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Gross v. Sweet

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Nov 29, 1979
49 N.Y.2d 102 (N.Y. 1979)

Summary

holding that “contracts intended to exculpate a party from the consequences of his own negligence,” though frowned upon and subject to close judicial scrutiny, “are enforceable” provided that the contracts do not indemnify for intentional misconduct or gross negligence

Summary of this case from Long v. Fairbank Farms Reconstruction Corp.

Opinion

Argued November 12, 1979

Decided November 29, 1979

Appeal from the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court in the Third Judicial Department, ROGER J. MINER, J.

Michael Davidoff and John S. McBride for appellants.

Philip Korn for respondent.



We hold that, in the circumstances of this case, a release signed by the plaintiff as a precondition for his enrollment in defendant's parachute jumping course does not bar him from suing for personal injuries he allegedly incurred as a result of defendant's negligence.

Plaintiff Bruce Gross, wishing to learn how to parachute, enrolled in the Stormville Parachute Center Training School, a facility owned and operated by the defendant William Sweet for the purpose of offering instruction in the sport. The ensuing events are essentially undisputed. As a prerequisite for admission into the course, Gross had to pay a fee and sign a form entitled "Responsibility Release". He was then given the standard introductory lesson, which consisted of approximately one hour of on-land training, including oral instruction as well as several jumps off a two and a half foot table. Plaintiff then was equipped with a parachute and flown to an altitude of 2,800 feet for his first practice jump. Upon coming in contact with the ground on his descent, plaintiff suffered serious personal injuries.

The suit is grounded on negligence, breach of warranty and gross negligence. In the main, plaintiff claims that defendant failed to provide adequate training and safe equipment, violated certain rules and procedures promulgated by the Federal Aviation Administration governing the conduct of parachute jumping schools and failed to warn him sufficiently of the attendant dangers.

Defendant pleaded the release plaintiff had signed and moved for summary judgment, contending that the terms of the release exculpated the defendant from any liability. Plaintiff, in turn, cross-moved to strike this affirmative defense contending, primarily, that the terms of the release did not specifically bar a suit for personal injuries negligently caused by the defendant. He also urged that, as a matter of policy, the release should not be enforceable as between a student and his teacher, a relationship in which one of the parties holds himself out as qualified and responsible to provide training in a skill and the other party relies on this expertise, particularly in the context of an activity in which the degree of training necessary for safe participation is much greater than might be apparent to a novice. Alternatively, plaintiff argues that the release in any event does not excuse defendant's violation of the Federal Aviation Administration's regulations governing parachute jumping schools and student parachutists, one of which allegedly required that a medical certificate be furnished as a prerequisite to enrollment in a parachute jumping course. Defendant's failure to request one, plaintiff asserts, bore critically on his situation because, despite his having informed defendant that several years earlier an orthopedic pin had been inserted in his leg, he was accepted as a student though, as the school must have known, landing in a parachute puts special stress on one's legs.

However, Special Term granted defendant's motion, denied plaintiff's cross motion and dismissed the complaint. On plaintiff's appeal from that order, a divided Appellate Division reversed, reinstated the complaint and granted plaintiff's motion to dismiss the affirmative defense. The appeal is now before us on a certified question: "Was the order of this Court, which reinstated the complaint and granted plaintiffs motion to dismiss the affirmative defense of release, correct as a matter of law?" Our answer is that it was.

We begin with the proposition, too well settled to invoke any dispute, that the law frowns upon contracts intended to exculpate a party from the consequences of his own negligence and though, with certain exceptions, they are enforceable, such agreements are subject to close judicial scrutiny (Van Dyke Prods. v Eastman Kodak Co., 12 N.Y.2d 301, 304; 4 Williston, Contracts [3d Jaeger ed], § 602A, pp 326, 332). To the extent that agreements purport to grant exemption for liability for willful or grossly negligent acts they have been viewed as wholly void (see Restatement, Contracts, § 575; 15 Williston, Contracts [3d Jaeger ed], § 1750A, p 141; New York Cent. R.R. Co. v Mohney, 252 U.S. 152; cf. Ciofalo v Vic Tanney Gyms, 10 N.Y.2d 294, 297). And so, here, so much of plaintiffs complaint as contains allegations that defendant was grossly negligent, may not be barred by the release in any event. But we need not explore further this possibility for we conclude the complaint in its entirety withstands the exculpatory agreement.

Nor need we consider plaintiff's request that we ignore the release on the grounds that the special relationship of the parties and the public interest involved forbids its enforcement. While we have, for example, had occasion to invalidate such provisions when they were contained in the contract between a passenger and a common carrier (Conklin v Canadian-Colonial Airways, 266 N.Y. 244), or in a contract between a customer and a public utility under a duty to furnish telephone service (Emery v Rochester Tel. Corp., 156 Misc. 562, affd 246 App. Div. 787) or when imposed by an employer as a condition of employment (Johnston v Fargo, 184 N.Y. 379), the circumstances here do not fit within any of these relationships. And, though we note that a recent statute renders void agreements purporting to exempt from liability for negligence those engaged in a variety of businesses that serve the public (e.g., landlords [General Obligations Law, § 5-321]; caterers [§ 5-322]; building service or maintenance contractors [§ 5-323]; those who maintain garages or parking garages [§ 5-325]; or pools, gymnasiums or places of public amusement or recreation [§ 5-326]), defendant's occupation does not fall within any of these classes either. We also decline, at this point, plaintiff's invitation that we proceed further to consider what effect, if any, the alleged contravention of Federal regulations may have on the relationship of the parties or the public interest involved. Such questions need not be reached in view of our holding that the wording of the exculpatory agreement does not preclude plaintiff's suit for negligence.

As the cases make clear, the law's reluctance to enforce exculpatory provisions of this nature has resulted in the development of an exacting standard by which courts measure their validity. So, it has been repeatedly emphasized that unless the intention of the parties is expressed in unmistakable language, an exculpatory clause will not be deemed to insulate a party from liability for his own negligent acts (Van Dyke Prods. v Eastman Kodak Co., 12 N.Y.2d 301, 304, supra [must be "absolutely clear"]; Ciofalo v Vic Tanney Gyms, 10 N.Y.2d 294, 297, supra ["sufficiently clear and unequivocal language"]; Boll v Sharp Dohme, 281 App. Div. 568, 570-571, affd 307 N.Y. 646 ["clear and explicit language"]). Put another way, it must appear plainly and precisely that the "limitation of liability extends to negligence or other fault of the party attempting to shed his ordinary responsibility" (Howard v Handler Bros. Winell, 279 App. Div. 72, 75-76, affd 303 N.Y. 990).

Not only does this stringent standard require that the drafter of such an agreement make its terms unambiguous, but it mandates that the terms be understandable as well. Thus, a provision that would exempt its drafter from any liability occasioned by his fault should not compel resort to a magnifying glass and lexicon. (Rappaport v Phil Gottlieb-Sattler, Inc., 280 App. Div. 424, affd 305 N.Y. 594.) Of course, this does not imply that only simple or monosyllabic language can be used in such clauses. Rather, what the law demands is that such provisions be clear and coherent (cf. General Obligations Law, § 5-702).

By and large, if such is the intention of the parties, the fairest course is to provide explicitly that claims based on negligence are included (see Ciofalo v Vic Tanney Gyms, supra, p 296 [plaintiff "agreed to assume full responsibility for any injuries which might occur to her in or about defendant's premises, `including but without limitation, any claims for personal injuries resulting from or arising out of the negligence of' the defendant"]). That does not mean that the word "negligence" must be employed for courts to give effect to an exculpatory agreement; however, words conveying a similar import must appear (see Theroux v Kedenburg Racing Assn., 50 Misc.2d 97, 99, affd 28 A.D.2d 960 [agreement provided for release of liability for any injury "regardless of how such injury * * * may arise, and regardless of who is at fault * * * and even if the loss is caused by the neglect or fault of" the defendant]).

We are, of course, cognizant of the fact that the general rule of strict judicial construction has been somewhat liberalized in its application to exoneration clauses in indemnification agreements, which are usually "negotiated at arm's length between * * * sophisticated business entities" and which can be viewed as merely "allocating the risk of liability to third parties between themselves, essentially through the employment of insurance" (Hogeland v Sibley, Lindsay Curr Co., 42 N.Y.2d 153, 158, 161; see Levine v Shell Oil Co., 28 N.Y.2d 205, 212; Liff v Consolidated Edison Co. of N.Y., 23 N.Y.2d 854). In such cases, the law, reflecting the economic realities, will recognize an agreement to relieve one party from the consequences of his negligence on the strength of a broadly worded clause framed in less precise language than would normally be required, though even then it must evince the "unmistakable intent of the parties" (Kurek v Port Chester Housing Auth., 18 N.Y.2d 450, 456).

The case before us today obviously does not fit within this exception to the strict legal standard generally employed by the courts of this State under which exculpatory provisions drawn in broad and sweeping language have not been given effect. For example, agreements to release from "any and all responsibility or liability of any nature whatsoever for any loss of property or personal injury occurring on this trip" (Kaufman v American Youth Hostels, 5 N.Y.2d 1016, modifying 6 A.D.2d 223, 228, 229) or to "waive claim for any loss to personal property, or for any personal injury while a member of [a] club" (Hertzog v Harrison Is. Shores, 21 A.D.2d 859) have not barred claims based on negligence (see Bernstein v Seacliff Beach Club, 35 Misc.2d 153). Moreover, in Boll v Sharp Dohme ( 281 App. Div. 568, affd 307 N.Y. 646, supra), we held not sufficiently unambiguous a release form in which a blood donor was required to agree that defendants were not "in any way responsible for any consequences * * * resulting from the giving of such blood or from any of the tests, examinations or procedures incident thereto", and further "release[d] and discharge[d] [defendants] from all claims and demands whatsoever * * * against them or any of them by reason of any matter relative or incident to such donation of blood". (307 N.Y., p 647.) The donor was thus allowed to sue in negligence for injuries he sustained when, on the completion of the blood donation, he fainted and fell to the floor.

With all this as background, the language of the "Responsibility Release" in the case before us, must be viewed as no more explicit than that in Boll. In its entirety, it reads: "I, the undersigned, hereby, and by these covenants, do waive any and all claims that I, my heirs, and/or assignees may have against Nathaniel Sweet, the Stormville Parachute Center, the Jumpmaster and the Pilot who shall operate the aircraft when used for the purpose of parachute jumping for any personal injuries or property damage that I may sustain or which may arise out of my learning, practicing or actually jumping from an aircraft. I also assume full responsibility for any damage that I may do or cause while participating in this sport".

Assuming that this language alerted the plaintiff to the dangers inherent in parachute jumping and that he entered into the sport with apprehension of the risks, it does not follow that he was aware of, much less intended to accept, any enhanced exposure to injury occasioned by the carelessness of the very persons on which he depended for his safety. Specifically, the release nowhere expresses any intention to exempt the defendant from liability for injury or property damages which may result from his failure to use due care either in his training methods or in his furnishing safe equipment. Thus, whether on a running reading or a careful analysis, the agreement could most reasonably be taken merely as driving home the fact that the defendant was not to bear any responsibility for injuries that ordinarily and inevitably would occur, without any fault of the defendant, to those who participate in such a physically demanding sport.

In short, instead of specifying to prospective students that they would have to abide any consequences attributable to the instructor's own carelessness, the defendant seems to have preferred the use of opaque terminology rather than suffer the possibility of lower enrollment. But, while, with exceptions not pertinent to this case, the law grudgingly accepts the proposition that men may contract away their liability for negligently caused injuries, they may do so only on the condition that their intention be expressed clearly and in "unequivocal terms" (Van Dyke Prods. v Eastman Kodak Co., 12 N.Y.2d 301, 305, supra).

Accordingly, the certified question is answered in the affirmative, and the order of the Appellate Division reversing the grant of summary judgment, reinstating the complaint and dismissing the defense based on the release should be affirmed.


I have no quarrel with the position of the majority that the release executed by plaintiff on November 1, 1975 should not be given effect to bar recovery in the event he establishes that the injuries he suffered were caused by gross negligence on the part of either or both defendants. I do dissent, however, from the majority's conclusion that the instrument is insufficient as a matter of law to relieve defendants from liability for fault short of gross misconduct on their part; this conclusion emasculates the instrument and is inconsistent with current law interpreting agreements exonerating a party from liability for his own negligence.

Despite the unlimited language of the release given by plaintiff, by which he explicitly waived "any and all claims [against the present defendants] for any personal injuries or property damage that I may sustain or which may arise out of my learning, practicing or actually jumping from an aircraft", the majority concludes that the agreement does not exonerate defendants from liability for ordinary negligence on their part. This is said to follow because, although disclaiming a requirement that the particular word "negligence" be included in the release, the majority concludes (p 108) that the instrument does not contain "words conveying a similar import" which it states must be employed by the parties.

This result would have been congenial to the prior view of exoneration agreements under which, because the law looked with disfavor on attempts of a party to avoid liability for his own fault, there was insistence that from the agreement "it must be absolutely clear that such was the understanding of the parties" (Van Dyke Prods. v Eastman Kodak Co., 12 N.Y.2d 301, 304). It fails, however, to take into account the change which was wrought by our discard of Thompson-Starrett Co. v Otis Elevator Co. ( 271 N.Y. 36), which had been the fountainhead of the requirement that a contract to indemnify a person against his own negligence must express such intention in "unequivocal terms" (271 N.Y., p 41). It is significant for present purposes that, prior to its abandonment, the Thompson-Starrett rule was applied with equal vigor to both indemnification agreements and to releases.

Thus in Kaufman v American Youth Hostels ( 5 N.Y.2d 1016) this court dismissed defendant's affirmative defense of release, citing Thompson-Starrett, Walters v Rao Elec. Equip. Co. ( 289 N.Y. 57), which had rejected a claim for indemnification, and Boll v Sharp Dohme ( 307 N.Y. 646), in which a defense of release had also been dismissed. (But see the dissenting opn of BREITEL, J., in Boll, 281 App. Div. 568, 572.) In Van Dyke Prods. v Eastman Kodak Co. ( 12 N.Y.2d 301, supra), in which we found a written notice not sufficiently unequivocal to relieve the defendant of its own negligence, our determination was predicated on Thompson-Starrett Co. which was discussed and quoted. Again, in Ciofalo v Vic Tanney Gyms ( 10 N.Y.2d 294), where we held a release sufficient to exonerate the defendant from its own negligence, we cited the Thompson-Starrett case as authority for the need for "express language to that effect" (10 N.Y.2d, p 297).

The disposition of the present appeal by the majority is wholly consistent with Thompson-Starrett and its progeny; indeed its holding is predicated on Thompson-Starrett analysis (p 107). This court, however, has long since repudiated the principle of Thompson-Starrett. In Kurek v Port Chester Housing Auth. ( 18 N.Y.2d 450) and in Liff v Consolidated Edison Co. of N.Y. ( 23 N.Y.2d 854, affg 29 A.D.2d 665) we "made substantial inroads on the Thompson-Starrett rationale" (Levine v Shell Oil Co., 28 N.Y.2d 205, 212), finding sufficiently unequivocal to create a right of indemnification against the indemnitee's own negligence, agreements that would not have passed muster under our prior decisions. In Levine we expressly announced that the Thompson-Starrett rationale "is no longer a viable statement of the law", cautioning that courts should be wary of construing such provisions "in such a manner that they become absolutely meaningless" (28 N.Y.2d, p 212). Indeed, as we only recently said in Hogeland v Sibley, Lindsay Curr Co. ( 42 N.Y.2d 153, 158-159): "A lease or other contract * * * is no longer to be construed as not intending indemnification of a party for its own negligence unless that intention is set forth in specific and `unequivocal terms' (see Thompson-Starrett Co. v Otis Elevator Co., 271 N.Y. 36, 41). Instead, in such cases we now look to the `unmistakable intent of the parties' rather than the semantic stereotypes with which an agreement may be phrased (Levine v Shell Oil Co., 28 N.Y.2d 205, 212). It suffices that the agreement between the parties connotes an `intention to indemnify [which] can be clearly implied from the language and purposes of the entire agreement.' (Margolin v New York Life Ins. Co., 32 N.Y.2d 149, 153.)" In light of these decisions, I cannot agree with the majority's continued application of the Thompson-Starrett rule of strict judicial construction. Nor can I perceive any basis for their suggestion that Kurek and the cases that have followed it have only carved out an exception, into which they find the present release does not fall. Rather I accept at face value the unqualified language of the Levine decision that Thompson-Starrett "is no longer a viable statement of the law". (28 N.Y.2d, p 212.)

There is no reason to believe that the development of the law with respect to interpretation of agreements by which a party is relieved of liability for his own negligence is not equally applicable to agreements which take the form of release as well as to those providing indemnification. The principles involved — that contracts should not be so construed as to make them meaningless and that the intent of the parties is to be drawn from the entire instrument, not from the presence or absence of a particular talismanic word or term — are equally appropriate and, when applied to the case before us, lead inescapably to the conclusion that the instrument executed by this plaintiff prior to his undertaking instruction at the hands of defendants served to exonerate the latter from the ordinary negligence claims plaintiff presently asserts.

The activity on which plaintiff was about to embark under the tutelage of defendants was a hazardous one at best, but virtually the only claims that he might have had against them should he sustain personal injuries or property damage would be claims resulting from fault or negligence of defendants. The majority reads the agreement "merely as driving home the fact that the defendant was not to bear any responsibility for injuries that ordinarily and inevitably would occur, without any fault of the defendant, to those who participate in such a physically demanding sport". (p 110.) But of what significance or practical effect is such a release? It is difficult to conceive of any claim other than one predicated on negligence; personal injuries or property damage occasioned without negligence by one or both of the defendants would give rise to no cause of action at all. The release then, if construed as not including claims predicated on negligence, releases nothing and is meaningless and a nullity. A more broadly worded exoneration provision would be difficult to imagine; a requirement that there be included the word "negligence" or a description of the specific acts of misconduct pleaded in the complaint (as plaintiff would contend for) would be a reversion to the "semantic stereotypes", which we have now abjured (Hogeland v Sibley, Lindsay Curr Co., 42 N.Y.2d 153, 159, supra). There is therefore no basis for limiting the effect of the release executed by this plaintiff; claims such as the present ones based on ordinary negligence appear to me to be precisely the claims intended by the parties to be included in the language "any and all claims * * * for any personal injuries or property damage that I may sustain or which may arise out of my learning, practicing or actually jumping from an aircraft".

As the majority observes, the relationship between these parties is not such as to give rise to a public interest precluding enforcement of the release executed by plaintiff. Except as to the cause of action predicated on the alleged claim of gross negligence, I would therefore reverse the order of the Appellate Division, reinstate the affirmative defense of release pleaded by defendants, and grant summary judgment in favor of defendants dismissing the causes of action alleged in the complaint.

Chief Judge COOKE and Judges GABRIELLI and WACHTLER concur with Judge FUCHSBERG; Judge JONES dissents and votes to reverse in a separate opinion in which Judges JASEN and MEYER concur.

Order affirmed, with costs. Question certified answered in the affirmative.


Summaries of

Gross v. Sweet

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Nov 29, 1979
49 N.Y.2d 102 (N.Y. 1979)

holding that “contracts intended to exculpate a party from the consequences of his own negligence,” though frowned upon and subject to close judicial scrutiny, “are enforceable” provided that the contracts do not indemnify for intentional misconduct or gross negligence

Summary of this case from Long v. Fairbank Farms Reconstruction Corp.

concluding that a general release signed by an enrollee of a parachute jumping school did not bar his negligence claim when, after one hour of on-land training, the enrollee was flown to an altitude of 2,800 feet for his first practice jump

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noting that broadly worded clauses may be sufficient where sophisticated business entities are involved

Summary of this case from McDermott, Inc. v. Clyde Iron

noting that an exculpatory clause cannot reach “liability for willful or grossly negligent acts”

Summary of this case from Yuille v. Uphold HQ, Inc.

stating that agreements which purport to limit liability for willful or gross misconduct are unenforceable

Summary of this case from Commercial Union Insurance v. Blue Water Yacht Club

noting that while the word "negligence" need not specifically be used, words conveying a similar import must appear

Summary of this case from Sweeney v. City of Bettendorf

In Gross (supra), a "Responsibility Release" was signed by the plaintiff that ostensibly relieved the defendant parachuting center of all liability for any possible injuries.

Summary of this case from Edge Management Consulting, Inc. v. Blank

In Gross (supra, at 105), by contrast, the Court of Appeals described the defendant's facility as being operated "for the purpose of providing instruction in the sport."

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In Gross, the release alerted the plaintiff to the dangers inherent in parachute jumping, and expressly stated that he entered into the sport with apprehensions of its risks.

Summary of this case from Simkin v. Heil Valley Ranch, Inc.

In Gross v Sweet (49 N.Y.2d 102, 106), cited approvingly in Kalisch-Jarcho, the court noted: "To the extent that agreements purport to grant exemption for liability for willful or grossly negligent acts they have been viewed as wholly void".

Summary of this case from Graphic Scanning v. Citibank

In Gross v Sweet (49 NY2d 102, 106-107), the Court of Appeals noted that agreements to exculpate for "willful or grossly negligent acts" are "wholly void," citing the unenforceability of such agreements in the context of a special relationship such as that between a "customer and a public utility under a duty to furnish [reliable] service."

Summary of this case from Empire One Telecom v. Verizon

In Gross v Sweet, 49 NY2d 102, 106-107, the Court of Appeals noted that agreements to exculpate for "willful or grossly negligent acts" are "wholly void," citing the unenforceability of such agreements in the context of a special relationship such as that between a "customer and a public utility under a duty to furnish reliable service."

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In Gross v. Sweet, 49 NY2d 102 (1979), it was noted that such exoneration clauses are often "`negotiated at arm's length between... sophisticated business entities' and... can be viewed as merely `allocating the risk of liability to third parties between themselves, essentially through the employment of insurance'" (p. 108).

Summary of this case from JANA L. v. WEST 129th ST. REALTY CO., LLC
Case details for

Gross v. Sweet

Case Details

Full title:BRUCE E. GROSS, Respondent, v. WILLIAM SWEET, Doing Business as STORMVILLE…

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: Nov 29, 1979

Citations

49 N.Y.2d 102 (N.Y. 1979)
424 N.Y.S.2d 365
400 N.E.2d 306

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