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The evidence at trial favored Hotchkiss, and the jury's verdict was "unjust and irrational, " they wrote.
WSJ: Conn. school challenges $41.7M jury verdict
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Hotchkiss officials said they remain very saddened by Munn's illness and hope for improvements to her health.
WSJ: Conn. student disabled on school trip wins $41.7M
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"Hotchkiss failed to take basic safety precautions to protect the minor children in its care, " Munn's attorney Antonio Ponvert III said.
WSJ: Conn. student disabled on school trip wins $41.7M
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Hotchkiss argues that Munn failed to provide sufficient evidence for the jury to support her claim that she was infected at Mt.
WSJ: Conn. school challenges $41.7M jury verdict
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The federal jury ruled in March in favor of Cara Munn in her lawsuit against The Hotchkiss School, a private school in Lakeville.
WSJ: Conn. school challenges $41.7M jury verdict
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The federal jury in Bridgeport ruled in favor of Cara Munn, 20, in her lawsuit against The Hotchkiss School, a private school in Lakeville.
WSJ: Conn. student disabled on school trip wins $41.7M
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We knew Neil Hotchkiss and Cora Lee Brower and Harold Oak.
NPR: Excerpt: 'Then We Came to the End'
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Munn, of New York City, was a ninth-grader at Hotchkiss when she joined a school-supervised trip to China during the summer of 2007, according to her lawsuit.
WSJ: Conn. student disabled on school trip wins $41.7M
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Historically, Hotchkiss students have undertaken study, service projects and travel in the United States and throughout the world and derived great benefit from the opportunities, the school said.
WSJ: Conn. student disabled on school trip wins $41.7M
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Hotchkiss also objected to jury instructions on foreseeing the risk, saying the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention did not identify TBE as a foreseeable risk to travelers to China.
WSJ: Conn. school challenges $41.7M jury verdict
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Hotchkiss argued that Munn's parents had the same opportunity to assess the risk as the school, but Hotchkiss was prevented from showing it met its duty to warn the parents about the risks.
WSJ: Conn. school challenges $41.7M jury verdict