The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Jury awards $22M to family of man killed by falling tree at off-road park

Georgia business, owner found liable in record verdict.

- By Henri Hollis henri.hollis@ajc.com

A jury has ruled against a popular Georgia off-roading destinatio­n in a wrongful death suit, awarding $22 million to the family of a metro Atlanta orthodonti­st killed at the Greensboro park in a record-setting verdict.

Durhamtown Off-road Park and its owner, Mike Mccommons, were found liable April 29 in the wrongful death of Dr. Adam White, according to Andersen, Tate & Carr, the Gwinnett County law firm representi­ng White’s family. The verdict amount is the largest awarded in the Ocmulgee Judicial Circuit, where the case was tried, the firm said.

Durhamtown has since been sold and rebranded as Georgia Off-road Park.

White was killed when he was hit by a falling tree while riding a dirt bike at the park in September 2019, according to the civil com- plaint filed in Greene County. The tree was knocked over because Mccommons was using heavy machinery to clear timber alongside the trail even though he knew it was being used by dirt bik- ers, the complaint said.

White is survived by his wife of 24 years, Debi, and three daughters. In an inter- view with The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on, Debi said t he verd ict was “bitter- sweet.” She was accompa- nied in the interview by her lawyer, Render Freeman.

“It was hard to explain. Just seeing Mike in the courtroom was very difficult for all of us,” Debi said, referring to Mccommons.

“We’re hurt and we’re angry,” she said, adding that her husband’s death was preventabl­e and had left her and their daughters struggling through “a living nightmare.”

“He was a light, and unfor- tunately, he’s not here,” Debi said. “If it wasn’t for the girls, I’m sure I would not be here today.”

Freeman said Mccommons asked to be excused from the courtroom because he was not feeling well, so the defendant was not present

when the verdict was read.

The AJC reached out to the off-road park for com- ment but did not hear back.

The large verdict adds to the legal and financial woes faced by Mccommons and the nearly 6,000-acre park that was abruptly shut down and reopened undera new name earlier this year, the Athens Banner-herald reported in March.

In 2019, a jury found that multiple plaintiffs associ- ated with Durhamtown had been grossly negligent after a teenager crashed his dirt bike into an exposed pipe and nearly lost his leg five years earlier, according to The Trial Lawyer magazine.

The jury awarded the boy and his family nearly $15 million, court documents show. According to Trial Lawyer, video taken from a Gopro camera the teen was wear- ing on his helmet at the time of the crash showed the pipe was exposed. By the time sher- iff ’s deputies arrived at the scene, someone had placed a tire barrier in front of the pipe, the magazine reported.

After White was killed at Durhamtown in 2019, two more people died at the park in 2020, the Banner-herald reported.

When the off-road park reopened in March, Mccommons told the Banner-her- ald he had sold Durhamtown to his brother, Tim Mccommons, and he was “just hanging out and enjoying my days in retirement.” Rebranded as Georgia Off-road Adven

tures, the park was planning a grand opening celebratio­n this month, the newspaper reported.

“He’s a very crafty and sophistica­ted guy in terms of how he’s tried to set this place up and insulate himself from personal liability,” Freeman said of Mike Mccommons.

Attorneys for the White family are prepar i ng post-judgment legal motions to target the sale of the park, Freeman said.

According to records kept by the Georgia Secretary of State’s Office, a new corporatio­n called Georgia OffRoad Adventure Rentals was formed in January with the same address as Durhamtown. Its organizer and registered agent is listed as Hailey Mccommons. It’s not clear how she is related to Mike and Tim Mccommons, but an obituary for their mother, Bevelyn Mccommons, lists a grandchild named Hailey.

Regarding the $22 million owed to the White family, Freeman said there was no insurance policy that he knew of that would make a payout and that his firm would be using “old-fashioned collection efforts.”

Acknowledg­ing that coll ecting the full a mount would be a challenge, Freeman added, “It may take us a while, but we’re not going anywhere.”

Debi said she was not sure of her next steps. “We’re just trying to make it through the days,” she said.

 ?? COURTESY ?? Dr. Adam White (left), a metro Atlanta orthodonti­st, was killed while riding a dirt bike at Durhamtown Off-road Park in 2019. White is survived by his wife of 24 years, Debi, and three daughters.
COURTESY Dr. Adam White (left), a metro Atlanta orthodonti­st, was killed while riding a dirt bike at Durhamtown Off-road Park in 2019. White is survived by his wife of 24 years, Debi, and three daughters.

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