Disneyland a Fierce Foe in Court
Eleven-year-old Inderjit Dosanjh flew out of Disneyland’s Teacup ride, fractured a vertebra and ended up in a body cast for four months.
Though a jury decided the theme park was not at fault, an angry Orange County Superior Court judge in 1997 called the verdict a “miscarriage of justice.” He accused Disney’s attorneys of hiding a key witness and improperly influencing the jury and granted the boy a new trial.
Disneyland prides itself on being the Happiest Place on Earth and one of the safest--and for millions of visitors each year, it is. But some who have gotten hurt at the fabled park and sought redress for their injuries have found themselves battling an aggressive and well-financed corporate giant whose legal tactics, while not uncommon, sometimes contrast sharply with its public image.
In one case, a juror complained first to the judge and then to Disneyland officials that the deliberations were tainted because of pro-Disneyland sentiments among jurors. Plaintiffs’ attorneys say such sentiments are common in Orange County.
In other cases, court documents show, Disney has investigated the intimate details of plaintiffs’ personal lives and brought them into the public record, concealed evidence and kept records of injuries at the park secret. Its legal strategies prompted one judge recently to sanction the company and another, in the Teacup case, to accuse it in writing of misconduct.
Disney attorneys would not discuss their overall litigation strategy, so it is difficult to know the extent of such practices by the park, which has been sued more than 150 times over the last five years.
But a Times review of a number of recent, hard-fought cases, while not a definitive compilation of Disney litigation, provides a glimpse into a side of the amusement park company that few are aware of.
Disneyland spokesman Ray Gomez said that when a complaint has merit, the Walt Disney Co. often settles the case. But the company will “very assertively” fight cases it views as frivolous, he said.
“Large companies like Disney are perceived to have deep pockets, and we’re obviously sued on frivolous grounds fairly frequently,” he said. “When that occurs, we defend ourselves vigorously.”
People who have sued the park over injuries can attest to its aggressive posture.
In addition to the case involving the 11-year-old boy, there are these actions over the last five years:
* A 36-year-old woman who said she suffered permanent hearing damage at the park was followed and videotaped by investigators working for Disney, which also questioned the parents of children in the day care center she ran and subpoenaed her therapist’s records, according to court documents and interviews.
* A 17-year-old whose finger was ripped from his hand on Splash Mountain later found that Disneyland workers had cleaned up the scene and tightened the screw that had snagged his ring before accident photos were taken, court records and testimony show.
* A 43-year-old woman who sued after she suffered a brain hemorrhage on the Indiana Jones Adventure was informed in court papers that she assumed the risk of injury when she rode the attraction.
“I was shocked,” said Barry Novack, the woman’s attorney. “I said, ‘Are you telling the public that getting a brain bleed is an inherent risk of riding Indiana Jones?’ ”
Some legal experts say Disney must employ tough tactics to protect itself in a litigious society. Being tough makes people think twice about suing Disney because it will be so costly, time-consuming and unpleasant, experts say.
“It’s standard for many large companies to make the price of an aggressive lawsuit against them too high as a way of discouraging the plaintiff,” said Stephen Gillers, a legal ethics professor at New York University. “They have to be tough, even in cases where they’re most vulnerable, to get a reputation for not being soft.”
The issue of safety at the park and Disney’s efforts to protect its image came into sharp focus Christmas Eve, when a worker attempted to tie up the Columbia sailing ship to a dock. A cleat--a metal item with prongs for attaching a rope--broke free from the ship and flew into a group of tourists, injuring a Washington state couple. The man died several days later. The whipsawing rope also injured the worker.
Disney officials came under criticism for cleaning up the scene and boxing up evidence before police detectives or investigators from the state Division of Occupational Safety and Health could arrive.
Although the coroner has ruled the incident an accident, Cal/OSHA is examining whether Disneyland was misusing the cleat and whether it had adequately trained the worker.
Issues of Privacy and Safety
On Wednesday, Disneyland’s new operations chief said the park is launching a ride by ride review of how all its attractions are run and is changing procedures for the Columbia.
Earlier this month, issues of privacy and safety were raised when a Los Angeles Superior Court officer fined Disneyland $7,050 for blocking efforts by Zipora Jacob, the woman who says she suffered the brain hemorrhage at the park, to obtain documents regarding injury and safety records.
Jacob’s case began in July 1995 after she rode the Indiana Jones ride with her two children. When the ride was over, she staggered out, vomited and collapsed, her lawsuit claims. She later underwent four surgeries for a subarachnoid hemorrhage, and doctors implanted a permanent shunt in her brain, she says.
Although such a hemorrhage can result from extreme shaking, Disneyland’s Gomez said defense attorneys believe that Jacob might have had a predisposition to such a medical problem.
Attorney Novack--and other lawyers who regularly sue Disney--are still surprised that the company tried to get the case dismissed by arguing that visitors who go on the park’s thrill rides assume a risk of such an injury. Park-goers, Disney contended, assume an inherent risk similar to someone taking a white-water rafting trip or going horseback riding.
