CA Judge Allows Paralyzed Player’s Claim Against Pop Warner to Continue

Donnovan Hill, 13 years old, was paralyzed playing Pop Warner tackle football in 2011. He is now suing Pop Warner for gross negligence. Donnovan claims he was taught to lead with his head when tackling. This type of tackling allegedly caused the injury to his neck. He is now a quadriplegic with minimal use of his arms.

Donnovan Hill, 13 years old, was paralyzed playing Pop Warner tackle football in 2011. He is now suing Pop Warner for gross negligence. Donnovan claims he was taught to lead with his head when tackling. This type of tackling allegedly caused the injury to his neck. He is now a quadriplegic with minimal use of his arms.

Is this the beginning of the end for youth tackle football? It certainly could be.

A cultural sea change appears to be happening regarding our country’s true national pastime.

In what may be considered a major shift in legal liability, “a California judge has ruled that a teenage football player who was paralyzed by an on-field hit can proceed to trial against the Pop Warner organization and the coaches he alleges encouraged him to tackle in a dangerous, head-first manner.”

Wow!

Football is at a cross-roads.  Everywhere you look people are talking about and evaluating the cost-benefit of playing tackle football.  Even Will Smith and his new movie Concussion is getting in on the discussion.

“The decision represents a blow to Pop Warner, which had argued that the lawsuit should be dismissed because the mother of Donnovan Hill signed a pre-participation waiver acknowledging that football is a sport that could cause serious injuries. Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Frederick Shaller rejected that defense, writing last Wednesday that the waiver does not cover gross negligence.”

Shaller set a court date for Tuesday, when Pop Warner and the coaches will have the opportunity to challenge the summary judgment ruling, which clears the way for the lawsuit to head to trial in April.

The coaches face a claim of gross negligence for allegedly teaching Hill to tackle with his head. On his Lakewood, Calif., team, Hill, then 13, used that technique in the Southern California championship game in 2011, as he did in other games. He is now a quadriplegic, with minimal use of his arms.

Shaller also declined to absolve of responsibility the national office of Pop Warner, which touts itself as committed to safety but allowed Hill to be coached by volunteers with no training in the organization’s preferred technique. Then-head coach Sal Hernandez, a barber, told Outside the Lines in 2013 that he completed the required training, but in a deposition he later admitted he never took the online modules. None of the administrators at the local, regional or national level noticed or took action against him.

“What’s striking is how little Pop Warner does behind the scenes to meet its promises,” said Rob Carey, lawyer for Hill and his mother, Crystal Dixon. “They’re hosting a combat sport with little kids, and not doing anything they say they’re doing to protect them. Nobody’s enforcing the safety rules, nobody’s checking on safety certification, and there’s no process in place to identify inefficiencies in safety training. There are no penalties for non-compliance, and no structure to resolve problems. That’s all on Pop Warner national. That’s what they’re supposed to do, provide systems that protect children.”

Lawyers representing Pop Warner and the coaches did not respond to requests for comment. In filings, they argue that Hill must show the coaches meant to cause the injuries or that their conduct was reckless.

Doug Abrams, a University of Missouri law professor, said the ruling is significant in that it holds a national youth sport organization accountable for a failure of process in protecting against serious injury at the community level.

“It should have the effect of encouraging more coaches to get trained,” he said. “We don’t live in the 1970s anymore, particularly in a sport like football where you have concussions. Cases like this are going to make governing bodies more attuned to promoting certification classes and refresher courses and providing greater oversight than what Pop Warner showed here. Sometimes it takes something like this to wake people up.”

Abrams said the ruling will encourage Pop Warner to settle the suit. But Carey said the organization is “vastly underinsured,” with just $2 million on its liability policy. Hill could ask for more than $10 million at trial because of his long-term medical care needs, Carey said, adding that if he wins a large jury award, Hill could potentially receive all assets of the national office of Pop Warner, the nation’s oldest youth sports organization.

“Unless Pop Warner can figure out a funding mechanism, that’ll be Donnovan’s only remedy,” he said.

Shaller’s ruling adds to the troubles for Pop Warner, which has been beset by falling participation and legal challenges on multiple fronts. In February, a Wisconsin family whose son committed suicide at age 25 and was later found to have Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, a degenerative brain disease, sued Pop Warner for allegedly failing to warn players about, and protect them from, the dangers of head trauma.

Pop Warner also faces a class-action claim by Hill’s mother, Dixon, on behalf of all parents in California who signed their child up for Pop Warner teams. Dixon claims Pop Warner made false statements about the relative safety of the sport. Carey said the organization hurt itself further by claiming on its website that, even after Hill was hurt, it has never had a catastrophic head or neck injury. Asked in his September 2015 deposition why his organization did that, Pop Warner executive director Jon Butler said, “There’s no good answer other than you don’t want to advertise the negative.”

This story – and stories like this – are far from over.

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