Lead Opinion
On cross-motions for summary judgment, the trial court ruled that a release printed on the back of a ski-lift ticket barred plaintiffs wrongful death action. The court accordingly granted defendant’s motion, denied plaintiffs motion, and entered judgment for defendant. We reverse and remand.
On January 28,1996, William Jameson went skiing at Mt. Hood Meadows with his brother and two friends. They bought day passes at the lift ticket booth. A day pass is relatively small, approximately three and a quarter by four inches in size. One side of the pass permits the holder to ski at Mt. Hood Meadows for a portion of the day. There is a burgundy border at the bottom of the pass. Printed within the border is a direction to the purchaser to read the “contract of release and indemnification agreement, terms and conditions, and assumption of risk notices” on the other side of the pass.
The other side of the pass provides:
“Skiing Is a Hazardous Sport
“The purchaser or user of this ticket accepts and assumes the inherent risks of skiing including man-made objects, changing conditions, natural obstacles, weather, and other skiers. (ORS 30.970-30.990)
“All Injuries Must Be Reported “to the Area Medical Clinic
“Contract of Release and “Indemnification Agreement
“In consideration flor lift access, the holder of this lift ticket agrees to [re]lease and indemnify Mt. Hood Meadows from any claims for personal injury and loss of/or damage to property arising in connection with or resulting from the use of this ticket or the area facilities.
“Terms and Conditions
“Mt. Hood Meadows is not responsible for loss or theft of this ticket. Good date of valuation only. Warning: This ticket may be removed for fast, discourteous, or reckless*275 skiing and for failure to obey posted closures.
Non-Transferable, non-refundable, void if detached.”1
Two signs at the ski resort called attention to the terms printed on the back of the pass. First, Mt. Hood Meadows posted small signs next to the ticket windows where day passes are sold. Those signs state “Additional terms stated on lift ticket” and describe how to attach the ticket. Second, larger signs are posted on the ticket booths and in the rest rooms. Those signs are headed by the word “IMPORTANT” in red, capital letters. They then divide into three parts. The first part states in smaller letters: “Please read the contract of release on your lift ticket. You are responsible for your own safety (ORS 30.970).” (Emphasis in original.) The second part sets out the “Skier’s Responsibility Code,” which consumes most of the sign. The last part of the sign states: “Please report any injury to the ski area operator immediately. Failure to notify the ski area operator by certified mail within 180 days of discovery of the injury may bar a claim for injuries (ORS 30.980).”
While Jameson was skiing at Mt. Hood Meadows, he suffered injuries that allegedly led to his death. Jameson’s sister brought a wrongful death action against Mt. Hood Meadows on behalf of her brother’s estate claiming that Mt. Hood’s negligence had caused his death. More specifically, the complaint alleges that Jameson’s death was the result of Mt. Hood Meadows’ negligent failure to warn skiers of a hazard “when it was reasonably expected that skiers would be recreating in this area.”
On appeal, plaintiff assigns error to both the ruling granting defendant’s summary judgment motion and the ruling denying her motion for partial summary judgment. She raises three issues in support of both assignments of error: (1) that no contract of release was formed; (2) that even if a contract were formed, it was contrary to public policy; and (3) that the terms of the release are ambiguous. Because we agree that the release is ambiguous, we do not reach the first two issues plaintiff raises.
The governing principles are well-established. See Estey v. MacKenzie Engineering Inc.,
In Estey, a home purchaser entered into an inspection contract with an engineering company. One section in their contract provided that “[t]he liability of [the engineering company] and the liability of its employees are limited to the Contract Sum.”
Similarly, in Southern Pac. Co. v. Layman,
In this case, the release on the back of the lift ticket provides that the “holder of this lift ticket agrees to release and indemnify Mt. Hood Meadows from any claims for personal injury * * * arising * * * from the use of this ticket.” The release does not specify whether the phrase “any claims for personal injury” includes claims for personal injury arising from Mt. Hood Meadows’ negligence or whether it is limited to claims for personal injuries arising from other causes. Compare Estey,
First, immediately before the language of the release on which Mt. Hood Meadows relies, it is stated on the ticket that the “user of this ticket accepts and assumes the inherent risks of skiing including man-made objects, changing conditions, natural obstacles, weather, and other skiers.” Additionally, the user is told that “all injuries must be reported to the area medical clinic.”
