“Always dive with a buddy” —
probably one of the first things
you learned in your beginning
scuba course. If you get in trouble,
your buddy’s job is to rescue
you. But what if he doesn’t? Can
you, or your estate, sue?
Despite a paucity of judicial
decisions, the question is more
than hypothetical. Legal actions
against buddies by divers or their
heirs have been filed and sometimes
settled for large, although
undisclosed amounts. Courts
have shown a willingness to entertain
such claims.
So, is there anything
you can do to
ensure that putting
on a wetsuit doesn’t
lead to finding yourself
on the wrong
side of a lawsuit?
As is true in any
tort or negligence action, to
recover against a dive buddy, a
plaintiff must prove: (1) duty, (2)
breach of that duty, (3) proximate
cause (which means the
injury was a direct consequence
of the buddy’s actions or omissions)
and (4) damages.
Judges who have faced the
issue conclude the buddy relationship
itself establishes a legal
duty. Litigation experts such as
Robert K. Jenner (Silver Spring,
Md.) caution that by agreeing to
be a buddy, you take on a variety
of roles: responsibility for (1)
checking and monitoring equipment
before and throughout the
dive, (2) creating and diving a
safe plan, (3) sharing air if needed,
(4) staying close, (5) untangling
a partner caught in debris
and (6) getting both of you to the
surface in case of an emergency.
As a buddy, the person suing
must prove that your negligence
caused his injury.
The latest legal ruling
Rasmussen v. Bendotti, the first
reported appellate opinion
directly pertaining to buddy diving,
was decided in August 2001.
Although negligent, Eugene
Bendotti escaped responsibility
for his buddy’s death — who
happened to be his wife. Her
children from a previous marriage
brought an action against their stepfather of five years.
Although the definitive list of buddy legal
obligations has yet to be written ... in today’s
litigious society, negligent divers
run the risk of being sued. |
Bendotti did neither a self nor
buddy equipment check before
their fourth dive of the day. As a
result, he didn’t notice until he
was in the water that his power
inflator was not connected to his
BC. He immediately surfaced .
How ever, his wife, perhaps while
ascending herself, got caught in a
rope at 40 feet and was unable to
disentangle herself and drowned.
Using a legal doctrine that
relaxes the required standard of
care for an individual faced with
an emergency, Bendotti denied
accountability. Yet the
Washington court explained that
this protection is not available to
a person who, like Bendotti, created
the dangerous situation
himself. Therefore, the finding
that he breached his duty was
“ inescapable . ”
While responsible, Bendotti
avoided liability because the connection
between his mistake and his
wife being trapped was “too attenuated.”
Why was the connection
insufficient? Expert testimony is frequently
important and Jon Hardy, a
widely published scuba professional,
made three points: (1) no relationship
existed between the error and
Bonny Jo Bendotti’s entanglement,
(2) the loss of buddy contact could
not be tied to her death and (3) the
proximate cause of her death was
that she was not
carrying a knife.
Further, the
judges noted it
was unknown
how Mrs.
Bendotti became
entangled, why
she was unable
to free herself and whether a non
negligent buddy could have saved
her. The unknowns were inadequate
to establish proximate cause.
Other lawsuits have reached similar
results. For example, in 1998 Ta i
Wilkerson, an experienced diver
who had previously been as deep as
415 feet, died searching for the
Spanish ship Juno and its millions in
treasure off the Virginia coast. At
170 feet, Wilkerson was attaching a
tether to the anchor line when his
buddy, Mike Fantone noticed his
partner was entangled in another
line. “He was really breathing hard,
oh Lord, and struggling with the
line,” Fantone said.
After untangling Wilkerson,
Fantone signaled to his friend to
calm down, then noticed his regulator
had come out of his mouth.
Fantone replaced it. “He tried to take a couple of more breaths.
But right after that, I looked in
his eyes, and they got all dilated,
and he stopped breathing. After
that, the only thing left to do was
to send him to the surface . ”
There was no time to worry
about the hazards of ascent without
decompression, and after
sending Wilkerson up, Fantone
ignored the risk to his own life.
Despite attempts by crew
members to revive Wilkerson,
and the arrival of the Coast
Guard, he died en route to the
hospital. His widow sued
Fantone, among others, claiming
they were negligent.
