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QC04232015

48 The Queens Courier • April 23, 2015 FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT www.queenscourier.com Funeral Home L.L.C. – Call for a FREE Planning Guide – John A. Golden: Member of K. of C. and C*KHS; Thomas A. Golden III: Member AOH, KHS (Owner, Operators) 149-20 Northern Boulevard • Flushing • 718-359-6300 10-25 150th Street • Whitestone • 718-359-1122 36-46 Bell Boulevard • Bayside • 718-428-2210 Please Visit Our Website @ www.gleasonsfuneral.com ANTIQUES WANTED Buyer of Fine Arts Careful management of your precious estate heirlooms and buying and liquidation of your estate is our top priority. In addition to antique buying, we also can provide estate clean out services. We’re your premier antique buyers. • Antiques • Oil Paintings • Sterling Silver • Jewelry • Porcelains • Bronzes • Carved Furniture • Clocks • Bronze Statues Member of the American Society of Appraisers and the Better Business Bureau Garden City Antiques and Fine Arts, Ltd. HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID IMMEDIATELY 718-347-0900 www.gardencityantiques.com IF BUSY 516-524-6000 and Antiques for Over 30 Years Martin A. • Our Services are available in all areas • Large Parking Facilities at all Locations • Personal Service, 24 Hours a Day • Burial and Cremation Services Available • Family Owned and Operated • FDIC Insured Pre-Plan Accounts • Pre-Arrangements Available • Out of Town Service, Call Us First • Shipping Specialists Martin A. Gleason Funeral Home L.L.C.: The Preferred Choice Legally Speaking By: Scott Baron, Attorney at Law Advertorial A SECRET POLICY Q: My special-needs bus would never enter the school yard. Instead, it would stop on the street, and an employee of the bus company would make sure I got inside. One day, the employee was absent. I was left unattended in the traveling bus, for over six hours. Everyone agrees that the bus company is liable for this. What about the school? A: Traditionally, it has been the responsibility of the bus company, not the school, to check to see that all of the children have exited the bus. A school’s duty to its students is dependent on its physical custody of those students, and you never passed into that physical custody. However, suppose that, before this incident, the school had promulgated a policy, and implemented a practice, of ascertaining the whereabouts of any child who is absent from class. By virtue of this, your attorney might be able to contend that the school had assumed a duty to ensure the safe arrival of its students. On the other hand, in order for the school to be negligent in the performance of any such assumed duty, the bus company or your parents must have known of, and relied upon, the school’s performance. You or the company must have tailored your own conduct in reliance upon the school’s hypothetical policy of checking. I would imagine that, even if the school had such a policy, the school had declined to publicize it – and cannot possibly have relied on upon a policy that was secret. The law responds to changed conditions; exceptions and variations abound. Here, the information is general; always seek out competent counsel This article shall not be construed as legal advice. Copyright © 2014 Scott Baron & Associates, P.C. All rights reserved. 159-49 Cross Bay Boulevard, Howard Beach, New York 11414 1750 Central Park Avenue, Yonkers, NY 10710(718) 738-9800, (914) 337-9800, 1-866-927-4878


QC04232015
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