Skip to content
Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter June 30, 2023

Bagley v. Mt. Bachelor, Inc.: A New Direction for the Enforceability of Sports Waivers?

  • Alfred C. Yen EMAIL logo
From the journal Journal of Tort Law

Abstract

In Bagley v. Mt. Bachelor, Inc., the Oregon Supreme Court considered a topic of widespread, daily significance – the enforceability of tort waivers in the context of sports and recreation. Although these Sports Waivers vary considerably in their precise form and deployment, they function primarily to release organizers and providers of sports and recreation from claims of negligence. Almost every adult has signed such a waiver. Indeed, such waivers are so common that one might fairly think that (assuming the waivers are enforceable) the typical sports or recreation provider faces little to no accountability for its own negligence. Bagley stands out among recent cases because it opened new directions for how to evaluate and draft Sports Waivers.


Corresponding author: Alfred C. Yen, Professor of Law and Dean’s Distinguished Scholar, Boston College Law School, Newton Centre, USA; and Visiting Scholar, University of Arizona Law School, Arizona, USA, E-mail:
I would like to thank the University of Arizona and the Journal of Tort Law for hosting this conference and publishing its papers. I would also like to thank my research assistants Gwendolyn Ljung-Baruth, Theodore Edwards, Emily Saulnier, and Julia Walters. Copyright, 2023 by Alfred C. Yen.

Funding source: Boston College

Award Identifier / Grant number: Unassigned

Received: 2023-05-29
Accepted: 2023-05-29
Published Online: 2023-06-30
Published in Print: 2023-03-28

© 2023 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

Downloaded on 28.4.2024 from https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/jtl-2023-0023/html
Scroll to top button