kbroderick
Active member
I also don't think that this practice really is theft of services, either. It's rather like paying for a dinner but if you have some leftovers, the restaurant shouldn't care what you do with the "doggy bag". Ski area gets my money for a full day's lifts. If I leave early, I fell it's perfectly OK to sell this time to somebody else, especially if the mountain really charges huge money for the ticket, i.e Stowe.
I'd say it's more like inviting someone to come in to an "All You Can Eat" buffet-style restaurant and taking over your table, if you insist on a restaurant metaphor. It is theft of services, at least under Vermont state law, and presumably in other states as well.
Vermont Theft of Services statute; my presumption is that removing a non-transferable lift ticket from one person and attaching it to another would qualify as "deception...to avoid payment."