The Norfolk medical examiner
determined the 41-year-old airplane
pilot, apparently in excellent
health, had suffered a heart
attack. When, without explanation,
the plaintiff subsequently
dropped her legal action, defendants’
attorneys asserted the dismissal
proved their clients were
blameless. “There was no settlement
and no money changed
hands . ”
Overseas courts also agree
that buddies owe a duty to each
other. However, a judge in
England concluded losing contact
is “a common hazard of diving.”
Consequently, because “no
more and no less than the taking
of reasonable care” is required,
Peter Milner was not at fault for
his buddy’s death. In March
1995, the two — who had logged
more than 100 dives together —
were diving the wreck, SS Sevilla,
off the English Coast. After 15
minutes, Dominic Rowbottom
indicated the pair should return
to the surface. But, when they
cleared the wreck, Rowbottom
cut his reel line and began a free
ascent. At 10 feet, he suddenly
descended rapidly, feet first. Despite
having lost sight of Rowbottom due
to poor visibility, Milner went back
down in an unsuccessful attempt to
affect a rescue.
The cause of death could not be
established because the body had
been in the water nine days when
found, so the court looked to experttestimony. A diving expert said
Milner should have guided
Rowbottom to the surface in case he
lost consciousness. He also criticized
Milner for undergoing a full decompression,
for failing to give a distress
signal upon surfacing and for suggesting
Rowbottom be given five
more minutes to come up.
Another expert explained that
because his buddy did not give a distress
signal, Milner had no reason to
suspect anything was amiss until
Rowbottom began to sink. By then,
it was too late. He also criticized
Rowbottom, a relatively inexperienced
diver, for attempting a 135-
foot dive without building up to it
and for using poorly functioning,
unfamiliar equipment.
Acknowledging the difficulty of
synchronizing a free ascent, the
court denied the widow and childrens’
claims, but inexplicably
ordered Milner to pay half the costs.
Opinions from related cases may
shed more light. For example, in In
re Adventure Bound Sports, a trio
“formed a dangerous, three-person
buddy team in which one diver was
to separate from the other two, cont
r a ry to PADI procedures.” As their
own defective plan was “a significant
contributing factor to their deaths,”
the damage award received by the
decendents’ estates against the M V
Seahorse’s owner and charterer was
reduced by the percentage of fault
attributed to their negligence.
Similarly, in Lyon v. Ranger III, a
federal case decided under general
maritime law, the court found that
Thomas Lyon surfaced way beyond
the statutory maximum distance
from his dive flag and contributed, along with his two partners, to
their “seriously flawed” plan. In
Massachusetts waters, another
boat struck and killed Lyon. As a
result, he was found 45 percent
responsible for his own death.
The court suggested that,
because Lyon didn’t control the
others, and, was required to do
more to protect himself, his “negligence
vis-a-vis his own safety ...
exceeds theirs.” Moreover, the
judges concluded that even if
they were wrong about decedent’s own responsibility, the
negligence of the other divers
should be attributed to Lyon
because of the “common control
of the diving plan.”
Suing buddies
The scarcity of reported cases
against buddies is not surprising.
Most buddies simply don’t have
enough money to justify the
costs. Generally, course
providers, boat operators, shop
owners and equipment manufacturers
have the “deep pockets,”
making them more likely targets.
In addition, buddies are usually
just that — friends or even relatives
of the injured or deceased
diver — people you wouldn’t
expect to sue. (Of course, there
can be exceptions when children
or an estate steps in.)
Courts may also reject these
cases based on the legal theory of
assumption of the risk (e.g., by participating
in certain ventures you
accept responsibility for known
hazards typically associated with
such endeavors). Thus, in Dao v.
Shipway, an unpublished decision,
a California judge granted summary
judgment to a buddy because the friends were “engaged in a
voluntary, active sport with inherent
risks” of which the victim was
aware. Although Doug Shipway
(1) had been diving with his partner
for years knowing he was not
certified, (2) provided him tanks,
(3) failed to follow the buddy system
and (4) did not go back
under water to search and waited
an hour to call for emergency
assistance, he was not responsible
for his buddy’s death.
Another explanation is that
lawyers are reluctant to take these
cases. “Juries just don’t want to
hold buddies liable,” says Alton J.
