When we discussed the ASCGA, I asked if they had done any lobbying, and the response was more about how fun and friendly the meetings are. Well, boys, clearly you've dropped the ball......
and......
Certainly neglegence should have to pay. But, how is Merion being neglegent, if some lucky somebitch gets to tee it up there and ends up hitting a shot, which they neither wanted or expected, yet ends up lethal..? ......
and......
It would appear some member got drunk at the club one night and was driving his cart home, in the dark, at a high rate of speed. Well, the poor sot gets severley injured and wants to blame the gc architect? Even a politician sould be able see the inequity in that..........
Adam,
I don't remember exactly what you asked that we should lobby for over at ASGCA, but if I responded, I guess I wasn't thinking of safety issues. We have discussed lobbying on many issues, but not on these types of legal issues.
Why? We don't control the world - the lawyers come the closest, naturally, and there are actually many state, circuit, county, and federal courts. Which would we lobby with our limited funds? For that matter, should we lobby 250 Mil potential jurors, just in case they get on a case?
The legal system may have its doctrines, but the most important is that each case is unique, at least in the US. Another is the concept of Precedence, where what juries and judges have said before influences current cases. Yet another is that professionals should adhere to the highest possible standards of care in their industry, which court cases continually revise upward through jury awards, as they probably should, allowing for the fact that we may individually disagree with many specific cases.
If you know how all of those would play out in a real, not hypothetical case, which is influenced by how nice the various parties and their lawyers appear to be, how much insureance money they are percieved to have, or how much need they are percieved to have, etc. you are a better man than I!
For what it's worth, my take and experience on golf and legal matters is that their is some assumption of risk by participants, and less so by innocent standers by. If a golfer gets hit, the jury would have to find that he couldn't reasonably foresee the danger, and more importantly, that the club (and/or architect) reasonably could have seen it in the layout of the course.
In housing, buyers often assume risk (and we encourage clients to develop convenants that limit their ability to sue - one of which has saved me a lawsuit - but nearby motorists may not. After all, a hedge may block their view, etc. (I do recall driving by a course one day with Dad on the way to golf elsewhere. A ball hit our windshied. Dad had me get out and pick it up, and he used it later! Why not today?)
I may have told this before, but Pete Dye got dragged into a cart lawsuit, even though he didn't design the cart staging area where a lady backed over her sister, breaking her leg, and leading to a lawsuit.
When asked if the area was big enough, Pete replied, "Testimony says she backed up without looking, and hit her after moving about six inches. It seems to me that had the area been as big as Montana, she still would have hit her!" Common sense prevailed (after what I am sure was $1000's in legal fees) and Pete got out of the suit.