Quote:
Originally Posted by HOOT
But there are risks in everything. There is a risk in driving everyday but if someone hits you, you claim against them you don't just shrug it off and say "well those are the risks of driving on the road". Just like homeowners shoudln't have to shrug it off when they get an errant ball flying through their window because they live on a golf course and know the risks.
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But you have a responsibility to mitigate your damages. That's why if you're hit from behind when you're stopped at a red light, and you go into the car infront of you, if you didn't leave enough space you're also partly responsible for the damage to the car ahead of you. You didn't mitigate potential damage.
It really depends on the situation.
Let's say there's a hole on a golf course that is a dog-leg. It goes straight and then hooks to the left. There are houses on the left side of the fairway that are all protected by trees and bushes. This is to help prevent errant balls from sailing into the back yards of the neigbours. When the houses were build they were built with extra thick protective glass windows. That way if a ball would get through the trees they wouldn't break. Additionally the course is designed so there's a wind tunnel that will help carry the ball forward and prevent it from hooking (slicing I mix the two up) left.
Now, one of the houses down the row is purchased by a family, the homeowner replaced all their windows with cheap thin windows, and clear cut the trees in his back yard. This leaves a gap in the tree barrier. Because of this gap the wind tunnel now will suck balls to the left into the backyard of the new homeowner.
So a ball is hit that normally would have hit the trees and fell in the rough, but because there are no trees combined with the new wind tunnel, the ball sails through the hole in the trees, and hits the window of the house, which is thin and breaks.
The homeowner not only did not take any steps to protect their property, they actually took steps to make it more hazardous.
Should the golfer be 100% responsible for the broken window? Should he take responsibility for the ball he hit? Or is the homeowner responsible
to some degree?
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Additionally, what if the same scenario happens, but the ball doesn't hit the new homeowners house, but the house next to them? Due to the force of the wind tunnel the ball picked up speed, enough to break the thick glass (whereas if there was no wind tunnel it would have bounced off).
Is the golfer responsible? The homeowner of the broken window? The golf course? Or the neighbour who clear cut the trees creating a wind tunnel and opening for the houses to get hit?
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Now assume the golfer was never on this hole before, he's a traveller playing the hole for the first time. He read the course materials, and knows the lay out of the hole. However the materials the course supplied him with state that there are trees all along the hole, they haven't been updated to include the now clear cut area. Based on the information he had he hit a shot where he tried to hug the left side of the narrow fairway, without worry of hitting the houses as there is a barrier there for protection.
But due to the wind tunnel his ball is sucked in, breaks the thin window of the house behind the clear cut area.
Is the golfer still responsible? Should he "man-up" and pay for the entire cost of damages in either of the above two scenarios?
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Assume that due to altitude, location, etc that the physics of the scenario would work.