Yap v. Controlled Parasailing of Honolulu, Inc.

873 P.2d 1321, 76 Haw. 248, 1994 Haw. LEXIS 35
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedMay 25, 1994
Docket16184
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 873 P.2d 1321 (Yap v. Controlled Parasailing of Honolulu, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yap v. Controlled Parasailing of Honolulu, Inc., 873 P.2d 1321, 76 Haw. 248, 1994 Haw. LEXIS 35 (haw 1994).

Opinion

RAMIL, Justice.

Plaintiffs-Appellants Frank Yap, Jr. (Yap), as Special Administrator of the Estate of Mami Kumagai (Mami), deceased, Yoshimasa Kumagai (Yoshimasa), Teiko Kumagai (Teiko), and Kimi Kumagai (Kimi) (collectively Plaintiffs) appeal from the judgment pursuant to a special verdict and the subsequent orders of the circuit court in a case involving a parasailing accident that resulted in Mami’s death.

On appeal, Plaintiffs contend that: (1) the circuit court abused its discretion when it did not allow their expert witness to testify that the parasail chair was negligently designed; (2) Plaintiffs should have been allowed to argue a theory of defective design in closing arguments; (3) the opinions and conclusions contained in the United States Coast Guard (Coast Guard) report were erroneously admitted as evidence; (4) the circuit court erred when it admitted the test results from a structurally different chair; (5) the court abused its discretion in allowing Defendants’ use of demonstrative evidence; and (6) the circuit court erred when it awarded Defendants-Appellees Controlled Parasailing of Honolulu, Inc. (CPH), Dean Auren (Auren) and Roland Ribordy (Ribordy) attorneys’ fees and costs. We agree with each contention.

Accordingly, we vacate the judgment and the award of attorneys’ fees and costs and remand for a new trial.

I. FACTS

A. Background

This lawsuit arises out of a parasailing accident that occurred on March 11, 1988 on Waikiki Beach. While on vacation from Japan, Mami and her sister Kimi, were passengers and parasailers on a boat owned by CPH, the Skyrider II (Skyrider). Also on board the Skyrider were four other passengers, crewmember David Morikawa (Morika-wa), and Auren. Auren was the pilot of the Skyrider and Morikawa its deckhand.

Mami was the last of the six passengers to ride the parasail. During her ride, she fell out of the parasail chair, falling approximately 150 feet to her death. The parasail chair was not equipped with a seatbelt or any type of restraining device.

The day after the accident, the Coast Guard investigated the incident. Two Coast Guard investigators rode in the Skyrider and in the parasail chair to test the equipment. The investigators, however, used a different line and parasail, because Auren cut the lines of the parasail after the accident in order to untangle the parasail from the Skyrider’s propellers. 1 Neither Auren nor Morikawa *251 were present during the Coast Guard testing. Thus, Ribordy, the owner and operator of CPH, who was not present during the accident, piloted the Skyrider for the Coast Guard investigators.

A complaint was later filed in the First Circuit Court on March 8,1989 by Yap, Kimi, and Yoshimasa and Teiko, Mami and Kimi’s parents. The complaint was filed against CPH, Ribordy, Auren, Controlled Parasailing Systems, Inc., 2 and Defendan1>-Appellee Par-asailing Enterprises, Inc. (Enterprises) (collectively Defendants). Enterprises manufactured and sold the parasail chair to CPH.

Prior to trial, Plaintiffs filed a motion in limine to exclude any documentary evidence regarding the Coast Guard investigation and to exclude the Coast Guard opinion testimony. The court granted and denied the motion in part. Specifically, the court ruled that it would not allow references to the Coast Guard report with respect to the conclusions and opinions regarding the lack of negligence.

The jury trial ensued and lasted approximately six weeks. During trial, it was established that two people saw Mami fall from the chair: (1) Mark Ross (Ross), an off-duty police officer, who was sitting on a surfboard; and (2) Kimi, who was aboard the Skyrider. Neither Auren nor Morikawa saw Mami fall.

Ross testified that the lines attaching the parasail to the chair “appeared to come off’ from “where they were fastened.” The para-sail then “billowed backwards,” the chair “tipped forward,” and Mami fell out feet first, “flailing as if trying to climb back into the chair.”

Similarly, Kimi testified that the “para[sail] deflated and [that the] cord attached to the chair came down.” She further stated that the chair tilted to the left and forward, and Mami slid as if she were coming down a slide.

B. Plaintiffs’ Expert Witness

Plaintiffs presented Raymond Bradley (Bradley) as an expert witness. Bradley had a Ph.D. degree in mechanical engineering, with a major in fluid engineering, which included aerodynamics. He worked for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) as a systems engineer from 1961 through 1986. During part of his tenure at NASA, Bradley was a manager of the systems engineering division. Essentially, Bradley’s job included “troubleshooting and looking for problems and resolving those problems.” Bradley worked extensively with the Apollo space program as the systems engineer, and “did a lot of integration work on the parachute system for the Apollo capsule.”

Bradley also worked on the design and testing of a “paraglider,” which he described as being similar to the parasail chutes used on the Skyrider, except that the paraglider was more “exaggerated, more like a wing.” Although not a designer, Bradley stated that he decided what to design and left it up to contractors to fulfill the design per his specifications.

While Bradley admitted that his testimony was based on hypothetical drawn from the facts elicited from other witnesses and not on actual testing, he also stated that he had examined the parasail chair in June 1990 and conducted tests to determine the chair’s center of gravity.

The court allowed Bradley to testify as an expert in aerodynamics, but found that he was not qualified to render an expert opinion as to the design of the parasail chair. Thus, Bradley was not allowed to testify as to the necessity of a seatbelt or restraining device.

During his testimony, Bradley was given the following fact pattern: (1) Mami was 150 feet in the air; (2) Auren was making a left turn with the boat; (3) there was slack in the cable connecting the boat and the parasail chair; (4) the parasail was above the chair; (5) there was a sudden gust of wind; (6) the parasail rose; (7) the front of the parasail chair tipped forward; and (8) Mami fell feet *252 first. Bradley was then asked to explain what happened aerodynamically.

Bradley stated that:

no matter which direction [the wind] came from, [the wind] causes the parasail to go up. When the parasail goes up, it pulls on the chair and if you look at the pictures you can see where it’s attached, it’s about the middle of the chair.
So the parasail is pulling up very suddenly due to the gust right about the middle of the chair, the cable [connecting the chair to the Skyrider] is attached to the front of the chair and it’s pulling down.... So when the gust hits the vehicle with the slack in the cable, the parasail goes up, the cable holds down and the chair will have a natural tilt forward.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
873 P.2d 1321, 76 Haw. 248, 1994 Haw. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yap-v-controlled-parasailing-of-honolulu-inc-haw-1994.