Case Review PRT
Case Review PRT
Case Review PRT
At 7 AM on the 31st the decision was made to close the ski area as well
as the road into the resort. By 3:30 in the afternoon only 7 people
remained in the Summit Building, the hub of mountain operations,
and 4 were in the parking lot; one in a travel trailer, and three, David
Hahn, Dr. LeRoy Nelson and his daughter of 11, Laura Nelson who were
walking toward the day lodge from the condominiums they were
staying in. By 3:45 then Mountain Manager and Snow Safety Director
Several lawsuits were filed, but only one went to trial. The jury ruled in
favor of Alpine Meadows Ski Corporation.
The Lawsuit
The plaintiff brought forth the argument that the Doctrine of Strict
Liability should apply to the conduct of defendant Alpine Meadows.
The questions for ultimate determination are whether the avalanche
In order to prove that Alpine Meadows avalanche control did fall under
the state of Californias strict liability clause the prosecution brought
forth evidence from many statute defining cases such as Luthringer v.
Moore. In Luthringer hydrocyanic acid fumigation was found to have
affected an adjoining property. The appellate court upheld the lower
courts decision that since the gas was not in everyday use by average
citizens and that it was indeed dangerous, it fell under strict liability.
"The important factor is that certain activities under certain
conditions(SIC) may be so hazardous to the public generally, and of
such relative infrequent occurrence, that it may well call for strict
Two expert witnesses also testified in this case, one for either side.
Avalanche pioneer Dr. Ed LaChapelle testified that due to advancement
of avalanche control the risk of avalanches could be completely
reduced. Art Mears argued for the defense that there was no
reasonable way to completely eliminate avalanche risk. Since the
storm cycle continued after the mornings control work, and snow fell at
an additional 1.3 inches an hour for the following five and a half hours,
that the avalanche was a natural release avalanche and not a postcontrol or hang-fire avalanche.
Decision
The court found in favor of the defenses motion for non-suit and the
case was dismissed.
Conclusion
The Alpine Meadows Avalanche was the most severe in-bounds
avalanche the ski industry has ever seen in America. Seven people
were killed including the general manager. Though only Hahn and
Nelson went to trial, several other cases were settled outside of court.
As a result there was a general tightening of avalanche procedure in
the industry the following years. From the end of 1982 up until the mid
to late 90s, no one else was killed by an avalanche within a ski resort.
Bibliography
Hahn and Nelson v. Alpine Meadows Ski Corporation, Cal.
Luthringer v. Moore, 31 Cal.2d 489 190 P.2d 1
Sutliff v. Sweetwater Water Co., (1920) 182 Cal. 24
Richard Penniman, (personal communication, June 2, 2012)
Stuart Thompson, (personal communication, June 2nd and 3rd, 2012)