Trevor Rhoda v. Peter E O'Dovero Inc

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 24, 2016
Docket321363
StatusUnpublished

This text of Trevor Rhoda v. Peter E O'Dovero Inc (Trevor Rhoda v. Peter E O'Dovero Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trevor Rhoda v. Peter E O'Dovero Inc, (Mich. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

DONALD J. RHODA, Guardian/Conservator of UNPUBLISHED TREVOR RHODA, and TAMMIE WALKER, March 24, 2016

Plaintiffs-Appellants,

v No. 321363 Marquette Circuit Court PETER E. O’DOVERO, INC. d/b/a LC No. 13-051044-NI MARQUETTE MOUNTAIN,

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: GLEICHER, P.J., and K. F. KELLY and SERVITTO, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Michigan’s Ski Area Safety Act of 1962 (SASA), MCL 408.321 et seq., delineates the distinct duties applicable to ski area operators and skiers. Among the responsibilities assigned to operators is an obligation to designate closed runs, slopes or trails in the manner prescribed by Michigan’s ski area safety board (SASB). MCL 408.326a(d). Skiers (the statutory term includes snowboarders) must “[h]eed all posted signs and warnings,” MCL 408.342(1)(c), and generally assume the risk of “obvious and necessary” dangers that “inhere” in the sport. MCL 408.342(2). Snowboarders or ski operators who disobey their statutory duties are “liable for that portion of the loss or damage resulting from that violation.” MCL 408.344. We consider the interplay of these statutory provisions in a case arising from a snowboarder’s fall from a defective rail.

Marquette Mountain designed and assembled a special combination snowboard rail for use in a snowboarding competition. The day before the event, Marquette Mountain realized that the rail’s separate sections were incompletely welded together. A dangerous gap separated the two parts. Marquette Mountain attempted to prevent snowboarders from accessing the rail by erecting crossed red poles at its top. This form of closure did not conform to the SASB rules, which instead required “a sign containing a regulatory symbol and the word ‘closed’ in 3-inch or larger letters,” plus the placement of a rope, mesh tape, or fence across the top or entrance to a closed run. Mich Admin Code, R 408.82(1).

Trevor Rhoda and other snowboarders rode the defective rail despite the crossed poles. On his last ride, Rhoda’s snowboard snagged in the gap and Rhoda fell. His head struck the rail, resulting in a severe brain injury. Rhoda’s conservator filed this negligence action against Marquette Mountain alleging that the ski operator failed to properly close the rail and to warn of

-1- its danger. The trial court granted summary disposition in favor of Marquette Mountain, ruling that the administrative regulations generated by the SASB do not address the method for closing snowboarding rails, and that the crossed poles sufficed to warn Rhoda that he assumed the risk of riding a defective rail.

We hold that the administrative regulations apply to snowboarding runs such as the rail, and that the crossed poles did not comply with the SASB’s closure requirements. Because Marquette Mountain violated its duties by relying on the poles to warn snowboarders of the rail’s dangers, it bears liability for Rhoda’s damages attributable to that violation. Although a jury may find Rhoda comparatively negligent for failing to “heed” the crossed poles, Marquette Mountain may not avoid liability based on Rhoda’s decision to snowboard, as a defective and dangerous rail is not a danger that necessarily inheres in the sport. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.

I

Trevor Rhoda was an experienced and accomplished snowboarder. On a relatively warm day in April 2010, Rhoda and several friends practiced their snowboarding skills at Marquette Mountain to prepare for the Mountain’s upcoming Super Park Competition. Marquette Mountain featured a terrain park for snowboarders, and had designed and erected a special combination rail in anticipation of the next day’s special snowboarding event.

In the snowboarding world, a rail is a long metal piece of pipe that may be flat, straight, or curved. “What are the Types of Rails for Snowboards?” (accessed March 22, 2016). Snowboarders slide their boards along the tops of rails to perform tricks or special moves. The longer the rail, the more difficult it is to maneuver. Id.

Dave Silverstein, a Marquette Mountain employee, testified that he and another employee constructed the combination rail by placing two snowboarding rails together to create “a bigger rail” than normal. The first segment of the special rail went down, then flat, then down. The second section was flat and then sloped down. When the ski area opened on April 2, 2010, the two component rails had not yet been welded together. Silverstein anticipated that the rail would be closed to snowboarders’ use until the two segments were attached, as lacking a joining weld, the rail was “hazardous.”

Ski Patroller Andrew Bek, another Marquette Mountain employee, inspected the combination rail before the ski area opened on April 2. He noted that the rail “wasn’t complete; it wasn’t ready for people to ride on.” Bek recounted that “[t]he thing wasn’t completely affixed to the surface of the snow. It was a two-part feature, and it wasn’t fastened, and so that right away says that’s not safe.” According to Bek, there was “an inch or two” gap between the two rail sections. Bek decided to close the rail. He explained that when he encountered a danger at Marquette Mountain, he closed-off access to the danger and advised the company.

Q. . . . If there was a hazard that was, let’s say, a tree laying across the trail, I’d close the trail, let them know about it, and then whenever they can go

-2- move that tree, then it’s up to them. My job is to close the trail or, in this case, close the feature.

A. A tree lying in a trail generally isn’t going to cover a whole hill; correct?

Q. Right.

A. But you close down the whole hill if there’s a tree that’s laying down in a - - on one of the runs?

Q. If I think that it’s something that a guest could run into inadvertently, then, yeah, I’d close that whole run. If it’s a hazard that’s you know, discretely in one place, then I would mark that place. It depends on the situation.

Bek drilled two pilot holes in the snow and placed red bamboo poles into them in an “X” formation “[a]t the approach ramp . . . across the front or the uphill side of that where a person would approach that terrain feature.” An eyewitness to Rhoda’s accident testified that when Rhoda slid onto the rail, only one bamboo pole was evident.

Rhoda approached the rail on his snowboard from the side, rather than the front. Other snowboarders also accessed the combination rail from the sides, via approaches known as “urban lips.” As best we can discern from the record, “urban lips” are snow formations that allow a snowboarder to access a rail from the sides rather than the top. Silverstein admitted that he and another Marquette Mountain employee designed the combination rail to offer “urban style access, which means you had to jump onto the rail instead of ride on.” The Marquette Mountain employees had “pushed snow” creating “urban lips” on both sides of the rail. Rhoda jumped onto the rail from the right side, turned around to face backwards, and slid backwards down the rail. Bek described the next events as follows:

A. It looked like his weight and momentum separated the rails further than they were, and then his board went between them in the gap, that his weight and momentum widened and his board got trapped there.

Q. His board was sliding down backwards got caught in the separation between the two components of the rail?

A. Correct.
Q. And at that point he swung back, and did he strike his head on the rail?
A. Yes.
Q. Did you see the rails kicking out one way or another as the - -

-3- A.

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