Lawsuit against coroner after death of Indigenous child should proceed appeal court
Ontarioâs top court says a lawsuit filed by the family of a four-year-old Indigenous boy against the coroner tasked with investigating his death should be allowed to proceed.
In a unanimous decision released this week, the Court of Appeal for Ontario says the motion judge erred in analyzing two of the grounds of the lawsuit and should not have dismissed the claim before trial.
Read more: Coroner role before Ontarioâs top court after strep throat death of Indigenous child
The three-judge appeal panel says the lawsuit should be permitted to go ahead on allegations of misfeasance of public office and breach of charter rights.
The lawsuit was launched by the family of Brody Meekis, who died in the remote Sandy Lake First Nation in northwestern Ontario of complications from strep throat in May 2014.
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It targets the investigating coroner, his superiors and the province.
Court has heard nurses at the communityâs nursing station had refused to give Brody an appointment for days, and instead told his mother to give him Tylenol.
After Brodyâs death, the coroner did not go to Sandy Lake to investigate in person, nor did he interview the boyâs family or the nurses, despite guidelines on the matter.
Read more: More needs to be done to protect kids in Ontarioâs child welfare system: Coroner
Court heard he did, however, ask local police to look into possible drug or alcohol abuse in the family.
A lower court threw out the case in April 2019 before it went to trial, ruling that it had no reasonable chance of success. It found the coroner had acted within his discretion and was not under any legal obligation to attend in person.
The family appealed that ruling.
© 2021 The Canadian Press
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