BELLEVILLE, Mich. (AP) – A man who broke an ankle on an obstacle course at a pumpkin patch will get his foot inside a courthouse again. A judge wrongly dismissed Tarek Hamade’s lawsuit against DeBuck’s Corn Maze and Pumpkin Patch, the Michigan Court of Appeals has ruled. Hamade fractured an ankle while running across tires that were part of an obstacle course known as “Tough Farmer.” He said he was injured while stepping on a tire that was very soft at the fall attraction near Belleville. DeBuck’s argued that the spongy tire was an open and obvious risk, a key legal standard under Michigan liability law. “It’s an obstacle course. It’s meant to be difficult to traverse,” attorney Drew Broaddus said at a Feb. 3 hearing. But the appeals court said the tire’s condition was not obvious. “If they’d called it the ‘spongy tire challenge’ we might have a different case. But that’s not what it was presented as,” Judge Michael Gadola said. Hamade’s lawsuit now returns to Wayne County Circuit Court. |