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re: Johnathan Taylor dismissed!!

Posted on 3/30/15 at 12:36 pm to
Posted by elposter
Member since Dec 2010
24972 posts
Posted on 3/30/15 at 12:36 pm to
quote:

Careless Hiring and Retention

Under a different legal theory, someone who is injured by your employee can sue you for failing to take reasonable care in hiring your workers ("negligent hiring") or in keeping them on after learning the worker poses a potential danger ("negligent retention"). This rule applies even to what your workers do outside the scope of employment -- in fact, it is often used to hold an employer responsible for a worker's violent criminal acts while working, such as rape, murder, or robbery.

However, under this theory you are legally responsible only if you acted carelessly -- that is, if you knew or should have known that an applicant or employee was unfit for the job, yet you did nothing about it.

Here are a few situations in which employers have had to pay up:
•A pizza company hired a delivery driver without looking into his criminal past -- which included a sexual assault conviction and an arrest for stalking a women he met while delivering pizza for another company. After he raped a customer, the pizza franchise was liable to his victim for negligent hiring.
•A car rental company hired a man who later raped a coworker. Had the company verified his resume claims, it would have discovered that he was in prison for robbery during the years he claimed to be in high school and college. The company was liable to the coworker.
•A furniture company hired a delivery man without requiring him to fill out an application or performing a background check. The employee assaulted a female customer in her home with a knife. The company was liable to the customer for negligent hiring


Are people REALLY debating whether the University of Alabama could be held legally liable for what this dumb arse did? I hope people aren't actually debating this.

The answer is no and it is nothing like these negligent hiring cases you used as an example.
Posted by logjamming
Member since Feb 2014
7833 posts
Posted on 3/30/15 at 12:50 pm to
quote:

Are people REALLY debating whether the University of Alabama could be held legally liable for what this dumb arse did? I hope people aren't actually debating this. The answer is no and it is nothing like these negligent hiring cases you used as an example.


My point was never that Saban and Battle are responsible for this act. But they should be criticized as they made the decision to bring him on despite warning signs (hell, even LSU passed on him, that should tell you something).

The question that I raised (which apparently was misunderstood by your Alabama brethren coachcrisp) was that the Northwestern Univ. suit alleges that these athletes should be treated as employees. If that ever happens, the university opens itself up to civil liability depending on the circumstances.

For example, a university can be liable if a student is assaulted or raped in a dormitory if they don't have adequate security or are negligent in providing a safe place for students to live.

An employer is liable when they give someone a company car and the person goes out, gets drunk, and hits someone in it.

Hypothetically, if Taylor was an employee of Alabama (again, hypothetically and according to what the NW lawsuit alleged), he would be a state employee, brought in by the decision of the state's two most powerful public figures, despite obvious risks, and housed in an off campus apartment paid for by the state.
This post was edited on 3/30/15 at 12:51 pm
Posted by IT_Dawg
Georgia
Member since Oct 2012
21863 posts
Posted on 3/30/15 at 12:55 pm to
quote:

Are people REALLY debating whether the University of Alabama could be held legally liable for what this dumb arse did?


you jumped in mid conversation. I would absolutely file a lawsuit against the University if I were the girls father. Through the lawsuit, I would ensure that every step of his student application and the process it went through, were investigated. The lawsuit would stipulate that the University knowingly brought a threat to the community in order to enhance the performance of their athletic team. This would get settled for high 6 or low 7 figures by the school....easily. School settles and everything goes away.

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