In his response, Novack argued: “A mother who goes on a Disneyland ride with her children does not suspect, consider or even contemplate that going on the attraction is going to carry some inherent risk of injury.”
The judge ruled in his favor, and the case is expected to reach trial this spring.
The volumes of court records compiled since the case was filed in July 1996 detail an often bitter battle over safety records. Disney attorneys have argued at times that injury records did not exist, only to have their availability verified by Disney employees under oath, depositions filed in the case show.
Disney’s attorney in the Jacob case, Stephen T. Waimey of Lewis, D’Amato, Brisbois & Bisgaard, did not respond to telephone calls for comment.
Irvine attorney Elizabeth Livesay Fry said she fought a similarly difficult battle against Disney before settling a case for $180,000 on the eve of trial in 1994.
Park-Goer Sues After Losing His Finger
Her client, Elizabeth Venema, was watching the preview of the new Fantasmic attraction in May 1992 when a cannon aboard the sailing ship Columbia fired near her, causing permanent damage to her auditory nerves. The cannon later was found to produce noises louder than levels that cause hearing damage and louder than Cal/OSHA allowed, according to sworn testimony and interviews. Two UCLA doctors hired by Disneyland confirmed Venema’s hearing damage, the interviews show.
Disney offered a small sum to settle, Livesay Fry said. When Venema didn’t accept, investigators for Disney’s attorneys videotaped her around town and playing with her toddler daughter, said Venema and her husband, Steve, who demanded to view the tapes as part of their settlement with the park.
Disney attorneys also subpoenaed the records of the therapist Venema went to after her brother’s death, Livesay Fry said, then argued that her emotional distress was just as likely to have resulted from family problems she had as a child.
“They try to break you,” Elizabeth Venema said. “They deposed my employees. They deposed every client I have. They even tracked down my past clients. My friends called me up and said they were asking questions like, ‘Did you ever see her kiss her daughter on the lips?’
“It was very frightening.”
But even trailing someone with a video camera is not uncommon, professor Gillers said. In Venema’s case, he said, “they may have done it to show, despite what the experts say, she was still able to perform the tasks of daily life.”
Attorneys also say they fight an uphill battle finding an impartial jury in Orange County, where most of the cases are tried. The park benefits from a “halo effect,” attorneys say, the goodwill bred from visitors’ happy experiences at the Magic Kingdom.
James Eubanks said he and his girlfriend were on the Splash Mountain ride in September 1996 when the log-shaped vehicle he was in jerked forward. Eubanks said he flung his hands out and caught his ring on a screw protruding from a hatch on the top of the flume ride. The force wrenched his finger off from above the socket.
After the accident a maintenance worker tightened the screw and the blood was cleaned up before photos of the scene were taken, according to the depositions of employees and court testimony.
A year later, an Orange County jury decided in Disney’s favor. Some jurors also felt that Eubanks should not have had his hands outside the vehicle. The park warns patrons to keep their hands and feet inside the ride vehicles at all times.
Gisela Burmeister, one of the jurors in the case, said some of her fellow panelists were clearly pro-Disney before deliberations started. One, she said, was employed by the city of Anaheim and commented on how bad it would be to ruin the park’s pristine safety record.
Judge Rejects Jury’s Pro-Disney Decision
Burmeister said she was so angry that she wrote a letter to the judge and, after the verdict, to Disneyland officials.
“The young man only had asked for his medical bills of $21,016 and the loss of his wages $9,600 to be reimbursed. Nothing big!” wrote Burmeister, a Newport Beach real estate agent. “I don’t feel that Disney cares about its accidents, and is only concerned with a ‘clean’ record.”
A Disney official wrote back that park officials “deeply regret” the injury but felt that the verdict was fair.
Beverly Hills attorney David Glickman thought he too had lost when a jury found in favor of Disneyland in February 1997 despite evidence that his client, 11-year-old Inderjit Dosanjh of Fresno, fractured a vertebra and suffered a concussion after he was flung from a spinning Teacup.
“Everybody on the jury had been on the Teacups. All 12. You couldn’t find one that hadn’t,” Glickman said.
But an Orange County Superior Court judge refused to accept the jury’s decision.
“The verdict reached by the jury results in a miscarriage of justice,” wrote Judge Donald Smallwood in a seven-page motion granting Inderjit a new trial.
Smallwood said that the Teacup the boy was riding in had not been properly maintained and that the post-accident inspection had been inadequate.
Disneyland was “guilty of misconduct” for producing a witness at the last minute that Disney security guards had known about from the start, then lying about it, Smallwood wrote.
“Even giving defense counsel the benefit of the doubt, it is clear that defendant Disneyland Inc. falsely answered plaintiff’s discovery requests for the names and addresses of all witnesses known to them,” Smallwood wrote.
Disney has appealed the decision.
Times staff writers Ray Herndon and E. Scott Reckard contributed to this story.
More to Read
Inside the business of entertainment
The Wide Shot brings you news, analysis and insights on everything from streaming wars to production — and what it all means for the future.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.