Three companies have agreed to pay $1.4 million
to the family of a West Virginia woman who drowned
while scuba diving in Hawaii. Susann Lovejoy, 42, of
Huntington, WV, drowned during a dive trip in July
2003. Her family sued the dive operator, AquaZone of
Honolulu, as well as Sheico PKS Inc. and Sherwood Scuba,
the manufacturer and distributor of her BCD.
What divers will find important about this lawsuit is
that Lovejoy had signed a PADI release that relieved the
operator of responsibility, even if negligent. Hawaiian law,
however, says that any firm providing scuba services “shall
exercise reasonable care to ensure the safety of patrons
and the public, and shall be liable for damages resulting
from negligent acts or omissions of the person which
cause injury.” A waiver is invalid if the injury results “from
the negligence, gross negligence, or wanton act or omission
of the owner or operator.”
The family claimed that the defective BCD, which she
owned, coupled with negligence by AquaZone, led to
Lovejoy’s death. Lovejoy had e-mailed Aqua Zone stating,
“My husband and I will be a little rusty since the last time
we dove it was last summer in Cozumel. We are looking to
hook up with a company that can accommodate us and is
flexible about working with us as novices. We prefer more
individual attention and would be glad to pay extra for it
rather than with the bigger operations with larger numbers
of divers.” She also said that her 13-year-old daughter
Kelsey and a family friend were seeking a referral for their
open-water certifications. AquaZone replied, “We can
probably get you a private boat for your group (no promises)
ocean dives and have you get warmed up on scuba in
the hotel pool before you go out.”
In fact, the PADI dive center’s website states:
“AquaZone SCUBA Diving Center is . . . .the only Dive
Center to offer a free SCUBA lesson in the pool to make
sure you are comfortable before a dive in the ocean.”
When the Lovejoy family arrived, their reservation was
not on record and the pool dive refresher was under way.
Instead of a refresher or private supervision, they were
grouped with four other divers, all uncertified. AquaZone
owner Devon Merrifield tried to arrange a second instructor
for the day trip but was unsuccessful. On the way to
the dive, the survivors claimed they were not helped to
assemble or test their equipment by Merrifield or by boat
captain Scott Williams. At the site, Merrifield took the six
uncertified divers down to the bottom first, leaving Susann
Lovejoy and her husband on their own.
Some time after the couple entered the water, Captain
Williams spotted Susann struggling at the surface and saw
that her weight-integrated Sherwood Avid BCD was not
holding air. Apparently she got to the stern ladder, but
Williams looked away for just a moment. When he turned
back, she was gone.
Williams grabbed a mask and jumped in the water
without fins and saw Susann Lovejoy about 10 feet down,
motionless. He returned to the boat and grabbed a scuba
rig. Susann was on the bottom in 35 ft and Williams unsuccessfully tried to inflate her BCD with the power inflator,
so he inflated his BCD and pulled her to the surface and
began CPR in the water.
Then Susann’s husband surfaced and Williams asked
him to get Merrifield. At some point during the process,
Williams released Susann Lovejoy’s BCD. Merrifield saw it
fall and testified that he tried to inflate it, without success.
When he pushed the power inflator, the air came right
out through the shoulder overpressure valve. He tried to
adjust the valve by pulling on the cord, but that didn’t
alleviate the problem. So he tied the BCD off to the
mooring buoy and surfaced, learned of the emergency,
and returned to the other divers to bring them back to
the boat.
An expert witness, a scuba instructor who manages
Hanauma Bay Nature Park, criticized AquaZone for
not having another person in the water to supervise the
two groups of divers. Although AquaZone was following
PADI’s maximum ratio of one instructor per eight openwater
divers or students, Patrick McTernan, a partner in
the Honolulu law firm that represented the plaintiffs, told
Undercurrent that in his firm’s experience, “Most if not all
of our diving death cases have involved instructors bringing
out students or resort dive customers using the maximum
instructor-student/customer ratio allowed by PADI.
Experience has shown time and again that this is too large
a number of inexperienced people for a single instructor
to monitor safely. As a result, someone dies.” In fact, he
said, the bulk of fatal cases his firm has handled involved
middle-aged Japanese women enrolled in resort courses.
Plaintiffs pointed out that the boat’s U.S. Coast Guard
Certificate of Inspection required it to be manned by
both a master and a deckhand. When Merrifield went
in the water, he left Williams alone on deck. The family
alleged that it was unreasonable of Williams, once he was
aware that Susann Lovejoy was having problems, to take
his eyes off her, even for a moment. A hyperbaric medicine
physician testified that if Williams had gotten Susann
Lovejoy out of the water immediately to perform CPR, she
probably would have survived.
For these and other reasons, the plaintiffs claimed that
AquaZone’s negligence contributed to Susann Lovejoy’s
death.
PKS and Sherwood Scuba were also accused of negligence,
for producing a defective product. The Avid BCD
had been recalled in May 2001 because the overpressure
valve could stick open, presenting a drowning hazard.
Consumers were told to stop using the BCDs and return
them for a free replacement. Lovejoy bought her Avid
after they were recalled, but an expert witness testified
that it had virtually the same defect.
The defendants questioned whether Lovejoy died
of drowning or cardiac arrhythmia, a tough theory to
prove, since everyone who drowns suffers an arrhythmia.
However, with a true arrhythmia, death is virtually instantaneous,
so the BCD keeping Lovejoy on the surface probably
wouldn’t have helped her survive nor would immediate
CPR or closer supervision.
The case was hotly contested in pretrial proceedings,
but the defendants agreed to settle. Had Hawaiian law
not invalidated the PADI waiver for negligence, gross negligence,
or wanton act or omission of the owner or operator,”
settlement would have been far more difficult. In
the next issue, we’ll look more deeply into the waiver, the
bane of sport divers, and its validity
– Larry Clinton, Jr.