Hoar v. Great Eastern Resort Management, Inc.

506 S.E.2d 777, 256 Va. 374, 1998 Va. LEXIS 131
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 6, 1998
DocketRecord 972334
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 506 S.E.2d 777 (Hoar v. Great Eastern Resort Management, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoar v. Great Eastern Resort Management, Inc., 506 S.E.2d 777, 256 Va. 374, 1998 Va. LEXIS 131 (Va. 1998).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE CARRICO

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On January 19, 1992, Thomas Hoar (Thomas) suffered disabling brain damage in a skiing accident on a ski trail maintained at a ski area near Harrisonburg by Great Eastern Resort Management, Inc., t/a Massanutten Ski Resort (Massanutten). In a motion for judgment alleging negligence on the part of Massanutten, Thomas’s wife and guardian, Patricia Stone Hoar (the Guardian), sought recovery of damages for Thomas’s injuries. A jury returned a verdict in the Guardian’s favor in the amount of $6,170,563.00. Upon motion of Massanutten, the trial court set the verdict aside and entered judgment in favor of Massanutten. We awarded the Guardian this appeal and granted Massanutten’s assignments of cross-error.

At the outset, Massanutten raises a question concerning the standard we should apply in reviewing the judgment of the trial court. Massanutten argues that when a trial court sets aside a jury verdict, the verdict is not entitled to the same weight as one that has been approved by the court. Mann v. Hinton, 249 Va. 555, 556-57, 457 S.E.2d 22, 23 (1995). Massanutten also asserts that the jury verdict in this case is entitled to little or no weight because it was in the exact *378 amount of Thomas’s special damages. When such a verdict is returned, Massanutten says, “it bespeaks a compromise . . ., the integrity of the jury’s finding on liability is suspect, and the . . . finding on liability is impeached.” Ford Motor Co. v. Bartholomew, 224 Va. 421, 433-34, 297 S.E.2d 675, 681-82 (1982). Further, Massanutten maintains, the trial court was of opinion there was no evidence to support the verdict in any event. Additionally, Massanutten says, neither party seeks a new trial. “Under these circumstances,” Massanutten concludes, “the standard of review should focus on whether there is evidence to support the trial court’s action entering judgment for Massanutten rather than whether there is evidence to support the jury verdict.”

However, it is the established rule that “[e]ven though the trial court [has] set the verdict aside, we [will] state the facts and reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the [party] who prevailed before the jury.” Stump v. Doe, 250 Va. 57, 58, 458 S.E.2d 279, 280 (1995). See also Griffett v. Ryan, 247 Va. 465, 467, 443 S.E.2d 149, 150 (1994). “[A]nd if there is any credible evidence in the record that supports the verdict, we must reinstate that verdict and enter judgment thereon.” Id.

Stated in the light most favorable to the Guardian, the evidence shows that on January 17, 1992, two days before Thomas’s accident, Massanutten opened to the public a new, more advanced ski trail, known as “Diamond Jim.” 1 This trail was built in a heavily wooded area by a “cut and fill” process, which is used when a ski run does not follow the natural “fall line” of a hill or mountain. According to an expert witness called by the Guardian, “[t]he fall line of a hill or a slope is the direction a ball would roll if you were to let it go and it rolled slowly [or] the direction water would flow if left to itself.”

In the cut and fill process, the side of a hill or mountain is cut away to form one side of a ski run and the excavated soil is used to fill in the opposite side to make the run even and to double its width. In the area of Diamond Jim where Thomas was injured, the cut and fill process created a “drop-off,” having a vertical drop of some thirty feet, on the left side of the downhill ski run. 2 The bottom of *379 the drop-off contained rocks and logs. The drop-off also had a double fall line, meaning that the hypothetical ball “wouldn’t go straight down the middle of [the ski] run [but] would taper off [to the bottom of the drop-off].” The cut and fill process also left a gap between the left edge of the ski run and the tree line, which bordered the remainder of the run on both sides, eliminating a “visual cue to the skier that this is the edge of the trail, don’t go over here.” 3

The groomed area of the ski run had a snow depth of two feet. The snow surface was “very hard packed” and the ground was “extremely hard.” A “berm” of snow, one foot higher than the groomed area, ran along the left edge of the run and the snow tapered off to a depth of only a few inches at the bottom of the drop-off.

Prior to Thomas’s accident, Massanutten had ordered and received a shipment of bright orange “warning barrier fencing” for use on Diamond Jim. At the time of the accident, Massanutten had installed fence posts in the area where Thomas was injured, but had not yet attached the bright orange fencing; the fencing was installed “a couple days later.” 4

As a result of his brain injury, Thomas is incompetent and was unable to testify. A friend, George Archer Marston (Marston), a civil engineer who accompanied Thomas to the Massanutten ski resort on the occasion in question, testified as a witness for the Guardian. According to Marston’s testimony, he and Thomas, both experienced skiers, purchased lift tickets and began skiing about 9:00 a.m. on January 19, 1992. After warming up on some of the easier slopes, they took a chair lift to Diamond Jim. At the time, Diamond Jim had been groomed to its left edge, permitting skiers to ski all the way to that edge. In addition, snowmaking machinery was blowing snow across the ski run, blinding skiers using the right side of the run. Also, there were “moguls” in the center of the ski run, but none on the edges. 5

Thomas and Marston skied down the left side of Diamond Jim without incident. They then took the chair lift for a second trip down Diamond Jim. After skiing about halfway down the run, they stopped *380 at a sign marked “slow,” below which the slope steepened, and talked for a couple of minutes. Thomas decided to ski down the left side of the run and, not “going fast,” skied to the left laterally across the slope, with Marston following.

Marston stated that shortly before Thomas reached the edge of the slope, he “caught an edge and lost his balance^ 6 ] bent at the knees and kind of sat down on the back of his skis and then slid off the edge of the slope out of . . . sight.” Marston skied “right up to the edge expecting to find [Thomas] adjacent to the slope, maybe six to eight feet below the edge of the slope,” but instead “found this very steep, large vertical drop.” Thomas was lying between two logs at the bottom of the drop, “probably laterally a hundred feet away from [Marston and] over 30 feet vertically below [him].” Thomas was unconscious and bleeding from his nose, mouth, and one ear.

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506 S.E.2d 777, 256 Va. 374, 1998 Va. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoar-v-great-eastern-resort-management-inc-va-1998.