FINE PRINT SAVES LIVES!: THE UPS AND DOWNS OF THE “NUTTY NEGLIGENCE” TRIAL

The Glenda Dawson H.S. delegation (District 3) defending the restaurant.
By: Malcolm Hodge
Glenda Dawson High School
Austin, TX – Much of the time, when we carry out tasks that we have years of experience with, we tend to ignore the text that we consider “less important”, whether that be on the bottom of a run-of-the-mill sign-up sheet, label of a beloved food, or a wordy workplace memo. Usually this does not prove to be dangerous or have detrimental consequences, but these oversights can certainly be catastrophic.
Take this year’s trial court case, alliteratively referred to as “Nutty Negligence”. In the case, a single mother sued a restaurant for preparing a delivery meal which contained trace amounts of
peanuts (which her daughter was allergic to). The decision of the case was often contingent on the varied importance assigned to fine print; there was an addendum to the order placed on the fact that there was a small alteration to the packaging of the fatal ingredient, reading “May contain peanuts”, and the fact that an addendum was placed on the online order asking specifically not to contain peanuts. However, the fine print on the packaging had just recently begun to appear, and the note asking not to add peanut products was not placed in the “allergies” section of the order (which was placed through a third-party platform).
This morning as well as yesterday, courts have seen different verdicts from the same team, as certain delegations placed varied emphasis on many of the numerous thought-provoking points of their arguments.
Most recently at the state Capitol, the Glenda Dawson H.S. trial court team was able to absolve the restaurant of liability for the daughter’s death through a combination of clever testimonies, witty objections, and consistent examinations. This victory, however, was long-awaited. “Did we win?!”, exclaimed one shocked student. Overall, watching the litigation of “Nutty Negligence” was an invigorating, entertaining, and at-times humorous sight







