People in today's society are very litigious and will sue at the drop of a hat. Many times these suits are extremely frivolous and shouldn't even be going to court. It may not have been anything really.tomservo92 wrote:I just recalled that he also teaches NRA classes. I assume there is a possibility of civil lawsuit with that.
At any rate, the class is done and I have my CHL. When I renew I can go somewhere else if there are questions around the instructor. He came highly recommended and seemed very knowledgeable.
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Return to “I have a question for CHL instructors”
- Sun Jan 27, 2013 4:16 pm
- Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
- Topic: I have a question for CHL instructors
- Replies: 13
- Views: 1570
Re: I have a question for CHL instructors
- Sun Jan 27, 2013 2:13 pm
- Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
- Topic: I have a question for CHL instructors
- Replies: 13
- Views: 1570
Re: I have a question for CHL instructors
It is possible that an instructor would be subpoenaed to testify in a case where one of their students was the shooter. It is also possible than that the instructor could be named in a lawsuit as well. However, Texas law states that someone who has been found justified in using force or deadly force against another cannot be found liable for damages. The others can sue, but they will not be able to collect, so no lawyer in their right mind is gonna take a case they know they have no chance of winning.tomservo92 wrote:
Thank you!
Another question (which you may not want to answer and I'll understand): Is it common for CHL instructors to get sued when their students are involved in a shooting?
As far as is it common, self defense shootings by a CHL are not that common, and it is far more rare for a CHL to be sued, so can't answer that as there are no cases I am aware of.
- Sun Jan 27, 2013 1:41 pm
- Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
- Topic: I have a question for CHL instructors
- Replies: 13
- Views: 1570
Re: I have a question for CHL instructors
There are varied thoughts on this, but it is possible that it could be used by a prosecutor or defense attorney to try and show you were a great shot, or if you shot a bystander for some reason, and you didn't do too well on your CHL test, that you were NOT a good shot and were reckless and maybe shouldn't have fired because you can't hit a target.tomservo92 wrote:When I took my class and did the proficiency test, our instructor told us not to keep our targets nor take photos and post them to Facebook, etc. He said the reason is that if you are ever involved in a shooting, how well you scored could be used against you in a lawsuit. This came up in a discussion on another board and now I'm curious if he was right or not. Some on the other board thought it was bull.
The thing to remember is an attorney will use any and all avenues to try and prove or disprove what they need to in a case. The less you provide them that they could spin and use against you the better.