Warrigal
SF VIP
- Location
- Sydney, Australia
I am gobsmacked!
Aunt sues 12-year-old nephew for $173,000 for accidentally breaking her wrist while greeting her
October 14, 2015 6:15am
Network WritersNews Corp Australia Network
![]()
Bizarre ... Jennifer Connell is suing her 12-year-old nephew for accidentally breaking her wrist. Picture: Facebook
AN aunt is suing her 12-year-old nephew who accidentally broke her wrist while greeting her — because she now struggles to hold a plate of canapés. Jennifer Connell, 54, claims she fell and hurt herself when Sean Tarala, excited to see her, leapt into her arms at his eighth birthday party four years ago.
Despite admitting she loves the youngster, who has always been “very loving, sensitive” toward her, the New Yorker wants him to cough up $US127,000 ($173,000) in damages.
“I live in Manhattan in a third-floor walk-up so it has been very difficult. And we all know how crowded it is in Manhattan,” she told a Connecticut court on Friday. “I was at a party recently, and it was difficult to hold my hors d’oeuvre plate.”
Connecticut Post reported Sean, whose mother died last year, looked confused in court as he sat beside his dad, Michael Tarala.
![]()
Scene ... Jennifer Connell was injured at the Connecticut home of her nephew. Picture: Googlemaps
The court heard Connell attended Sean’s birthday party at his Connecticut home on March 18, 2011. When the pre-teen saw his aunt, he ran toward her, exclaiming, “Aunty Jen, Aunty Jen.”
“All of a sudden he was there in the air, I had to catch him and we tumbled onto the ground,” Connell, who doesn’t have children, testified. “I remember him shouting, ‘Aunty Jen, I love you,’ and there he was flying at me.”
The human resources manager said she didn’t complain about her injury at the time because she didn’t want to upset Sean. But now she claims her life has been turned upside down.
“The injuries, losses and harms to the plaintiff were caused by the negligence and carelessness of the minor defendant, in that a reasonable eight-year-old under those circumstances would know or should have known that a forceful greeting such as the one delivered by the defendant to the plaintiff could cause the harms and losses suffered by the plaintiff,” Connell’s bizarre lawsuit claims.
A six-member Superior Court jury will decide on the lawsuit.
http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/wo...ile-greeting-her/story-fni0xs61-1227568194734