Check the first paragraph of this story about diving the
Sea Hunter, and you’ll see our writer’s description of three
lawyers who had problems with the dive release but went on
the trip after writing a statement that they were signing it
under protest. So we wondered, is there any value to doing
that? We asked Undercurrent contributor Lawrence Schnabel,
a member of the California State Bar, counsel to the Los
Angeles-based law firm Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith
and a certified divemaster, what you should do if you were in
these people’s fins. Here’s his take:
First, I obtained the current Sea Hunter release. It indeed
releases various entities from gross as well as ordinary negligence.
It does not contain a choice of laws or forum clause.
This is important because if a diver were to sue Sea Hunter entities in the U.S., it is less likely the court would use Costa
Rican law, or rule the suit needed to be filed for convenience
purposes in Costa Rica. (Note: read more about these clauses
in Schnabel’s story “Divers, Sign Your Life Away” in our
August 2008 issue). If a suit is brought in the U.S., however,
keep in mind the court must be able to assert “personal jurisdiction”
over the person or entity sued, which can be a problem
for a person bringing suit where the person or entity
sued is located outside the U.S..
Is there any value to writing a protest? In my opinion,
there is little, if any, legal value to this, under general principles
of contract law. By signing the release and then going
on the dive trip, a court or jury would probably find that the
diver accepted the contract. His “protest” would be viewed
as a “grumbling acceptance” of the contract, or his going on
the trip would be considered acceptance of the contract by
conduct. I see the contract here as the diver’s agreement to
pay, sign the release and obey the boat rules while aboard.
The dive operator, in turn, agrees to supply transport, diving,
food and accommodations. Once the diver has completed his
trip, he’d have a difficult time trying to cancel (rescind) the
contract and seek his money back. This is because his acceptance
of the benefits by completing the trip would be seen as
affirming the contract rather than rescinding it.
So what options do you have if confronted with an unpalatable
release? You can almost always view a copy of the
release before leaving home. It should be on the operator’s Web site, or they should send you it on request ( I called Sea
Hunter’s 1-800 number and its Florida office e-mailed it to me
the same day, no questions asked). The first option is to sign
it. If the indigestible term is void by law (as is a release of
gross negligence in almost every U.S. state), then you can sue
the operator post-trip if you’ve been injured by the operator’s
gross negligence. Keep in mind a dive release’s purpose
is not to release liability for “inherent risks,” although a
release’s wording will often mention that term. A dive operator
needs no release for it since by definition an inherent
risk is one innate to diving and can’t be minimized by the
operator’s due care. So the operator, absent a few peculiar situations,
isn’t liable for injuries caused by such risks because
they occur without negligence on the operator’s part. A
recreational release is intended to release the operator from
simple negligence (versus gross negligence or willful/wanton
misconduct), and this is what most states’ laws allow the dive
release to accomplish.
Your second option is to seek a modification to the
release. This would require the operator to agree to strike
the objectionable clause. Both the diver and the operator
should initial it so there is less chance of a later conflict over
who agreed to what. But the operator will usually refuse to
do this, feeling any release form that is printed must be valid
and enforceable.
The third option is to refuse to sign the release, go home
and then - - after the operator refuses to refund his money
- - sue the operator under a claim of conversion or restitution.
The legal argument would be that no contract ever arose
because to accept the contract, the diver would have had
to have signed the release. This is a risky option because it
forces you to either hire an attorney (whose hourly fee will
soon cost more than you can ever expect to recover) or sue in
Small Claims court, with the headache of trying to serve the
complaint on an out-of-state or country operator, establishing
the court’s jurisdiction over the operator, then trying to collect
on any judgment you’re lucky enough to obtain.
So unless you can get the release modified, with assent
by the operator, the wisest course is to sign, dive and know
that if you are injured, at least most U.S. state courts won’t
enforce a gross negligence provision or other invalid clause.