Waivers raise the standard from negligence to actual malice. That means you have to prove that they intentionally--and maliciously--did something wrong. That's a very high bar short of them confessing to the deed.
Waivers raise the standard from negligence to actual malice. That means you have to prove that they intentionally--and maliciously--did something wrong. That's a very high bar short of them confessing to the deed.
Pretty sure that's not true. Like I said, medical malpractice is big business. If it was only actual malice there's no way it would be that big.
Pretty sure that's not true. Like I said, medical malpractice is big business. If it was only actual malice there's no way it would be that big.
(post is archived)