Go to navigation Go to content
Toll-Free: 1-800-74-TRIAL
Phone: (561) 655-3925

School's Duty to Protect Invitees

A school board owes a duty to invitees to keep the school premises in a reasonable safe condition. The school board's duty includes protecting non-student invitees. Therefore, the school board's duty includes protecting non-student invitees from the intentional or criminal acts of students, in the event that those actions are reasonably foreseeable. For instance, a school board may be held liable for breaching its duty to protect invitees on the school premises where there is evidence that the school board was on notice of a student's violent nature and propensity for violence against any person lawfully upon school property, and the school board failed to protect a non- student child from the known or reasonably foreseeable acts of violence by the student. A plaintiff whom is injured on the school premises should have a knowledgeable and experienced West Palm Beach Child Injury lawyer to recover his or her damages. For instance, such a plaintiff may be an individual whom was injured from a fall, allegedly due to the improper design and maintenance of the school premises, which caused a breach of the school board's duty to warn against a reasonably foreseeable dangerous condition.

If your child has been injured due a breach of the school's duty to supervise the students, you need the knowledgeable and experienced Florida Child Injury Law firm of Sharmin & Sharmin P.A. The West Palm Beach Child Injury law firm of Sharmin and Sharmin P.A. will work tirelessly to recover all compensation and damages your child and family deserves for an injury due to the school's failure to supervise. Call Sharmin & Sharmin P.A. at 1-800-74-TRIAL.




 All material contained in this site is for informational purposes only and is not meant to take the place of a licensed lawyer. Attempting to use this material to help yourself may result in irreparable harm to your case. Please consult a License Florida lawyer for help. Examples including case law, rules of procedure and satutory law are for demonstrative purposes and may not be Florida Specific. No attorney client relationship is formed unless we accept your case and you sign a contract.
Call 1-800-74-TRIAL
 


Florida Child Injury Lawyer