Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

All trees 'potentially harmful,' court rules in nixing paraplegic's lawsuit

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Feb, 2015 12:41 PM
  • All trees 'potentially harmful,' court rules in nixing paraplegic's lawsuit

TORONTO — A teenager left paralyzed after falling from a favourite climbing tree in a public park has no grounds to sue the municipality, Ontario's top court has ruled.

In a unanimous ruling, the Court of Appeal said there was no way municipal authorities could reasonably have foreseen the tragedy and acted to prevent it.

"Trees, being by their very nature things which can be climbed and therefore fallen from, are potentially harmful," the court said.

"Any danger posed by this tree was an obvious one. If you chose to climb it, you could fall and be injured."

The incident occurred in 2001, when Eric Winters, then 16, and friends were hanging out at the Kinsmen Park in Cayuga, Ont. As generations of teens had done before, according to trial evidence, Winters climbed a healthy willow on the banks of the Grand River they had dubbed the "Chilling Tree."

For reasons not clear, he fell from a branch. He was left paraplegic. He sued.

In June 2013, Superior Court Justice Dale Parayeski dismissed the lawsuit.

"In a perfect world, of course, all risks could be avoided, and no accident such as the tragic one in this case would ever occur," Parayeski said, adding a municipality monitored ban on tree climbing would have been called for.

"There has to be a reasonable limit to such prohibitions on human activity," he said.

In his appeal, Winters argued the judge was wrong to find the premises were reasonably safe and that the town's monitoring of the park, which it maintained, was deficient.

He also argued it should have been obvious to town officials that the "Chilling Tree" was "inherently unsafe" because no one was keeping a specific eye on it.

The Appeal Court rejected all the arguments, noting no one had ever complained about the tree in question. Nor had anyone hurt themselves — before Winters — save from one case where someone had twisted an ankle getting out of the tree while fooling around.

The lower court judge left little doubt he had found the park to be reasonably safe and the monitoring of the premises reasonable, the Appeal Court said.

"There is no duty to warn of such an obvious and self-evident danger (as tree climbing) nor any duty to monitor beyond what the township is doing at the time of this most unfortunate accident," the Appeal Court ruled.

MORE National ARTICLES

Students Hope 'Sailbot' Makes History With First Solo Voyage Across The Atlantic

Students Hope 'Sailbot' Makes History With First Solo Voyage Across The Atlantic
VANCOUVER — Sailing across the Atlantic Ocean by wind power alone is an impressive achievement by any standard. But contending with the unpredictable weather, busy freight traffic, meddlesome fishing nets and treacherous icebergs without anyone in the pilot's seat is another feat entirely.

Students Hope 'Sailbot' Makes History With First Solo Voyage Across The Atlantic

Farmers Enjoying Low Fuel Prices But Waiting For Other Shoe To Drop

Farmers Enjoying Low Fuel Prices But Waiting For Other Shoe To Drop
CALGARY — Decades of boom-and-bust commodity prices, worker shortages and being at the mercy of the weather has virtually removed the word optimism from the vocabulary of many Canadian farmers.

Farmers Enjoying Low Fuel Prices But Waiting For Other Shoe To Drop

Australian Al-jazeera Reporter Greste Deported, Fahmy And Mohamed Still Jailed

Australian Al-jazeera Reporter Greste Deported, Fahmy And Mohamed Still Jailed
CAIRO — Al-Jazeera English reporter Peter Greste left Egypt on Sunday after the president approved his deportation, but there's no official word on jailed colleagues Egyptian-Canadian Mohamed Fahmy and Egyptian Baher Mohamed.

Australian Al-jazeera Reporter Greste Deported, Fahmy And Mohamed Still Jailed

Serious Crash In Whistler Sends Woman To Hospital With Critical Injuries

Serious Crash In Whistler Sends Woman To Hospital With Critical Injuries
WHISTLER, B.C. — A woman in her late 30s has been airlifted to hospital in critical condition after a serious crash in Whistler, B.C.

Serious Crash In Whistler Sends Woman To Hospital With Critical Injuries

Surrey Sees More Violent Crime, Fewer Murders According To Latest Statistics

Surrey Sees More Violent Crime, Fewer Murders According To Latest Statistics
Violent crimes include murders, sexual assaults and robberies, and there were 52 per cent more of such crimes in last year's fourth quarter compared to the same quarter in 2013.

Surrey Sees More Violent Crime, Fewer Murders According To Latest Statistics

B.C. Truckers Stage Protest In Surrey Over New Port Metro Vancouver Licensing Rules

B.C. Truckers Stage Protest In Surrey Over New Port Metro Vancouver Licensing Rules
B.C. truckers staged a protest on Saturday against new licensing rules at Port Metro Vancouver. They say more than 600 truckers and office staff will lose their jobs because of the new requirements

B.C. Truckers Stage Protest In Surrey Over New Port Metro Vancouver Licensing Rules