Six years ago, two women died when
their Arctic Cat snowmobile reversed off a 40 foot cliff on Mackinac
Island. Now those women's families will finally get their day in
court. A Michigan Court of Appeals has sent the snowmobile defect
case back to trial.
Defective products can run the risk
of anything from simply not working to causing fatal accidents. But
when the product in question is a snowmobile, the risk of injury, and
even death, is much higher.
Karen Schwarck and Edith Bonno were
riding together on an Arctic Cat 660 snowmobile near Mackinac
Island's Grand Hotel in February 2010. As the pair made a three-point
turn to head back toward the resort, their snowmobile unexpectedly
shot backward through a wooden fence and over
the West Bluff of the island, falling nearly 40 feet. Both women died
in the crash.
Their families sued Arctic Cat,
saying that a defect in the reverse warning alarm led Schwarck to
believe the snowmobile was in forward gear, instead of reverse. The
manufacturer denied a “silent reverse zone” and claimed there was
no question of fact that would tie the women's deaths to a
manufacturing defect. The company called the plaintiffs' theory
“hypothetical.” The trial court agreed and dismissed the case.
But a Michigan
Court of Appeals panel thought differently.
While it agreed that the 40 foot fall rendered the snowmobile's gear
shifter after the accident unreliable, it found other fact questions
exist.
Experts on both sides had testified
about the snowmobile tracks. Some found a smooth reverse track.
Others testified that a stop in the middle of a reverse track
wouldn't show up in the snow. And one witness said he saw evidence of
two stops in the tracks – evidence the driver was trying to make a
3 point turn.
The court also found that while the
reverse alarm was “operational,” that wasn't the end of the
issue. An expert for the plaintiff showed that the alarm only sounded
when the gear shifter was in the last inch of its 4-inch movement
range. But the snowmobile would only go forward if the shift lever
was in the first inch. That left 2 inches in the middle where the
alarm would not sound, but the snowmobile would still travel
backward.
The court sent the whole case back
to trial so that a jury could weigh all the evidence and decide
whether the snowmobile's silent zone caused the women's deaths. It
decided human psychological factors might allow a rider to
foreseeably rely on an alarm designed for bystanders and be unable to
react to a sudden, unexpected reverse motion. All of these were
decisions best left to a jury. That means 6 years later, the Schwarck
and Bonno families will finally have a chance to prove a product
defect caused their loved ones' deaths.
Dani K. Liblang is a personal
injury attorney at The Liblang Law Firm,
P.C., in Birmingham, Michigan. She represents people injured by
defective products. If someone you love has been hurt, contact
The Liblang Law Firm, P.C., today for a
free consultation.
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