between her last drink of beer and the time of the accident and she did not fall on any of those runs. She said she was clear headed as she started her descent towards the jump. An emergency medical technician who subsequently attended Hiibschman stated, “I could smell alcohol on her breath, but she was not obviously intoxicated.”

On the day of Hiibschman’s accident, there were at least five inherent risk of skiing signs posted at Salmonberry Ridge: one on the outside of the lift shack, one by the door to the warming hut, one inside the warming hut, and one on the inside of each bathroom door. 6 These signs were posted in places the Parks & Recreation Service thought were “the most prominent places on the ski hill.”

*1358 Based on the Ski Act, the City moved for summary judgment, which the superior court granted in part and denied in part. The court held that Hiibschman’s injuries resulted from “an inherent risk of skiing” which specifically included “variations or steepness in terrain,” “surface ... conditions,” and/or “a skier’s failure to ski within the limits of the skier’s ability.” The superior court rejected Hiibschman’s contention that the statute’s categories violated equal protection.

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Bluebook (online)
821 P.2d 1354, 1991 Alas. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hiibschman-ex-rel-welch-v-city-of-valdez-alaska-1991.