Hello everybody,
this may not directly be a rule issue, but still important: is it enough to ask for a liability dislaimer signed by just the skipper or do I need the disclaimer signed by all crew members? RRS no. 3 and 4.4 just mention the acceptance of the rules. The rules to my understandig do not regulate the liability or am I wrong?
Rule 81 INDEMNIFICATION OR HOLD HARMLESS AGREEMENTS
Here is US Sailing's quick description: https://www.ussailing.org/news/release-of-claims-and-indemnification-agreements/
We also have our own insurance, of course.
I'd be astonished if the race rules were held by a court to excuse liability, though the MIGHT help with the doctrine of "assumption of risk," which, depending on the state and the facts, might get one off the hook.
As a note to Keith's comment. A RELEASE of liability (I promise not to sue you) is okay. An INDEMNIFICATION (I promise to pay you if you are liable) is not okay. "Hold Harmless" is a vague and expansive term that adds nothing to the rule.
In the UK, the RYA has an extremely good document titled "RYA Race Training and Event Management - Legal Aspects" which should be read by all Race Officers running events in the UK.
In essence, forms disclaiming liability is rarely accepted by the Courts, but if a disclaimer approved by the Insurer of the Organising Authority is not signed by whoever the Insurer requires, the OA's insurance is not valid. In the UK, most OAs make the Race Team and all competitors and their crews temporary members of the Organising Authority (usually a Club) and so everyone is covered by "Member to Member" Liability Insurance, usually up to £10m, to which the boat's Insurance can be added so usually giving a "pot" of £13-16m for the courts to distribute to those who it feels have a valid claim. Up to now all claims have been settled within the limit of the amount of insurance available.
Prosecutions for criminal negligence are done by the Health and Safety Executive after a report from the Marine Accident Investigation Bureau if appropriate and disclaimers are ignored.
In the UK most insurers insist the parents of those under 18 sign a disclaimer to stop the parents suing for emotional and other damages: those under 18 can not disclaim their rights in UK law.
Hope that helps.
Roger
This question mainly concerns national regulations and requirements, which cannot be answered here. I would therefore recommend that you ask your question in a german forum again:
First, to answer Mr. Koenig's original question, most big boat regattas require all crew to sign a waiver of some sort. Similarly, national championships and other regattas at that level. Small one-design classes and club racing, not so much. There is a theory that members of a club have given an implied waiver -- just by being a member of an organization that conducts an inherently dangerous activity.
Second, in the US because sailboat racing is do diverse among classes and types of organizations and so dispersed geographically, it is hard to generalize about what the liability of race officials is for negligence and what the standard is to avoid having an act or omission being deemed negligence. In my view, a major reason for this uncertainty is not the fact there are so many jurisdictions, but rather the failure of US Sailing and its insurance "partners" to tell us the facts involved in what claims it has paid out on. We just do not know the scope of the problem and hiding the ball by US Sailing has not been helpful.