In November of 1994, plaintiff enrolled in a two day motorcycle safety program conducted at Lenoir Community College; defendant was the instructor for the program. As a condition of receiving instruction, plaintiff was required to sign a waiver form stating that she
[h]ereby releasеs, waives, discharges, and covenants not to sue the North Carolina Motorcycle Safety Program . . . the promoters, other participants, operators, officials, any persons in a restricted area . . . whether caused by the negligence of the releаsees or otherwise while the undersigned is . . . participating in the course ....
*636 During the second day of the program, in which the participants rode motorcycles in a parking lot, defendant assigned plaintiff a motorcycle which, according to plaintiffs allegations, defendant knew had given another participant problems due to difficulties with the throttle. The throttle malfunctioned while plaintiff was riding the motorcycle, causing it to crash, injuring plaintiff’s leg and knee. Plaintiff brought this action for damages, alleging defendant’s negligence caused hеr injuries. Defendant answered, denying negligence, alleging plaintiff’s contributory negligence, and asserting the waiver and release as a bar to plaintiff’s recovery. Defendant’s subsequent motion for summary judgment was granted and plaintiff appeals.
Plaintiff contends the trial cоurt erred in granting summary judgment, arguing that the waiver and release was void as against public policy and that there were issues of material fact concerning defendant’s negligence. We agree. Accordingly, we reverse the order dismissing plaintiff’s claim.
Summary judgment is properly granted “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that any party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” N.C.R. Civ. P. 56(c);
Toole v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
In North Carolina “[Releases which exculpate persons from liability for negligence are not favored by the law.”
Johnson v. Dunlap,
Plaintiff contends the public policy exception to the general validity of exculpatory contracts appliеs in this case. “While recognizing the right to contract against liability, our courts have stated ‘that a party cannot protect himself by contracting] against liability for negligence in the performance of a duty of public service, or where a public duty is owed, or publiс interest is involved.’ ”
Alston v. Monk,
In the present case, defendant’s motorcycle safety training program evokes the same, if not greater, important level of public interest as cosmetology. Imрortant public safety interests are present both in the instruction and use of motorcycles because both those receiving instruction in the proper use of motorcycles and the general traveling population are at risk from negligent training in the use of motоrcycles. Trainees, unfamiliar with motorcycles, are particularly vulnerable to hazards associated with improper or negligent training.
Even so, defendant argues the public policy exception does not apply because the motorcycle sаfety training program is more like a sporting event than a public service. Defendant relies on
Bertotti v. Charlotte Motor Speedway, Inc.,
*638 Significantly, the Johnson court did not question that such pre-race releases are enforceable. The court did not characterize the release as an adhesion contract involving unequal bargaining power and did not hold that such contracts involved a public interest. Thus, Johnson strongly implies that when a party has the opportunity to see and read a pre-race exculpatory contract, the agreement is enforceable in North Carolina.
Id. at 567.
We disagree with defendant’s characterization of the public interests in this case. There is an enormous difference between the situation of professional race car drivers racing around a course designed for that sport, and an inexperienсed member of the public seeking training in the safe use of a motorcycle on the public highway. The public interest in minimizing the risks associated with motorcycle use have been recognized in case law and regulated by statute. When upholding the statute requiring safety helmets оn motorcycles, G.S. § 20-140.2(b) (now G.S. § 20-140.4), this Court has stated that:
Death on the highway can no longer be considered as a personal and individual tragedy alone. The mounting carnage has long since reached proportions of a public disaster. Legislation reasonably designеd to reduce the toll may for that reason alone be sufficiently imbued with the public interests to meet the constitutional test required for a valid exercise of the State’s police power. However, it is not necessary to invoke so broad a premise in order to find the statute here attacked to be constitutional.
State v. Anderson,
Despite legislative and judicial statements of public policy concerning motorcycle training and use, defendant still contends the
*639
public policy exception does not apply to this case. Defendant argues that even though motorcycle use is heavily regulated in general, this particular training course was not regulated, and so the circumstances do not infringe upon the public interest. According to his argument, two cases,
Gas House, Inc. v. Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Co.,
Gibbs
conсerned an indemnity agreement whereby a contractor agreed to indemnify the power company for any injuries to contractor’s employees not covered by Workers’ Compensation laws. The Court found two factors significant when holding that public poliсy does not bar the enforcement of an otherwise valid indemnification agreement. First, the power company’s relation to the contractor “was not in the regular course of its business of furnishing electric current to the public and not in the performance оf a duty of public service.”
Id.
at 467,
There is a distinction between contracts whereby one seeks to wholly exempt himsеlf from liability for the consequences of his negligent acts, and contracts of indemnity against liability imposed for the consequences of his negligent acts. The contract in the instant case is of the latter class and is more favored in law.
Gibbs,
*640
Both
Gibbs
and
Gas House
were also concerned with the threat to the public posed by a utility’s superior bargaining power, not public safety; therefore, the contracts outside the scope of public service do not implicate the • same public interests.
Gas House
involved an action by a yellow pages advertiser against a telephone company to recover damages because of improper classification of advertisement.
Gas House
at 179,
[t]he inequality of bargaining power between the telephone company and the businessman desiring to advertise in the yellow pages of the directory is more apparent than real. It is not different from that which exists in any other case in which a potential sellеr is the only supplier of the particular article or service desired. There are many other modes of advertising to which the businessman may turn if the contract offered him by the telephone company is not attractive.
Gas House
at 184,
In this case, we are faced with a different public interest, i.e., public safety as opposed to inequality of bargaining power, and a complete release from liability. Having entered into the business of instructing the public in motorcycle safety, the defendant cannot, by contract, dispense with the duty to instruct with rеasonable safety.
See cf., Jordan v. Eastern Transit & Storage Co.,
Because plaintiff’s claim is not barred by the purported waiver, and the рleadings and other materials before the trial court raise genuine questions of material fact with respect to negligence issues, summary judgment was inappropriate.
Lamb v. Wedgewood South Corp.,
Reversed and remanded.
