Kenneth Mr. Vercammen was included in the 2020 “Super Lawyers” list published by Thomson Reuters.

To schedule a confidential consultation, email us at VercammenAppointments@NJlaws.com, call or visit www.njlaws.com

(732) 572-0500

Tuesday, February 22, 2022

OLIVIA CHECCHIO, ET AL. VS. EVERMORE FITNESS, LLC, ET AL. (L-7065-20, MIDDLESEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (A-3461-20)

 

OLIVIA CHECCHIO, ET AL. VS. EVERMORE FITNESS, LLC, ET AL. (L-7065-20, MIDDLESEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (A-3461-20)

In August 2018, fourteen-year-old Olivia Checchio went to Sky Zone South Plainfield—an indoor trampoline park—with four friends and Gina Valenti—the mother of one of the children. Upon arrival at the park, Valenti signed an agreement that included an arbitration provision, under which the signing adult on behalf of the minor child waived a jury trial and agreed to arbitrate any dispute or claim arising out of the child's use of the Sky Zone premises.

The trial court, relying on this court's recent decision in Gayles v. Sky Zone Trampoline Park, 468 N.J. Super. 17, 21-22 (App. Div. 2021), denied defendants' motion to dismiss the complaint and compel arbitration.

Defendants moved for reconsideration, producing for the first time five agreements signed by Olivia's mother, Lisa, when she took Olivia to the park in 2016. Defendants asserted Gayles was distinguishable from the circumstances here because the 2016 agreements demonstrated a pattern of prior conduct, and, therefore, establish apparent authority.

The court noted the 2016 agreements contained different language than the 2018 agreement. The 2016 agreements did not vest Valenti with the authority to enter into the 2018 agreement or any future agreement on Olivia's behalf. Nor did the 2016 agreements manifest any understanding on Lisa's part that Valenti or any other adult could sign a future waiver agreement in the place of Lisa or on Olivia's behalf.

The court found there was no evidence demonstrating that Lisa would have signed the 2018 agreement. And, Lisa's prior execution of the 2016 agreements did not establish a pattern that she would authorize another person to sign an agreement on behalf of her daughter. Therefore, the court held the 2016 agreements did not establish Valenti had apparent authority to waive Olivia's trial rights under the 2018 agreement.