Sepaugh v. Lagrone
300 S.W.3d 328 (2009)
Legal Analysis
Legal analysis from Dean's Law Dictionary will be displayed here.
Nature Of The Case
This section contains the nature of the case and procedural background.
Facts
Frank was the only child of a marriage between M and F that ended in a contentious divorce. M was awarded sole managing conservatorship while F was named possessory conservator and awarded visitation rights. F remarried and had two more sons, Cole and Sam. Sam and Cole were living with f in a two-story, four-bedroom house. Frank lived with M, subject to F’s visitation rights. A fire occurred during the early morning hours of December 24, 2002--Christmas Eve. Frank was spending the Christmas holidays with F and his younger half-brothers. John Overby, another boy, and friend of Cole and Sam was also spending the night. Frank, Cole, and Overby stayed upstairs, while Sam fell asleep downstairs in F's room. F was awakened by the fire and he and Sam managed to escape the burning dwelling through a window. Frank, Cole, and Overby all perished in the fire. M sued F for damages under the wrongful death and survivorship statutes. F raised parental immunity as an affirmative defense. The district court granted F's motion and rendered judgment that M take nothing on her claims. M appealed. M claims that parental immunity, as a matter of law, does not bar her claims because they are predicated on F's breach of a duty imposed by city ordinance to have smoke and fire detectors rather than the sort of discretionary parenting decision that parental immunity protects.
Issues
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Holding & Decision
The court's holding and decision will be displayed here.
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