Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

All trees 'potentially harmful,' court rules in nixing paraplegic's lawsuit

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Feb, 2015 12:41 PM
  • All trees 'potentially harmful,' court rules in nixing paraplegic's lawsuit

TORONTO — A teenager left paralyzed after falling from a favourite climbing tree in a public park has no grounds to sue the municipality, Ontario's top court has ruled.

In a unanimous ruling, the Court of Appeal said there was no way municipal authorities could reasonably have foreseen the tragedy and acted to prevent it.

"Trees, being by their very nature things which can be climbed and therefore fallen from, are potentially harmful," the court said.

"Any danger posed by this tree was an obvious one. If you chose to climb it, you could fall and be injured."

The incident occurred in 2001, when Eric Winters, then 16, and friends were hanging out at the Kinsmen Park in Cayuga, Ont. As generations of teens had done before, according to trial evidence, Winters climbed a healthy willow on the banks of the Grand River they had dubbed the "Chilling Tree."

For reasons not clear, he fell from a branch. He was left paraplegic. He sued.

In June 2013, Superior Court Justice Dale Parayeski dismissed the lawsuit.

"In a perfect world, of course, all risks could be avoided, and no accident such as the tragic one in this case would ever occur," Parayeski said, adding a municipality monitored ban on tree climbing would have been called for.

"There has to be a reasonable limit to such prohibitions on human activity," he said.

In his appeal, Winters argued the judge was wrong to find the premises were reasonably safe and that the town's monitoring of the park, which it maintained, was deficient.

He also argued it should have been obvious to town officials that the "Chilling Tree" was "inherently unsafe" because no one was keeping a specific eye on it.

The Appeal Court rejected all the arguments, noting no one had ever complained about the tree in question. Nor had anyone hurt themselves — before Winters — save from one case where someone had twisted an ankle getting out of the tree while fooling around.

The lower court judge left little doubt he had found the park to be reasonably safe and the monitoring of the premises reasonable, the Appeal Court said.

"There is no duty to warn of such an obvious and self-evident danger (as tree climbing) nor any duty to monitor beyond what the township is doing at the time of this most unfortunate accident," the Appeal Court ruled.

MORE National ARTICLES

Police Credit B.C. Conservation Officer For Saving Life Of Man Whose Pal Died

Police Credit B.C. Conservation Officer For Saving Life Of Man Whose Pal Died
POWELL RIVER, B.C. — Police say a conservation officer with extensive knowledge of the backcountry saved a man whose friend drowned in frigid lake waters near Powell River, B.C.

Police Credit B.C. Conservation Officer For Saving Life Of Man Whose Pal Died

City Bylaw Can Discriminate In Setting Property Tax Rates: B.C. Judge

City Bylaw Can Discriminate In Setting Property Tax Rates: B.C. Judge
VANCOUVER — A B.C. Supreme Court judge says a Vancouver Island city can discriminate when it sets two separate tax rates for forestry lands within its municipal boundaries.

City Bylaw Can Discriminate In Setting Property Tax Rates: B.C. Judge

Dean Del Mastro's lawyer seeks mistrial in election overspending case

Dean Del Mastro's lawyer seeks mistrial in election overspending case
PETERBOROUGH, Ont. — Former Conservative MP Dean Del Mastro is seeking to have a mistrial declared in his election overspending case.

Dean Del Mastro's lawyer seeks mistrial in election overspending case

Montreal cabbie pleads not guilty to aggravated assault and other charges

Montreal cabbie pleads not guilty to aggravated assault and other charges
MONTREAL — A Montreal cab driver accused of running over a man in an incident widely shared on YouTube has pleaded not guilty to several charges.

Montreal cabbie pleads not guilty to aggravated assault and other charges

Winter storm shuts down businesses, cancels flights as Maritimers hunker down

Winter storm shuts down businesses, cancels flights as Maritimers hunker down
HALIFAX — A blizzard warning cancelled flights and closed schools, government offices and universities throughout the Maritimes on Tuesday as people hunkered down during a powerful winter storm that unleashed stiff winds and dumped heavy snow on the region.

Winter storm shuts down businesses, cancels flights as Maritimers hunker down

Bogs into bush: Research suggests climate change threatens Alberta wetlands

Bogs into bush: Research suggests climate change threatens Alberta wetlands
EDMONTON — New research suggests that climate change is threatening to turn Alberta's huge northern wetlands into vast expanses of bush and shrub.

Bogs into bush: Research suggests climate change threatens Alberta wetlands