Supreme Court hears arguments for civil case in preschool
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murders
Lolita Harper
California Supreme Court judges heard arguments on Wednesday morning
about a civil lawsuit filed by the parents of two toddlers who died
at a preschool after a man intentionally ran them over with his car
five years ago.
The case is before the Supreme Court to decide if the Wiener and
Soto families, who lost children on that horrific day, have a
legitimate civil case against Southcoast Early Childhood Learning
Center, where the children were killed, and should be heard. The case
was thrown out of a lower court.
The proceeding took about an hour, said Ron Harris, whose Los
Angeles-based law firm Harris & Green represents the child-care
center. The information now lies with the Supreme Court for a
decision. Gary Leland Green, Harris’ partner, argued the case and
called Harris briefly before boarding a plane back home.
“We thought it went well,” Harris said. “As we lawyers say, all
the ‘hard questions’ were posed to the plaintiffs. ... Whether that
means anything or not, we have yet to see.”
Harris expects the Supreme Court to make a decision within the
next 30 days. The Wieners, Sotos and their legal counsel could not be
reached for comment by press time but have always expressed
confidence in their argument.
“We will win this lawsuit,” Aaron Wiener said earlier. Wiener’s
3-year-old son, Brandon, was one of the victims. On May 3, 1999,
Steven Abrams drove his brown 1967 Cadillac through a chain-link
fence at Southcoast Early Childhood Learning Center in Costa Mesa,
killing 4-year-old Sierra Soto and Brandon Wiener, and injuring
several others. He was found guilty on Aug. 24, 2000, on two counts
of murder, seven counts of attempted murder and three counts of
causing grievous bodily injury. His insanity plea was rejected, and
he went to prison for life without the possibility of parole.
In the midst of criminal legal proceedings, the parents filed a
wrongful death lawsuit against the school and its former director
Sheryl Hawkinson, accusing them of negligence. But an Orange County
Superior Court Judge threw out that lawsuit in January 2001.
The Wiener and Soto families appealed that decision, armed with
confirmation from the U.S. Postal Service that a mail carrier ran
into the school about three years before the murders. The parents
contended in their lawsuit that the school, at Magnolia Street and
Santa Ana Avenue, could have prevented the tragedy had they taken the
necessary precautions after that incident and the appellate court
agreed -- giving the parents the right to sue the preschool.
Southcoast Childcare Centers Inc., the parent company of the Costa
Mesa preschool, appealed that decision and put it in the hands of the
state Supreme Court. If the state Supreme Court rules for the
parents, a lawsuit will commence.
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