In last month’s issue we covered the common provisions in
a dive release and its effectiveness in protecting the dive operator
from negligence claims. This concluding portion of my
dive release article discusses some other dive release provisions
which protect dive operators, and a few provisions which courts
in the U.S. usually will not enforce.
If the Release Doesn’t Get You, Other Provisions May
Some releases contain a “choice of forum” clause and a
“choice of laws clause” (e.g., Peter Hughes’ and Mike Ball’s
online releases contain both). The “choice of forum” clause
(such as in Hughes’ releases, which sends litigants to the courts
in places such as Indonesia, the Maldives and Belize) will, if
enforced, result in a U.S. court dismissing the lawsuit and leaving
the injured diver or his heirs to journey to the designated
court - often one distant and/or foreign. The prospect of finding
a foreign attorney who can communicate in English, is trustworthy
and will charge a reasonable legal fee, will discourage
most litigants from pursuing their claims (note that most countries
don’t allow the contingency fee arrangement, which fuels
almost all U.S. personal injury/wrongful death suits).
Courts within the U.S. will generally enforce a release’s
“forum selection” clause so long as it is fair to the suing party.
Thus, if the designated forum is where the dive accident
occurred, and the chosen court offers the diver some chance of
litigating his claim, the court in which the diver chooses to sue
will dismiss the case and leave him to refile his case in the designated
court. A forum selection clause is useful to an operator
who does enough business in, or has sufficient contacts with, a
state within the U.S. to give that state’s local or federal courts
power (jurisdiction) over the operators. Such an operator, if he
inserts a “forum selection” clause in his release, can force the
plaintiffs to sue in a court that the operator thinks is more convenient
and friendly to himself. Thus, a New York state court
dismissed a New York resident’s lawsuit arising out of a dive
injury in Bonaire, leaving the diver to sue under the release’s
forum selection clause in a Bonaire court. The injury occurred
where the forum selection court was located and where most of
the witnesses resided.
Courts likewise will usually enforce a “choice of laws”
clause if: 1) the chosen state’s or foreign country’s laws have a substantial relationship to the parties or their transaction,
or have some other reasonable basis; 2) the law chosen is not
contrary to some fundamental policy of a state with a greater
interest in the matter’s determination than the chosen state or
foreign country; and 3) the applicable law would be that of the
state with the greater interest absent the choice-of-laws clause.
Another speed bump a diver may encounter on his trip
to court is a “time to sue” clause. Dive releases occasionally
provide that the injured diver or his heirs must file suit within
a certain time (e.g., Peter Hughes’ and the Aggressor Fleet’s
releases specify one year). These time-to-sue provisions are
usually shorter than what the otherwise applicable statute of limitations provides (e.g., California’s and Hawaii’s statutes
allow two years for a personal injury and wrongful death suit
based on negligence, New York two for wrongful death, three
for personal injury; if maritime law applies, three years for
either claim).
If enforced, time-to-sue clauses give the dive operator
some certainty on when he and his insurer can close the
books on a potential claim. A choice -of-laws clause won’t
necessarily provide such certainty, since a court may decide
the chosen law does not extend to when a suit must be filed.
Courts generally will enforce a time-to-sue provision
shorter than the applicable statute of limitations period so
long as the provision violates no statute and is reasonable.
“Reasonable” basically means giving the plaintiff sufficient
time to investigate his claim and to file suit. Note that a
federal statute prohibits a “time for suit” clause less than one
year for certain seagoing vessels (and a companion statute
prohibits a release of liability for negligence). But this statute
will not affect most dive boats since the statute does not
apply to vessels leaving and returning to the same port and is
aimed at cruise liners.
When a Dive Release Provision Won’t Fly
A dive release may not bar liability for gross negligence,
willful misconduct or violation of law. While it is the rare
dive release that explicitly states it releases “gross negligence”
(versus just “negligence”), at least one reported case
held that a PADI release’s reference to “negligence” protected
the defendant dive instructors and PADI International
against a claim of gross negligence. However, a recent
California Supreme Court decision may well end any chance
a dive operator will ever again escape liability through a
release if guilty of gross negligence.
In July 2007, the California Supreme Court issued City of
Santa Barbara v. Superior Court (available online). It involved
a wrongful death suit by the parents of a developmentally
disabled 14-year-old girl who drowned in a city swimming
pool. The issue before the court was whether the city’s
release extended beyond ordinary negligence (failure to use
the same care as a reasonable person would under similar
circumstances) to include gross negligence (the lack of even
scant care). In an exhaustive analysis, the court found that
most U.S. courts will not extend a release - however worded
- to cover gross negligence. It refused to extend the City of
Santa Barbara’s release to gross negligence, fearing a contrary
ruling would lessen the incentive to safely operate recreational
activities. For the same reason, courts will not enforce releases
of more aggravated misconduct, like willful negligence (conduct
so unreasonable and dangerous that the foreseeable harm is
highly probable) and violations of law.
Courts outside California likely will be influenced by the
City of Santa Barbara opinion given the respect generally
accorded California’s Supreme Court in shaping tort law. It
remains an open question whether this opinion will make it more difficult for a dive operator or other recreational activity
provider to win summary judgment since – as the opinion itself
concedes – it is generally a question of fact whether the conduct
in question constitutes ordinary versus gross negligence.
It is also worth mentioning here the use of a “severability”
clause. Where a release contains an invalid provision, there is
a risk that this provision will infect the rest of the release, making
the entire release invalid. To help avoid this risk, releases
often contain a clause along the lines of “If any provision of this
Release is held invalid, it is agreed the remaining terms shall
remain in full force and effect.” A severability provision indicates
that the parties to a release have agreed that a court may
if it chooses cut out an illegal provision (e.g., release of liability
for willful misconduct, gross negligence or violation of law) and
enforce the release’s remaining provisions.
A release will not extend to liability stemming from a defective
product. Dive shops and dive operators that sell or lease
dive equipment are considered in the product’s chain of distribution.
That generally makes them potentially liable on a product
liability claim along with the manufacturer and distributor
of a defective diving-specific product. Thus, a dive release will
occasionally list product liability as one of the released claims.
U.S. courts will not extend a recreational activity release to
a product liability claim stemming from an injury or a defective
product. The reason is public policy - the manufacturer and
downstream distributors are better situated than the consumer
to recognize and remedy the defect as well as pay for any resulting
harm. Luckily, dive product defects are rare.
Minors Get a Free Pass
A majority of U.S. courts will not enforce a release of a
minor’s claim, regardless if the parent signs the release on the
minor’s behalf. (California and a few other states will enforce it.)
However, despite this majority rule, that same form will release
that parent’s claims based on the child’s injuries, at least where
it is clear the parent has signed the release on his own behalf,
not just on the minor’s. Parents sometimes join in the minor’s
suit, claiming reimbursement for medical expenses they paid
on the minor’s behalf, damages for the value of any services the
minor performed and - in those states allowing this - damages
for loss of the child’s companionship.
Diver, It All Comes Down to You
As Michael Ange observes in his book Diver Down, the
majority of dive accidents are due to diver error. Yes, occasionally
dive operators may play a role in a dive mishap, but it
rarely stems from gross negligence, violations of law or product
defects. Most dive lawsuits boil down to a claim of ordinary
negligence. It is just such claims which dive releases are geared
to extinguish. All the more reason then why divers need to take
responsibility for their own safety, for there is rarely a pot of
gold at the end of the litigational rainbow.
Larry Schnabel is a member of the California State Bar and is Of Counsel to
the law firm Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith LLP, headquartered in Los
Angeles. He is also a NAUI certified divemaster.