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#1
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Coors Lite wrote in message ...
Didn't you make this same arguement last year? Let it go man! It's a dead horse! So your saying that good advice isn't worth repeating. Personally in this day and age, if I was Jay and about to give out free alcohol at a party, I would be keeping a very close eye on everyone who was drinking. I don't think another warning about alcohol is a dead horse. Yes, it is. It was brought up last year and took forever for the thread to die. Usually I enjoy seeing an active thread, but this one was stupid and I was glad to see it gone. This isn't high school graduation. The people going to Jay's have most likely been in this newsgroup awhile and I'm sure know enough about aviation to avoid drinking and flying. Even if someone got hammered at his party, flew off into the wild blue yonder, and crashed into a tower 10 mins later I doubt he would be held liable, even in today's world. I guarantee that when we first saw this thread, we were all thinking "I hope some dumbass doesn't drink beer and then fly". Then of course most of us dismissed the thought knowing that: 1)The people in this group are probably not that dumb. 2)The people in this group and at Jay's party would likely beat the sh&t out of anyone trying to do it. Of course, YOU had to be "that guy" to bring it up. Yes, it is extremely annoying. We are not stupid people. Keep these warning posts for the reality tv newsgroups or something. |
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Sam wrote:
Even if someone got hammered at his party, flew off into the wild blue yonder, and crashed into a tower 10 mins later I doubt he would be held liable, even in today's world. Hmm. Having just read an ePilot message about some family being awarded money in court from the manufacturer of a vacuum pump that didn't fail, and therefore had nothing to do with the crash, I fail to share your optimism that sanity reigns. I'd not be shocked to learn that the company that builds the wiring used in the generators that power the area in which the party is held liable...even if the party was held by candle light. - Andrew |
#3
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![]() "Andrew Gideon" wrote in message online.com... Sam wrote: Even if someone got hammered at his party, flew off into the wild blue yonder, and crashed into a tower 10 mins later I doubt he would be held liable, even in today's world. Hmm. Having just read an ePilot message about some family being awarded money in court from the manufacturer of a vacuum pump that didn't fail, and therefore had nothing to do with the crash, I fail to share your optimism that sanity reigns. I'd not be shocked to learn that the company that builds the wiring used in the generators that power the area in which the party is held liable...even if the party was held by candle light. - Andrew Your second example is of course a crude troll. Also see _Palsgraf vs. Long Island Railroad._ The first example is too unless you furnish facts and a citation to the source of those facts so they can be verified, rather than your (probably clouded) recollection. I have never seen a judgment awarded to an injured plaintiff when there wasn't some proof of negligence or defective design proximately causing the injury. Maybe you can show me my first. I won't hold my breath waiting. As for furnishing alcohol to someone likely to cause injury to himself or others, the dramshop laws and cases are dispositive. As much as I like the party-giver and join in complimenting him for his contributions in this and other newsgroups, it is risky to serve alcohol to anyone you know or have reason to know is about to operate dangerous machinery because of the dramshop cases and the dramshop laws. Whether the entertainment is done for pay or not is irrelevant. 8 hours from bottle to throttle, remember? And 24 are recommended. OTOH, the question is one of reasonableness. If someone drinks a beer and then flies, does host who served the beer subject himself to liability? I don't think so. |
#4
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As much as I like the
party-giver and join in complimenting him for his contributions in this and other newsgroups, it is risky to serve alcohol to anyone you know or have reason to know is about to operate dangerous machinery because of the dramshop cases and the dramshop laws. Whether the entertainment is done for pay or not is irrelevant. I appreciate the sentiment, but, alas, I don't care to live in a world where I can't serve my friends beer at pool side. I also refuse to live in a world where I cannot trust my fellow pilots with my $30K, full sized van. And no, I don't make them produce a drivers license, and sign a waiver, nor do I check to make sure that they have insurance. I toss 'em the keys, give 'em a map, and bid them adieu, liability be damned. If you have flown in to my hotel, that's proof enough to me that you are an honorable, decent person. No one has proven me wrong yet. People live up to your expectations. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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Jay Honeck wrote:
As much as I like the party-giver and join in complimenting him for his contributions in this and other newsgroups, it is risky to serve alcohol to anyone you know or have reason to know is about to operate dangerous machinery because of the dramshop cases and the dramshop laws. Whether the entertainment is done for pay or not is irrelevant. I appreciate the sentiment, but, alas, I don't care to live in a world where I can't serve my friends beer at pool side. I also refuse to live in a world where I cannot trust my fellow pilots with my $30K, full sized van. And no, I don't make them produce a drivers license, and sign a waiver, nor do I check to make sure that they have insurance. I toss 'em the keys, give 'em a map, and bid them adieu, liability be damned. If you have flown in to my hotel, that's proof enough to me that you are an honorable, decent person. No one has proven me wrong yet. People live up to your expectations. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" Oh man. Jay, can I move to your world? Mine is starting to suck with all the law suits happy people around here. Richard Lamb |
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Oh man. Jay, can I move to your world?
