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View Full Version : Calif. Court: Would-be Good Samaritan can be sued



LiberalNation
12-21-2008, 11:44 AM
never try an help no one. Even if you know what your doing you could still be sued by the person. It doesn't matter that their problems would have still occured had you not intervened.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081218/ap_on_re_us/samaritan_protection;_ylt=AgFvGkBnJABu6D._9PZTxooD W7oF

LOS ANGELES – Proving that no good deed goes unpunished, the state's high court on Thursday said a would-be Good Samaritan accused of rendering her friend paraplegic by pulling her from a wrecked car "like a rag doll" can be sued.

California's Supreme Court ruled that the state's Good Samaritan law only protects people from liability if the are administering emergency medical care, and that Lisa Torti's attempted rescue of her friend didn't qualify.

Justice Carlos Moreno wrote for a unanimous court that a person is not obligated to come to someone's aid.

"If, however, a person elects to come to someone's aid, he or she has a duty to exercise due care," he wrote.

Torti had argued that she should still be protected from a lawsuit because she was giving "medical care" when she pulled her friend from a car wreck.

Alexandra Van Horn was in the front passenger seat of a car that slammed into a light pole at 45 mph on Nov. 1, 2004, according to her negligence lawsuit.

Torti was a passenger in a car that was following behind the vehicle and stopped after the crash. Torti said when she came across the wreck she feared the car was going to explode and pulled Van Horn out. Van Horn testified that Torti pulled her out of the wreckage "like a rag doll." Van Horn blamed her friend for her paralysis.

Whether Torti is ultimately liable is still to be determined, but Van Horn's lawsuit can go forward, the Supreme Court ruled.

Beverly Hills lawyer Robert Hutchinson, who represented Van Horn, said he's pleased with the ruling.

Torti's attorney, Ronald Kent, of Los Angeles didn't immediately return a telephone call.

PostmodernProphet
12-21-2008, 01:40 PM
states need to pass immunity statutes for these situations or you will have people watching accident victims burn in their cars before pulling them out....

Mr. P
12-21-2008, 02:39 PM
states need to pass immunity statutes for these situations or you will have people watching accident victims burn in their cars before pulling them out....

I thought that's what the Good Samaritan law was all about...apparently not in California.

5stringJeff
12-21-2008, 07:19 PM
What a friend, to sue someone who acted in good faith to help someone in immediate need. With friends like that, who needs enemies?

Immanuel
12-22-2008, 09:50 AM
What a friend, to sue someone who acted in good faith to help someone in immediate need. With friends like that, who needs enemies?

Ah, but the good samaritan's insurance company will settle and they will split the take most likely 60/40.

The next thing that will happen is that the family of someone who dies in an auto accident will sue the people that stood around and did not offer assistance and the State because of the fact that everyone was afraid of getting sued for offering assistance.

Immie