OK, im done being butt-hurt. I will repsond in turn to your posts (since im a man on an island here). I feel like im taking crazy pills!
JHH60 wrote:there's a reason we had to pay dive professional insurance all those years.
I'm with ya. But the professional diver insurance we pay for covers legal bills. Not a verdict guarantee. In this case, it was PADI's lawyers and they lost. Only the cost of the legal bills were picked up by the insurance.
JHH60 wrote: As a DM you should know that's a cardinal sin.
I know. The DM and the Captain fucked up royally, but this diver ditched his buddy (rule #1) and went off by himself. Seen the type too often. Often see it in the mountains (called summit fever).
1000Pks wrote:There's plenty of negligence in outdoor venues, and I'm glad he won. I do not dive, but it seems a victory for all of us who ever partake in professional guiding and suffer damage due to such reasons.
So are you saying, you as a guide, are glad the client sued the guide and won? Or are you saying that you have been negligent as a guide in the past and now it's good that years of sin will now be vindicated? What are you saying really? It sounds like you are for the guides, but also for the guilty verdict? How can that be?
mrchad9 wrote:Fletch, it has always been the case that it is up to the jury to decide what impact the liability waiver does or doesn't have, how far reaching it is.
I agree, but this is the first time (at least in the Scuba industry) where a waiver DIDNT hold up. Im not disagreeing with the verdict. There were lots of people that fucked up, all I'm saying is that now, going forward, every case (whether warranted or not) will use this verdict as a foundation to build from.
FortMental wrote:Jim Bridwell was guiding in the Tetons back in early 90s (please confirm date) when one of his clients, when on the Grand Teton, took his harness off to take a piss. He fell. He died. Bridwell was sued. Why? To get at the Deep Pockets, which was then Black Diamond, which made the victims harness. This, incidentally, was why Patagonia was spun from Black Diamond, to shelter it from liabilities like this. The upshot? Black Diamond is one of the healthiest, most profitable gear manufacturers currently out there. The scuba industry is about 20 years behind the times.
The fact that a lawsuit arising from a product produced by the guide (?) malfunctioning promted a full discharge of a company? Sounds like it was user error (i.e. the user took off the harness to pee). And so Patagonia doesn't make harnesses anymore because they don't want the liability? But BD does, because they do? And because of this, BD is profitable? Im confused again...
mrchad9 wrote:Oh good grief!
I know. I was being emotional. I appologize.