Skip to main content

School Settles Lawsuit Filed By The Family Of A Drowned Boy

School Settles Lawsuit Filed By The Family Of A Drowned Boy

School Settles Lawsuit Filed By The Family Of A Drowned Boy

Introduction

The family of a 15-year old pupil of San Ramon Valley High School who drowned in the school’s swimming pool in Danville in May 2018, received an $8 million settlement. Parents of the boy who drowned in the pool filed a lawsuit six months after the incident, against the school and physical education teacher, alleging that they neglected the safety of their kid. According to the lawsuit, on May 8, 2018, during a PE class at the high school's pool, the kid and other students were asked to tread water for three minutes, which was extended by 30 seconds. The kid went under the water after the initial three minutes, following which he was pronounced dead a short time later at a nearby hospital. The school district made a public apology to the community, and the parents. The school district’s attorney informed that the school suspended the use of the pool post the kid's drowning. The attorney even notified that the teacher is not facing any legal sanctions further and is still a teacher in the high school. Plaintiffs' attorney said the parents are in deep pain, which is worsening even after the settlement. The Contra Costa County Coroner's Office ruled the cause of the boy's death to be asphyxia due to drowning and the manner of death was accidental. No criminal charges were filed, but the plaintiff's family sued the PE teacher and school district in November 2018. The lawsuit claimed the PE teacher had a lifeguard certification that expired two months before the incident, as per the reports of the San Francisco Chronicle. The boy's family also alleged that surveillance video showed that the PE teacher was on his phone when the drowning happened, though the district attorney said he was not texting or talking on the phone at the time. A similar incident took place in 2019 when a boy almost got drowned in a wave pool at the Cowabunga Bay. The jury awarded $49 million as the boy suffered lifelong injuries. The drowning resulted in severe brain damage to the boy as he was submerged underwater for a longer time. Currently, he requires 24-hour care due to hypoxic and anoxic brain injury that disrupts the oxygen flow around the body. The civil lawsuit filed in Clark County District Court alleged that Cowabunga Bay did not have enough lifeguards on staff when the boy was underwater. Attorneys in the case agreed that investigations through the past four years uncovered facts that showed liability against Henderson Water Park LLC for negligence. Medical experts believe that the boy could live anywhere from 64 to 81 years old and incur medical costs between $40 million and $59 million.
Comments

Restricted HTML

  • Allowed HTML tags: <a href hreflang> <em> <strong> <cite> <blockquote cite> <code> <ul type> <ol start type> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <h2 id> <h3 id> <h4 id> <h5 id> <h6 id>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.

Latest Personal Injury News

NYC Man Wins $90M After Losing Limbs in Subway Accident

Categories: Settlements

The MTA could be facing a hefty $90 million payout following a lawsuit in which a Brooklyn man, who was severely injured when a train ran over him after he fell onto the tracks while intoxicated, won a massive judgment…

GA EV Battery Maker Settles Fire Lawsuit for $31M

Categories: Settlements

SK Battery America, a North Georgia-based electric vehicle battery manufacturer, has agreed to a $31 million settlement with Metro Site recycling center, which was destroyed in a fire in July 2023.

LA Archdiocese Settles $880M with Clergy Abuse Victims

Categories: Settlements

The Archdiocese of Los Angeles has agreed to pay $880 million to settle claims of clergy sexual abuse spanning several decades, marking one of the largest single settlements of its kind in the United States.

Demand Letter or Medical Record Review?     
Free Trials + 10% Discount!