Delta appeals roadside death lawsuit - Action News
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British Columbia

Delta appeals roadside death lawsuit

The Corporation of Delta is seeking a dismissal in a lawsuit that could find it partially liable for the death of a four-year-old girl who was killed in a car crash in 2008.
Alexa Middelaer, 4, died when hit by a car in Delta, B.C., in 2008. (CBC)

The Corporation of Delta is seeking a dismissal in a lawsuit that could find it partially liable for the death of a four-year-old girl who was killed in a car crash in 2008.

Alexa Middlelaer died after she washit by impaired driver Carol Berneras she was feeding a horse in a field by the side of a road.

Her parents are suing Berner, Delta andthe ministry of transportation.

Alexa Middelaer's parents have filed a civil lawsuit naming among others the Corporation of Delta. (CBC)

The Middlelaers allege that the municipality is partially responsible because an engineering report they commissioned suggests that speed bumps on the rural road were too close together, and could have been a factor in the crash.

A provincial court judge has ruled that the lawsuit should proceed, but Delta has applied to the B.C. Court of Appeal seeking to be dismissed from the civil lawsuit.

Delta's lawyer Eileen Vanderburgh says the two speed bumps on the road where Middelaer was killed are appropriate and properly set apart from each other.

She says Delta's responsibility is to make roads safe for average drivers, not dangerous ones.

After the death of their daughter, the Middelaers have become outspoken activists against impaired driving.

Berner wassentenced to two-and-a-half yearsin prison for the deadly crash. She recently began to serve her sentence after her second appeal was dismissed.

With files from the CBCs Terry Donnelly