Monday, December 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

$7M Award Upheld For Girl Disabled After Jumping From Moving School Bus

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Nov, 2019 07:43 PM

    TORONTO - A bus company is on the hook for a $7 million award to a girl who suffered a brain injury when she jumped from a moving vehicle in keeping with an informal last-day-of-school tradition, Ontario's top court has ruled.

     

    In rejecting most arguments from the bus company, the Court of Appeal found no issues with how the trial judge had instructed the jury in the case of Sarah Little, of Barrie, Ont., who was 13 years old when she jumped out of the rear emergency exit in June 2011.

     

    "The trial judge did not misdirect on causation, and there was ample evidence to support the jury's verdict and apportionment of liability," the Appeal Court said. "As such, the liability verdict is reasonable."

     

    The incident happened on the last day of Grade 8 when Little and other students were on their way home from their area public school. She and her twin sister had ridden the bus for years and Sarah, as a bus patroller, knew how to open the emergency doors.

     

    Evidence was that the risky practice of jumping from moving buses had become something of a tradition among graduating Grade 8 students at their school. Despite knowing how dangerous it was and despite efforts of her sister and other students to dissuade her, Little jumped from the bus before it stopped to let her off. She smashed her head on the sidewalk.

     

    Sarah cannot care for herself and will likely never live or work independently, court records show.

     

    After a four-week trial, jurors found the teen 25 per cent responsible for her own injuries, and the bus company, which now operates as Landmark Bus Lines, for the rest. In May 2018, the Superior Court jury awarded Little $7 million for her share of damages.

     

    Among other things, jurors found the company didn't follow its own policies by failing to tell schools about previously known instances of students jumping from buses on their last day.

     

    On appeal, the company called for either a new trial or a reduction in the award. It argued Justice Elizabeth Quinlan made legal errors in her instructions to jurors, who should have put more blame on Little for what happened to her.

     

    The higher court rejected the arguments. Quinlan, the court said, had clearly set out the factors that led to the teen's injuries, and jurors were aware of those. Both sides also had a hand in drafting the jury instructions and neither had objected when Quinlan delivered them, the court said.

     

    "There is no question that the jury was alive to the defence position that Ms. Little should be principally responsible for her tragic decision to jump from a moving school bus," the Appeal Court said. "In assessing Ms. Little's contributory negligence at 25 per cent, the jury rejected her argument that the (company) should bear 80 to 90 per cent of the fault."

     

    The Appeal Court did find Quinlan made a mistake in instructing the jury about whether Little had failed to lessen her pre-trial losses by having psychiatric treatment or by moving to a group home. However, the panel said the error was not material given the lack of evidence her prognosis would have been any different.

     

    The court did side with the company on one aspect: It ordered a new trial to decide whether the award to Sarah should have been reduced by the amount of statutory accident benefits she received.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Change Approach To Diagnosing Autism To Ease Wait Times, Stress: Doctor

    Change Approach To Diagnosing Autism To Ease Wait Times, Stress: Doctor
    My little guy couldn't start kindergarten because he can't access support without a diagnosis

    Change Approach To Diagnosing Autism To Ease Wait Times, Stress: Doctor

    BC Says It's First Province To Implement UN Declaration On Indigenous Rights

    BC Says It's First Province To Implement UN Declaration On Indigenous Rights
    VICTORIA - The British Columbia government says it has introduced legislation that makes it the first province to implement the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

    BC Says It's First Province To Implement UN Declaration On Indigenous Rights

    B.C. Backs Proposal For Liquefied Natural Gas Ship Refuelling Facility

    B.C. Backs Proposal For Liquefied Natural Gas Ship Refuelling Facility
    A proposal to build the first ship-to-ship liquefied natural gas marine refuelling service along the west coast of North America is getting support from the British Columbia government.

    B.C. Backs Proposal For Liquefied Natural Gas Ship Refuelling Facility

    Violent Offender Goes Missing From Vancouver Halfway House

    Vancouver Police are asking for public assistance to locate a federal offender who failed to return to his halfway house last week.

    Violent Offender Goes Missing From Vancouver Halfway House

    Three Charged In Connection With Protest Outside PPC Event In Hamilton

    Three Charged In Connection With Protest Outside PPC Event In Hamilton
    The Al Soufi family was forced to close its Toronto restaurant earlier this month after they said they received hundreds of death threats over their son Alaa Al Soufi's participation in the rally.

    Three Charged In Connection With Protest Outside PPC Event In Hamilton

    Alberta Finance Minister Says First Budget To Attack Spending, Not Services

    EDMONTON - Alberta Finance Minister Travis Toews says the first budget of the new United Conservative government will surgically attack spending but not at the expense of essential services.    

    Alberta Finance Minister Says First Budget To Attack Spending, Not Services