Wenzel v. Tremonti

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Michigan
DecidedApril 15, 2024
Docket1:21-cv-00908
StatusUnknown

This text of Wenzel v. Tremonti (Wenzel v. Tremonti) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wenzel v. Tremonti, (W.D. Mich. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION

AMBER WENZEL,

Plaintiff, Case No. 1:21-cv-908 v. Hon. Hala Y. Jarbou PHILLIP TREMONTI, KRISTA TREMONTI,

Defendants. ________________________________/

OPINION In this diversity action,1 Plaintiff Amber Wenzel sues Defendants Phillip and Krista Tremonti for an injury she suffered after falling from a zip line on Defendants’ property. Before the Court is Defendants’ motion for summary judgment (ECF No. 46). For the reasons herein, the Court will grant that motion in part and deny it in part. I. BACKGROUND The following is a summary of the evidence, viewing the facts in a light most favorable to Wenzel. Defendants reside in a house at 7887 Helena Road, in Helena Township, Michigan. They also own a house on an adjacent parcel of land at 7819 Helena Road. They use the latter as a short- term rental property. Wenzel and her friends rented the house at 7819 Helena Road (the “Rental House”) for three days in August 2020. Wenzel discovered the Rental House through Airbnb and chose to stay there because it was close to Torch Lake, where she and her friends planned to rent a pontoon boat. (Wenzel Dep. 67-

1 Plaintiff is a citizen of Illinois. Defendants are Michigan citizens. The amount in controversy exceeds $75,000. 70, ECF No. 47-1.) She communicated directly with Krista Tremonti and decided to rent it before arriving. (Id. at 74.) Wenzel and her friends met Krista at the Rental House when they arrived on August 17, 2020. Krista showed them the inside of the house and explained the rules for use of the property. Before leaving, Krista offered Wenzel and her friends the opportunity to use a zip line that Phillip

Tremonti had constructed at Defendants’ residence. (Id. at 73.) Krista said Defendants made the zip line available to “all of our guests to enhance their experience and to . . . make it a more memorable trip[.]” (Id.) Krista told them to let her know when they wanted to use it. (Id. at 74- 75.) This was the first time that Wenzel learned about the zip line. It was not mentioned on the Airbnb listing, and Wenzel did not believe that using it was part of the rental fee. (Id. at 73-74, 78.) Wenzel believed Defendants had offered to let Wenzel and her friends use the zip line because Wenzel was renting the Rental House and the Tremontis offered the use of the zip line to guests staying at the Rental House. (Id. at 125.) Similarly, Wenzel’s friend Candice Loye recalls Phillip saying that the zip line “wasn’t part of the rental”; it was “just something for [them] to use[.]”

(Loye Dep. 43-44, ECF No. 51-2.) And Wenzel’s friend Jacob Buber testified that he believed the Tremontis offered to let them use the zip line “because it was their home [and] they were nice people”; it was not part of the “Airbnb [rental].” (Buber Dep. 32, ECF No. 51-4.) Two days later, Wenzel texted Krista and inquired about using the zip line. Wenzel asked Krista whether “there was a weight limit or anything of that sorts.” (Text Messages, ECF No. 47- 3, PageID.273.) Wenzel weighed about 200 pounds at the time and some of her friends were “on the heavier side”; she was concerned that they were too heavy for the zip line. (Wenzel Dep. 20, 80.) Krista responded that her husband, Phillip, “says you just have to be able to hold your own weight while holding the handle[.]” (Text Messages, PageID.273-274.) After communicating with Phillip, Wenzel and her friends went over to Defendants’ home to try the zip line. (Wenzel Dep. 81.) The line was attached to a balcony or covered porch at the back of Defendants’ home. (Id. at 84; Phillip Tremonti Dep. 18, ECF No. 51-5.) The handle of the zip line was a set of handlebars clipped to a trolley. (Wenzel Dep. 85; Photo, ECF No. 47-4.) As shown in video of the incident, the line ran down the length of Defendants’ back yard, which

