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I don't think any school system does. There are lawsuits filed all the time against schools these days.
Immunity is an exemption granted by statute to government or government authorities protecting them from a legal duty, penalty or prosecution connected with official duties. Governmental (or sovereign) immunity, protects government agencies from lawsuits unless the government agrees to be sued.
Generally the "phrase clock of legislative immunity" refers to the security or immunity of civil lawsuits against a legislative body of government, when such matters occur during their official capacity of office.
Protect the sovereignty of individual states (A+)
yes, I think so. In general, one cannot sue the government for damages/
The three types of immunity is innate immunity, adaptive immunity, and passive immunity.
The phobia of lawsuits is called Liticaphobia.
2 lawsuits
There are three special cases of immunity from tort liability. They are intrafamily immunity, governmental immunity, and charitable immunity. Intrafamily immunity is immunity from a tort action brought by an immediate family member. Governmental immunity is immunity of a governmental agency from a tort action. Charitable immunity is immunity of a charitable organization from a tort action.
If the parent has defamed, slandered or libeled the principal, the principal can sue. The media in which the activity occurs does not provide any immunity. Such lawsuits are civil causes of action to prevent just such things from happening.
mostly antiviral immunity is the result of cell mediated immunity and antibacterial immunity is result of humoral immunity
explain the difference between sovereign immunity qualified immunity charitable immunity and interspousal immunity?