If your haunt uses online waivers at checkout, the Colorado Supreme Court is about to issue a ruling you need to know about.
In 2022, a Texas man named John Litterer was in the middle of a lawsuit against Vail Resorts — he'd been struck by a snowmobile at Breckenridge. While the lawsuit was pending, he bought an Epic Pass for the next season and clicked through the purchase agreement without reading it.
That agreement released "any and all claims… including… anything which has happened up to now."
Both lower courts dismissed his case because of that click. The Colorado Supreme Court heard oral arguments just a few weeks ago and is deciding whether that result stands.
I wrote this up for HauntLaw because the questions it raises about click-through waivers may well apply to any ticketed attraction — haunts included. If you use an online waiver at checkout, this case is worth knowing about.
Full post here: https://hauntlaw.com/blog/2026-05-litterer-v-vail-click-through-waiver
(I'm an attorney and member of the California State Bar. I run HauntLaw, a free legal reference for the haunted attraction industry.)