
Originally Posted by
joypulv
If the teacher didn't see it, who did? Can you prove it happened at school? Did the teacher know about it even if she didn't see it? Who did contact you? Is there some reason to sue? Is there any lingering effect of injury? If you are concerned about long term effects, document all that you can such as affidavits from people who witnessed the event, and of course medical records.
I guess I'm old fashioned - kids get injured at play and if the doctor's visit is covered by insurance and there are no long term ill effects, why sue a school?
You are both old fashioned and wrong from a legal standpoint.
I'm a liability investigator - if there are medical bills, pain/suffering, long-term after effects, yes, contact an Attorney. If it's a concussion, yes, you have damages.
You do not need affidavits. You don't even need witnesses. The harsh truth is that it is the job of the teacher to supervise. If a child was injured the teacher was NOT doing her job. I'm not talking about what should be done. I'm talking about a simple legal issue and that's how it is. The child walked into the playground without a concussion and left with a concussion.
There are medical reports which indicate what/where happened. There are other children present.
Did the school fill out a report? Did you?