Mine is starting to suck with all the law suits happy people around here. Come to Iowa, Richard. America still exists here. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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Jay Honeck wrote:
Oh man. Jay, can I move to your world? Mine is starting to suck with all the law suits happy people around here. Come to Iowa, Richard. America still exists here. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" Well thank you, Jay. If I ever get out of this mess, I might just do that. You can take the boy out of Texas, but you can't take Texas out of the boy. And if you could, there wouldn't be much left... Richard http://home.earthlink.net/~n6228l/ |
#8
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Richard Lamb wrote in message ...
Jay Honeck wrote: As much as I like the party-giver and join in complimenting him for his contributions in this and other newsgroups, it is risky to serve alcohol to anyone you know or have reason to know is about to operate dangerous machinery because of the dramshop cases and the dramshop laws. Whether the entertainment is done for pay or not is irrelevant. I appreciate the sentiment, but, alas, I don't care to live in a world where I can't serve my friends beer at pool side. I also refuse to live in a world where I cannot trust my fellow pilots with my $30K, full sized van. And no, I don't make them produce a drivers license, and sign a waiver, nor do I check to make sure that they have insurance. I toss 'em the keys, give 'em a map, and bid them adieu, liability be damned. If you have flown in to my hotel, that's proof enough to me that you are an honorable, decent person. No one has proven me wrong yet. People live up to your expectations. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" Oh man. Jay, can I move to your world? Mine is starting to suck with all the law suits happy people around here. Richard Lamb Jay's the kind of great guy that got me into aviation in the first place. Matt however is the kind of guy I wouldn't lend a bicycle to. He'd go put new tires on it and bring it back, giving me the bill and lecturing me on how dangerous it was for him. Jay, just put up a sign at poolside that says: Warning: Patrons are not permitted to fly for 24 hours after consuming free alcoholic beverages. Caution: consumption of lava rocks after falling down can cause extreme discomfort and distress during future bowel movements....Notice: You are not required to buy B.S. from poolside turd-merchants in the airport hotel. The management does not condone their activities at all. Danger!.. Danger!... Danger Will Robinson! pac "fall artist assassin" plyer |
#9
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jls wrote:
and a citation to the source of those facts so they can be verified, rather than your (probably clouded) recollection. I have never seen a judgment awarded to an injured plaintiff when there wasn't some proof of negligence or defective design proximately causing the injury. Maybe you can show me my first. I won't hold my breath waiting. From AOPA e-mail news JUDGE DENIES CARNAHAN REQUEST FOR NEW TRIAL A Kansas City judge has refused to grant a new trial to the family of the late Missouri Gov. Mel Carnahan seeking punitive damages against the Parker Hannifin Company. In a ruling, Circuit Court Judge Charles Atwell said evidence supporting punitive damages was so weak he was reluctant to give it to a jury. An investigation into the crash of a twin-engine Cessna aircraft that killed Carnahan, his son Randy, and aide Chris Sifford on October 16, 2000, found vacuum pumps made by Parker Hannifin were working well enough for vacuum-driven instruments to give proper indications. The Carnahan family alleged, however, that Parker Hannifin earlier had refused to recall vacuum pumps it manufactured to save money. However, evidence also indicated the company reported pump failures to the FAA and also warned customers that pumps could fail and urged the use of backup pumps. The family sued for $100 million but a jury awarded $4 million from Parker Hannifin, an amount that was later reduced to $2.4 million. Sifford's family settled separately with Parker Hannifin, which no longer manufactures the pumps, for $905,000, according to press reports. To learn more about the lawsuit, read a previous column from "AOPA Pilot" ( http://www.aopa.org/epilot/redir.cfm?adid=4583 ). |
#10
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![]() jls wrote: I have never seen a judgment awarded to an injured plaintiff when there wasn't some proof of negligence or defective design proximately causing the injury. You haven't been paying attention to the Parker-Hanefin case, I take it? George Patterson None of us is as dumb as all of us. |
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