That interpretation would be consistent with ORS 30.970 to ORS 30.990, which are cited on the ticket. Those
A second factor supports that conclusion. Mt. Hood Meadows relies on the large signs posted on the ticket booths and in the rest rooms to put its guests on notice that they should “read the contract of release on [their] lift ticket[s].” Those same signs, however, also ask guests to “report any injury to the ski area operator immediately” and provide that “[flailure to notify the ski area operator by certified mail within 180 days of discovery of the injury may bar a claim for injuries (ORS 30.980).” The last sentence implies that Mt. Hood’s guests retain some claims for their injuries, a proposition that is at odds with the notion that the release bars all claims for personal injuries whatever their cause. Moreover, the reference to ORS 30.980 suggests that the claims guests retain are claims arising from the ski operator’s own negligence. See Jessup,
Finally, it is difficult to see a meaningful distinction between this case and Layman. Without a specific reference to negligence in the release, we can no more assume that a skier would understand that he or she was giving up a claim for personal injuries arising from Mt. Hood’s negligence in return for a day’s skiing than the Layman court was willing to assume that a landowner understood that it was assuming the consequences of the railroad’s negligence in return for
The remaining issue is whether plaintiffs cross-motion for partial summary judgment should have been granted. As noted above, plaintiff moved for partial summary judgment claiming that the release could not be enforced, and she has assigned error on appeal to the ruling denying her motion. As a general rule, if a contract term is ambiguous, its meaning becomes a question for the factfinder — a proposition that would ordinarily preclude summary judgment for either party. See Pacific First Bank v. New Morgan Park Corp.,
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
We have not attempted to reproduce the type size and capitalization of the original release. Our holding turns on whether the release is ambiguous; on that point, the wording not the type size matters.
Because neither party moved for summary judgment on the underlying question of negligence, we quote the allegations in the complaint solely to put the issues raised on appeal in context. We express no opinion on the merits of plaintiffs negligence claim.
In Cook v. Southern Pac. Transp. Co.,
This language is relevant to the meaning of the release for two reasons. First, defendant argues that the release is one of the terms of the contract that was formed when Jameson used the ski-lift ticket. If defendant is correct, it follows that the other portions of that contract, such as the notice that precedes the release on the back of the ticket, bear on the release’s meaning. See Yogman v. Parrott,
We recognize that ORS 30.990 requires ski area operators to notify skiers of those risks, and Mt. Hood Meadows may simply have been complying with that statute when it printed the notice on the back of its lift ticket. The presence of that notice, however, created an ambiguity that required greater specificity in the terms of the release.
Estey’s reasoning on this issue may be subject to two different interpretations. Its quotation from Transamerica Ins. Co. supports the interpretation noted above: When a party seeks to avoid liability for its own negligence, any ambiguity in the release will be interpreted against the drafter. Alternatively, Estey could be read for the proposition that any release that does not “clearly and unequivocally” reflect an intent to release one party from the consequences of its own negligence is simply ineffective regardless of who drafted it. Because Mt. Hood Meadows drafted the release in this case, both rationales lead to the same conclusion and we need not decide which rationale underlies Estey’s holding.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I agree with the majority’s conclusion that the contractual provision that purportedly released all claims against defendant for injuries sustained by Jameson is ambiguous and, as a consequence, inapplicable to plaintiffs claim. I write separately to highlight an issue about the enforceability of the provision that the parties raised but the majority does not reach.
In Illingworth v. Bushong,
That approach appears to be particularly appropriate in resolving the common-law issue whether a provision in a consumer contract that limits liability for personal injuries is enforceable. The determination whether such a provision is enforceable often turns on whether its enforcement would offend public policy. See, e.g., Harmon v. Mt. Hood Meadows, Ltd.,
“[cjonsequential damages may be limited or excluded [in contracts for the sale of goods] unless the limitation or exclusion is unconscionable. Limitation of consequential damages for injury to the person in the case of consumer goods is prima facie unconscionable but limitation of damages where the loss is commercial is not.”
ORS 72.7190(3). Under Illingworth, the policy embodied in ORS 72.7190(3) should apply to consumer contracts that are not subject to the UCC, such as the contract at issue here.
The statutes enacted by the legislature on the liability of ski area operators for injuries caused by the inherent risks of skiing, ORS 30.970 to ORS 30.990, do not undercut the analysis. They insulate ski area operators from liability for inherent risks but not from liability for their own wrongful conduct. Hence, they do not raise any problem with the application of the Illingworth analysis to exculpatory provisions in contracts between ski area operators and people who use their facilities.
