Peresypa v. Jiminy Peak Mountain Resort, Inc.

653 F. Supp. 2d 131, 2009 WL 2948446
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedSeptember 15, 2009
DocketC.A. 08-30055-MAP
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 653 F. Supp. 2d 131 (Peresypa v. Jiminy Peak Mountain Resort, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peresypa v. Jiminy Peak Mountain Resort, Inc., 653 F. Supp. 2d 131, 2009 WL 2948446 (D. Mass. 2009).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER REGARDING DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT, PLAINTIFFS’ MOTION TO AMEND COMPLAINT, AND DEFENDANT’S MOTIONS TO STRIKE

(Dkt. Nos. 13, 25, 31, and 33)

PONSOR, District Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

Plaintiff, Irina Peresypa 1 (“Peresypa”), was seriously injured when she struck a snow gun while skiing at the ski area operated by Defendant, Jimmy Peak *133 Mountain Resort, Inc. She asserts that Defendant’s negligent rental of ski equipment, negligent marking of trails, negligent marking of the snow gun she struck, and negligent padding of that snow gun caused her injuries. Pursuant to the scheduling order entered by Magistrate Judge Neiman, Defendant had the option to delay the naming of expert witnesses until after the court ruled on its motion for summary judgment if it filed its motion by March 31, 2009. Defendant met that deadline. Shortly after Plaintiff opposed Defendant’s motion for summary judgment, both parties filed additional motions. Plaintiff moved to amend her complaint, and Defendant filed two motions to strike. Ml four motions are now before the court. For the reasons set forth below, the court will allow Defendant’s motion for summary judgment, in part, and deny the motion to amend and motions to strike.

II. BACKGROUND 2

Late in the afternoon on March 23, 2007, Plaintiff, who as a child had been skiing once, arrived at Jiminy Peak with Michael Shifrin (“Shifrin”), who had never been skiing, and Michael Promyslovsky (“Promyslovsky”), who considered himself an intermediate skier. None of them had ever been to Jiminy Peak before. Ml three bought lift tickets and Promyslovsky picked up a printed trail map. On the trail map beginner trails were marked by a green circle, and low intermediate trails were marked by a green circle in a blue square. The map showed eight lifts serving forty-four trails. Three of the lifts served only beginner trails. Two other lifts transported skiers from the base of the mountain to the summit.

On the main map, the Left Bank trail, one of several trails that began at the summit, was correctly marked as a beginner trail, but on an inset map showing just summit trails Left Bank was incorrectly marked as a low intermediate trail. The West Way trail also began at the summit. It was correctly marked on the main and inset maps as a low intermediate trail.

After buying lift tickets, the three friends proceeded to the rental shop to rent equipment. Plaintiffs rental form, completed by Defendant’s employee, indicated that she was given “5-290-DD” boots. The “290” was an in-house size designation that roughly corresponded to a woman’s U.S. shoe size of three to four- and-a-half. The size marked on the boots themselves was twenty-two, a size designation within the Mondopoint system, commonly used for alpine skis. The parties do not agree about the corresponding woman’s U.S. shoe size. Defendant’s employees who rented ski boots were directed to ask the renter whether the boots they had been given were comfortable. Though Plaintiff normally wore a U.S. woman’s size five-and-a-half or six shoe, there is no evidence that she found the boots she was given were too tight, or that she made any complaint about them.

Elsewhere on the rental form Defendant’s employee indicated that the “visual indicator” setting on both ski bindings, also known as the DIN number, was set to three. Higher DIN numbers indicate tighter bindings, meaning that greater pressure is required for them to release. When the bindings were examined after the accident it was determined that, contrary to the written form, the DIN number was actually set at six on both bindings, which Defendant concedes was tighter *134 than appropriate for someone of Peresypa’s size and experience. In conjunction with the same post-accident examination, the employee completing the written Post Incident Equipment Investigation Report (Dkt. No. 20, Tab G.) placed inconsistent markings in two boxes, appearing to indicate both that the forward pressure setting on one ski passed a test and that it failed the same test. A failure on the forward pressure test would have indicated that the binding might have released with less pressure than should have been required for the corresponding DIN number.

Once Plaintiff and her friends had rented equipment, they declined the three lifts serving beginner’s trails and proceeded to the Berkshire Express lift, one of the lifts that went to the summit. While riding the lift to the top of the mountain, Promyslovsky looked at the main portion of the map he had picked up earlier, ie., the portion of the map that correctly marked the Left Bank trail as a beginner’s route. Nevertheless, he advised Plaintiff to “go to the right,” away from this easier trail, upon disembarking from the lift. This direction led towards the West Way trail, a low intermediate trail. To the left, the Left Bank trail was marked by a green circle as an easy trail and designated as a non-speed zone.

It is undisputed that, on both the inset of the printed trail map and on the large trail map posted near the lifts at the summit, the Left Bank trail was incorrectly marked as a low intermediate trail, when it was actually a beginner trail. Promyslovsky recalls directing the group to the West Way trail, away from the easier Left Bank trail, based on his perusal of the paper trail map while riding the lift. Shifrin recalls the group stopping at the top of the mountain to look at the large trail map before proceeding to the right. In other words, despite the clear and correct notation on the map he consulted of a beginner’s trail to the left (Left Bank), Promyslovsky directed the party to the right to a low intermediate trail (West Way). No evidence suggests he ever consulted the erroneous paper map inset, or trail board map, in making his decision.

The deposition testimony of the third member of the party, Shifrin, was slightly different. He offered no testimony regarding any conversation about their route during the ride up on the lift, but he recalled that the three of them looked at the large trail map board briefly from a distance of two to three meters when they arrived at the summit. He testified that they were “looking for something specific” — he does not state what — but also that they “didn’t study the map per se.” (Dkt. No. 18, Ex. C, Shifrin Dep. 30, 1. 12-13.) He does not recall the substance of the conversation the three had while they looked at the trail map, or any specific discussion with either of the other two members of the party about which way to go, apart from the fact that they were looking for “what seemed to be the easiest route.” (Id at 30, 1. 14-15.) When asked specifically why it was that the group went to the right as opposed to going left, he testified at his deposition, “I don’t know why.” (Id at 34, 1.12.)

Plaintiff and her friends began their descent on the West Way low intermediate trail. Partway down the trail, a beginner trail, Lower Glade, branched off to the right from the West Way trail. The parties do not agree about whether that trail was open for skiing at the time of Plaintiffs accident.

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653 F. Supp. 2d 131, 2009 WL 2948446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peresypa-v-jiminy-peak-mountain-resort-inc-mad-2009.