New York Judge rules 6-year-old can be sued

NEW YORK,  (Reuters) – A girl can be sued over  accusations she ran over an elderly woman with her training  bicycle when she was 4 years old, a New York Supreme Court  justice has ruled. The ruling by King’s County Supreme Court Justice Paul  Wooten stems from an incident in April 2009 when Juliet  Breitman and Jacob Kohn, both aged four, struck an 87-year-old  pedestrian, Claire Menagh, with their training bikes.

Menagh underwent surgery for a fractured hip and died three  months later.
In a ruling made public late Thursday, the judge dismissed  arguments by Breitman’s lawyer that the case should be  dismissed because of her young age. He ruled that she is old  enough to be sued and the case can proceed.
The decision also will allow for the lawsuit to proceed  against the Kohn family for the incident.

“For infants above the age of 4, there is no bright-line  rule,” Wooten wrote, adding that the girl had been three months  shy of turning 5.

Wooten also disagreed with the lawyer’s assertion that  Juliet Breitman should not be held responsible because her  mother was supervising the children at the time.

“A parent’s presence alone does not give a reasonable child  carte blanche to engage in risky behavior such as running  across a street,” Wooten wrote. He added that “the term  ‘supervising’ is too vague to hold meaning here.”