Negligence in Avila v. Citrus Community College District

Unlock all answers in this set

Unlock answers
question
Avila v. Citrus Community College District (negligence)
answer
-Avila was 19 year old baseball player at Rio Hondo Community College -During game against Citrus College he got his \"deliberately\" with a pitch in the head -cracked his helmet & felt dizzy & in pain -coaching staff didn't check on him/get medical aid & told him to get on base -alleged citrus college was *negligent for not providing medical aid, failing to supervise & control pitcher, failure to provide umpires to prevent reckless pitching, failure to provide proper helmet protection & failing to pro dive reasonable training for coaching staff/trainers* -citrus college argued it was immune under gov code for recreational immunity, so owed no duty to supervise Avila -*Avila won* after an appeal because court ruled that immunity was not appropriate & it was *foreseeable* that a player would get hurt
question
4 elements of negligence
answer
1-Standard of care/duty *responsibility 2-Breach of the duty *Failure to meet standard of care 3- Causation *proximate, cause in fact 4-Injury *actual harm
question
Vanderbilt v DiNardo (employment contract)
answer
-DiNardo was head football coach for Vanderbilt -Vanderbilt wanted to exited contract -LSU wanted DiNardo, so he got permission from Vanderbilt to talk to them -Accepted job at LSU -*Vanderbilt seek liquidated damages under sec 8 of contract* -said he was liable for 3 yr net salary, 1 yr original contract & 1 yr addendum -*Vanderbilt won*- court ruled it was enforceable 7 reasonable
question
Coleman V. Western Michigan (employment law)
answer
-Former football player -Disabling injury during practice -could not afford to finish school w/out scholarship -considered himself an employee so sued for not being compensated under *workers disability compensation act* -Court used 4 part economic reality test to determine if employee (passed 3/4) -Football was not integral to university, so ruled not employee (4th part) -WESTERN MICHIGAN WON *Showed student athletes aren't employees*
question
Washington Sports & Ent. V. United Coastal (employment contract)
answer
-Washington sport built new stadium & got sued for not complying with ADA -so they sued United Coastal because in insurance contract (item 5) they have duty to defend claim _*contracter was negligent in building- breached duty* -Washington Sport WON *importance of following regulations
question
NCAA v Tarkanian (constitutional rights).
answer
-Tarkanian was UNL basketball coach -UNLV was found to have 38 improper recruiting practices -Tarkanian was a part of iy, so his pay was cut & faced demotion -Sued because he wasn't given *due process* (5th amendment right) -*Court found NCAA is not state institution & does not owe due process* *shows how much of a monopoly it is
question
Palsgraf v LIRR (negligence/tort)
answer
*Landmark in tort law- established proximate cause as a limitation of negligence* -Palsgraf tried suing for negligence of employees -LIRR WON (1928)
question
Norman Law v NCAA (antitrust)
answer
-Class action law suit (numerous plaintiffs) -NCAA was *conspiring* to lower coaches salaries by putting cap for new assistants -*Court ruled that NCAA violated section 1 of Sherman Act* - Law won -got treble damages & used CPI (consumer price Index) to calculate added loses
question
Elements of a contract
answer
Consideration Capacity Offer Acceptance Legality
question
Indianapolis Colts v Metro Baltimore Football
answer
-sue CFL for trademark infringlement -wanted a team called CFL Colts -said people would get confused -Indianapolis colts won -tried arguing they abandoned trademark when they left to go to Indiana
question
Defenses to negligence
answer
Assumption of risk contributory negligence (1% at fault)
question
Hayden v Notre Dame (negligence)
answer
-Hayden went to football game in season ticket seat -field goal was kicked & not blocked -fans dove & her shoulder was injured -*sued for negligence* -*NOTRE DAME WON because 3rd parties act was unforeseeable*
question
CBC Distributive Marketing V Major League Baseball advanced Media
answer
-CBC sued because believed they could use names & stats of players in conduction with their fantasy baseball products -MLB said breached contract -CBC had a contract but it expired and MLB licensed exclusive rights to Advanced Media -CBC won because rights to publicity -information was available to the public *was a major blow to pro sport & what they own*
question
Cohen v. Brown University
answer
1992 several female athletes sued using three part test to show Brown was not complying with title XI didn't comply with 2/3 parts -1 substantial proportionality (was off) - History of expansion of women's programs (not adequate growth) -Full & effective women's interest womens coaches lost offices, lost practice time priority
question
Kelley v. University of Illinois
answer
-Male swimming team was cut, along with fencing & women's diving due to budge constraints.. but was mainly because title IX -male swimmers alleged gender discrimination under Title IX & equal protection *this was a collateral attack= argue the same point (got a motion for summary judgement) -Title IX does not protect mens sports -Though sympathetic, the court ruled in favor of defendant= University of Illinois won
question
Speakers of sport vs pro serve
answer
-Ivan Rodriguez signed terminable agent contract with Speakers -Proserve said if he came & signed with them they would make him millions in endorsements -Rodruiguez switch to preserve & speakers sued for fraudulent interference with contract *Did Proserve violate Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Act?* -Court ruled competition is NOT a tort- no evidence of fraud & the contract was terminable so speakers did not own -Shows how competition is just part of the game for agents -never got endorsement money...
question
4 part economic reality test for employment: (used in Coleman v Western Michigan)
answer
1- employer right to control/dictate activities of proposed employee 2- employer right to discipline/fire 3- payment of wages/benefits for daily expenses 4- task performed in \"an integral part\" of business *Need all 4 to be considered an employee*
question
Clarett v NFL
answer
-Clarett was a running back for Ohio state -Did first year & was very good -He was suspended his second year & wanted to go to NFL his third year (early) -NFL eligibility rules say you need three full college season or there NFL season past HS -Sued saying rules violated antitrust laws and limited competition -Argued it should be up to the team to decide if player is ready to go pro -Clarett won the case in the lower court (shows how skewed info can be) but ultimately NFL won -He was not protected under CBA yet= NOT A MEMBER -decision was based on non statutory labor exemption- NFL can makes rules like the eligibility for people not part of the association
Get an explanation on any task
Get unstuck with the help of our AI assistant in seconds
New