slopes away from the house for much of that length before sloping up again near some trees at the end. The line first ran over a stretch of grass, then over a stone walkway, then over a small pond surrounded by large rocks, and then over another stretch of grass before ending at a wooden ramp or platform near the trees. According to Phillip, the line runs about 75 yards from the house to the wooden platform. (Phillip Tremonti Dep. 17.) Phillip purchased the components of the zip line from a website, Ziplinegear.com. (Id. at 23, 52.) He did not review any manuals or conduct any research about how to construct a zip line. (Id. at 24.) He did not consult any instructions or guidelines on Ziplinegear.com. (Id. at 33-36, 39.) As of 2022, that website advised that “[t]he maximum allowable slope is 3% (3’ feet drop

per 100’ feet) for zip lines that will not utilize a braking system.” (Ziplinegear.com pages, ECF No. 51-9, PageID.505.) It also advised that the zip line “must never exceed 6% (6’ foot drop per 100 feet) riding slope.” (Id., PageID.504.) Phillip did not measure the vertical descent of the zip line or calculate its slope. (Phillip Tremonti Dep. 20, 35.) And he did not have a seat, harness, or brake installed on the day that Wenzel used it.2 Phillip showed Wenzel and her friends how to use the zip line by using it himself. (Wenzel Dep. 86.) To Wenzel, “it was obvious that you had to hold on.” (Id.) Wenzel’s friend Jacob

2 Phillip had installed a seat and braking apparatus on the zip line for when guests used the zip line at his daughter’s wedding in August 2019, but he removed that apparatus shortly after the wedding. (Phillip Tremonti Dep. 28-29.) Buber went next. (Buber Dep. 15-16.) A video shows him standing on a raised platform in front of the covered porch with his arms above his head, holding the handle of the trolley attached to the zip line. The platform sits a few feet above the ground. He then lifted his legs and glided down the line until he reached the wooden ramp at the other end. (Snapchat Video of Jacob Buber, ECF No. 47-6.) Next, Candice rode the zip line from one end to the other. (Wenzel Dep. 91.)

Wenzel watched Phillip, Jacob, and Candice use the zip line. She thought it looked “pretty simple.” (Id. at 90.) But she was hesitant to go because she was worried that it would not hold her. (Id. at 92.) To address her fears, Phillip had her “test” the line by hanging on to the handlebars. (Id. at 92-93.) He told her, “As long as you can hang on for five seconds, you’ll make it completely across.” (Id. at 92.) With the handlebar and trolley fixed in place, she hung onto it while he counted to five. (Id. at 95.) She was only able to hold her weight for about four seconds. (Id.) She was aware that it took longer than four seconds to make it all the way down the line. (Id. at 94-95.) In fact, the video of Jacob’s ride indicates that it lasted about 15 seconds from beginning to end. Phillip assured Wenzel, telling her, “[Y]ou’re basically there, you’ll be fine, just go for it.”

(Id. at 92, 95.) In spite of her concerns, Wenzel decided to try the zip line. A video of her ride shows her gliding over the first stretch of grass, the walkway, and the pond. After she made it to the second stretch of grass, her hands “slipped” off the handlebar and she fell to the ground. (Id. at 104-05.) Wenzel says the handle “hit something a little bit” and she “felt a jerk” in her hand before she fell. (Id. at 105.) Wenzel is “not sure” how far she fell (id.), but based on the video, it appears that she fell a distance of about three feet. She landed on her feet and fell forward, breaking her left ankle. Wenzel’s injury required her to go to the hospital, where she had surgery on her ankle the day after the accident. (Id. at 34.) She underwent a second surgery in September 2020 to correct the first surgery. (Id. at 35-37.) Wenzel seeks damages for her injury.

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Wenzel v. Tremonti, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wenzel-v-tremonti-miwd-2024.