Hall, Jr., an attorney who specializes
in diving litigation. This is
especially true if the buddy tried
to do anything to help, “no matter
how stupid.”
Johnson v. Northwest Sport s
Divers, Inc. is illustrative. Tw o
friends, who learned to dive in
the same course, dove to 80 feet,
exceeding their basic open water
certification. They neither conducted
an equipment check nor
monitored each other’s air supp
l y. At some point, Russell
Johnson indicated he was out of
air. He and William Feely
attempted to buddy breathe but,
contrary to their training, they
did not hold on to each other as
they ascended. After the decedent
dropped the regulator,
rather than retrieve it as he had
been taught, Feely panicked and
shot to the surface. Johnson
drowned. Despite his actions
falling “below the standard of
practice for certified recreational
scuba divers,” when Johnson’s
estate sued, Feely was not named
as a defendant.
Rick Lesser, a PADI board
member and attorney whose
practice consists of diver negligence
cases, warns that although
the definitive list of buddy legal
obligations has yet to be written
and there are few cases so far, in
today ’s litigious society, negligent
divers run the risk of being sued.
He advises the best way to protect
yourself is “if you agree to be a
buddy, be a buddy. ”
Finally, while uncertainty
about the probability of someone
filing a buddy lawsuit exists, everyone
seems to agree that gross
negligence, or egregious violations
of the standard of care,
mean you could be facing a large
verdict .
What can divers do?
• When you agree to be a
buddy, you must act as a reasonably
prudent, certified diver. Be
conscientious yourself and
choose your buddy carefully.
• If you find yourself on a boat
being pressured to accept a partner
you neither know nor want,
don’t give in. Vessel operators
may push to make sure every one
is paired because, as a federal
court in Hawaii explained in
Tancredi v. Dive Makai Charters, “it
is a breach of the standard of
care in the recreational dive
industry for a dive charter company
to conduct a dive without
assigning ‘buddy’ teams.”
Similarl , in Kuntz v. Windjammer“ Barefoot” Cruises, Ltd., although
the deceased was negligent in
drinking and taking drugs the
night before the accident, the court
held the cruise line liable for her
death because if their employee
“had instituted and maintained a
partner system during the deep
dive, as required by the practice and
standards of the scuba-diving
instructors and [NAUI] ... this
mishap would not have occurred.”
Notably, however, in Madison v.
Superior Court, a broadly worded
release relieved an instructor and
training course from liability for
their “failure to follow the ‘buddy
system’ rule.” Possibly signing such
a waiver would convince a boat
operator to allow you to dive solo. If
not, it could be a serious mistake to
agree to the buddy he gives you.
Your moral and legal responsibility
to a stranger will probably be the
same as to a close friend or even a
family member, but a person who
doesn’t know you is much more
likely to sue if something goes
wrong .
• It is important to recognize that
a buddy who is not competent
endangers your life as well as your
bank account. In one survey of
approximately 200 divers, 15 percent
of the respondents said their
greatest fear was a “bad buddy. ”
Indeed, some experienced divers,
unwilling to assume the responsibility
and potential liability, have turned to solo diving. While this might
sound blasphemous, one group,
Scuba Diving International, is currently
offering a certification
allowing graduates, who must first
satisfy stringent requirements, to
dive alone. And some folks say
most people are really solo divers
— “they are just in the same
ocean at the same time.” For
example, one study recently
reported in Undercurrent revealed
that in 80 of 100 fatal cases, the
victim was not with another diver
at the time of thUndercurrent e accident.
However, in only 21 of these was
the diver deliberately solo.
• If you truly want protection,
purchase personal liability insurance.
Assuming you decide to take
that step, a suggestion: first check
your homeowners policy. It might
provide coverage. Apparently
homeowner insurance policies are
used to paying settlements. But acautionary note: people with insurance
are more likely to be sued.
In other words, by having coverage,
you become a deep pocket.
Phyllis Coleman, Professor of Law,
Nova Southeastern University, Ft.
Lauderdale, Fl., is an active diver.
She is the coauthor of Sports Law:
Cases and Materials ( American
Case book series). Last year she wrote
for Underc u rrent on the legality of
releases divers must sign before diving.