How to Sue a School District in Virginia?

Virginia’s public schools are not operated directly by the government of the state of Virginia. They are also not organized into local districts as they are in most other states.

Public schools in Virginia are organized according to special political subdivisions known as “school divisions.” So, a person would not be suing a school division in Virginia but rather suing a school division. A division in Virginia is similar to a district in other states. Each division is associated with a county, city, or incorporated town in Virginia. The governments of these local entities supply most of the funding for the schools.

This is only a matter of terminology, however. In every important respect, suing a school division would be the same as suing a school district.

The highest-ranking administrator of a school division in Virginia is its superintendent of schools. A school board oversees a school division.

As noted above, each public school is part of a division. Generally, if a person has a complaint against a school, they would be suing the division in which the school is located and not suing the school itself.

One important special procedure that should be noted by people who want to sue a school division in Virginia is the state’s special notice requirement for tort claims. An adult who wants to sue a government entity in Virginia for a tort claim must give the local governmental entity notice within 6 months of the incident that gave rise to the claim. The notice must include the time and place of the incident that resulted in the injury. Again, this applies to adults.

Children, however, or anyone suing on behalf of a child would have until a child’s 19th birthday to give this special notice. So, this special notice requirement probably would not apply in the case of a parent suing a school division for injury to a child. However, a person would not want to delay consulting a local attorney in Virginia about their complaint and any possible notice requirements and time requirements that might apply to it.

  1. Do I Need to Identify a “Cause of Action” to Sue a School Division?
  2. Do I Need to File an Administrative Complaint Before I File a Lawsuit Against a School Division in Virginia?
  3. Is the Process the Same for Suing a Private School District?
  4. Do I Need the Help of a Lawyer for My School Division Claim in Virginia?

Do I Need to Identify a “Cause of Action” to Sue a School Division?

The operations of a modern school division are complex. A person may have a wide variety of possible complaints against a school division. Some may involve the experience of students in one of its schools. Others may involve the business aspects of a division’s operations.

A cause of action is a type of claim that courts recognize as giving a person a right to a remedy that the law allows. A common remedy allowed by law is for a party who is liable for a wrong to pay money damages to the person who is harmed. Of course, if a person plans to file a lawsuit against a school division in Virginia, they must decide which cause of action fits their complaint.

Some of the causes of action that a person might assert in a lawsuit against a school division in Virginia include the following: