A question about lawsuits concerning atvs
#1
A question about lawsuits concerning atvs
hey everyone, new to these boards, and i have a question
I just bought my first atv, an 05 honda rancer 350 es, and have been loving it so far. I have a couple of friends with four wheelers also, and we had all planned on riding at my house. problem is, I don't own the land, my wifes dad does, we just have our home on it. He showed up the other day and is saying only I can ride. He is worried about lawsuits if someone gets hurt.(he's also a major a-hole anyway, but that's beside the point) Are his fears justified. Is there a history of people suing private landowners that give permission to ride atv's on their land. Thanks for any help.
I just bought my first atv, an 05 honda rancer 350 es, and have been loving it so far. I have a couple of friends with four wheelers also, and we had all planned on riding at my house. problem is, I don't own the land, my wifes dad does, we just have our home on it. He showed up the other day and is saying only I can ride. He is worried about lawsuits if someone gets hurt.(he's also a major a-hole anyway, but that's beside the point) Are his fears justified. Is there a history of people suing private landowners that give permission to ride atv's on their land. Thanks for any help.
#2
A question about lawsuits concerning atvs
I dont know if there is a history of it happening, but it is always a possibility. If they are on your (your father in-laws property) you are responsible for their safety. If they get hurt while riding there, they could sue. I wouldnt consider them very good friends if they sued you over them getting hurt because they outrode their riding skills. But they could sue you.
#4
#5
A question about lawsuits concerning atvs
Yes, they could sue. I can tell you, friendship only goes so far. If, your house is on his property, and you want it to stay that way, then I'd listen to him. I very familiar with a case, where a family's best friend sued them. And the family lost[img]i/expressions/face-icon-small-sad.gif[/img] so, it does happen. And waiver forms are not much good either.
#7
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#8
#9
A question about lawsuits concerning atvs
I wouldn't rely on a waiver. Most of these waivers are not written up correctly, and dont hold up in court, unless you have a place of buisness like a paint-ball field, or a bungy jump station. Things like that. Friends sometimes surprise you when it comes to money.
#10
A question about lawsuits concerning atvs
a little off-topic here, but is that why they put safety warnings on instruction manuals about how saying wheelies, stunts, and jumps is bad and you should <u>NEVER</u> do it, LOL ive done all those, and ive gotten monir injuries before, but if someone breaks their *** on a jump and tries to sue, the companies can say "haha, told you so dumb$hit"