A more thorough article on the BC Canada case:
Parents cannot waive a child's right to sue for injuries: B.C. court
By NEAL HALL
VANCOUVER SUN
October 16, 2009 4:02 PM
METRO VANCOUVER -- A parent cannot sign away a child's right to sue
for injuries caused by negligence, a judge has ruled in what is
believed to be a precedent-setting decision.
Victor Wong of Richmond, now a 20-year-old University of B.C. student,
sued Lok's Martial Arts Centre and owner Michael Lok.
Wong claimed he suffered injuries because of the negligence of the
defendants, including Ramin Asgare Nik, who violently threw Wong to
the ground in the course of a sparring match at a Hapkido school owned
and operated by Lok's.
Wong alleged the defendants were negligent "in failing to take
preventative measures to ensure that injuries did not occur in the
course of sparring matches by taking such measures as screening
participants, instructing participants, requiring suitable protective
gear or carefully supervising matches."
Lok and the martial arts centre went to court to have the lawsuit
dismissed, arguing that Wong's mother, Yen To, signed a release,
agreeing not to make legal claims for injuries when Wong first began
taking lessons in 2001, when he was 12.
The document, titled "Conditions of membership and release," said: "It
is expressly agreed that all exercises and treatments, and use of all
facilities shall be undertaken by the student's sole risk...YOU ARE
RESPONSIBLE FOR ALL INJURIES!"
B.C. Supreme Court Justice Peter Willcock concluded that while the
Infants Act was intended by the legislature to establish the sole
means of creating contractual obligations that bind minors, "the act
does not permit a parent or guardian to bind an infant to an agreement
waiving the infant's right to bring an action in damages in tort."
The judge dismissed the defendant's application to strike the lawsuit,
but has not ruled on whether the defendants were negligent. That
matter now is set to proceed to trial on Nov. 23.
"It appears to be precedent-setting in B.C.," Wong's lawyer, Bonnie
Lepin, said Friday of the ruling. "It may well be the first [ruling of
its kind] in Canada."
She said the ruling will not affect parents signing waivers for their
children involved in sports or skiing who have accidental injuries.
The ruling, she added, only means a parent cannot sign away a child's
right to sue for injuries caused by negligence.
Lepin said her client suffered a fracture of his right arm, which
required surgery and left the young man partially disabled. His right
arm now becomes fatigued and cramped because of the injury, she said.
"He gets more time to write exams," Lepin explained about the UBC
student.
The full judgment is available online at:
http://www.courts.gov.bc.ca/jdb-txt/SC/09/13/2009BCSC1385.htm