A federal judge has denied a request by Dartmouth College to rule in its favor on a lawsuit over the death of a student in a 2004 skiing accident.
Christina Porter was in an introductory skiing class to fulfill her physical education requirement at Dartmouth when she skied down a slope into a tree, dying nearly a year later of complications from head injuries. Her parents sued Dartmouth, seeking more than $20 million in damages.
Dartmouth has said it was not responsible. It recently asked Judge Paul Barbadaro to rule based on an equipment rental and liability release agreement Porter signed. Dartmouth said the agreement relieved the college from any liability. Barbadaro disagreed, saying the document doesn’t specifically identify Dartmouth or inform a renter that he or she is relieving Dartmouth of liability
Topics Legislation Education Universities
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Lemonade Books Q4 Net Loss of $21.7M as Customer Count Grows
Viewpoint: Runoff Specialists Have Evolved Into Key Strategic Partners for Insurers
AI Claim Assistant Now Taking Auto Damage Claims Calls at Travelers
State Farm Adjuster’s Opinion Does Not Override Policy Exclusion in MS Sewage Backup 

