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Private & Independent Schools
Reply to "Any experience of walking away from a school contract?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]There is a reputation issue. Since most families are relatively well off, they would prefer to pay the full year rather than going to a trial. Having said that, private schools don’t really care if the family is poor. They just want their money: https://www.washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/2025/08/08/private-school-lawsuit-sandy-springs-families/[/quote] It's a reputational issue for the schools, not for the families. SSFS sued this mother when it was on the verge of closing due to collapsing finances. It ultimately forgave the debt because of how bad the publicity was for it. But SSFS evidently didn't have a wait pool of tons of eager, full-pay families. Otherwise, it wouldn't have come close to closing. [/quote] That’s same WaPo article said it was not uncommon for schools to go after people who break their contracts, regardless of the reason: Private institutions filed at least 140 cases over the past decade seeking more than $1.6 million in debt, The Post found in a search of court databases in the District and its Maryland and Virginia suburbs. Among them: suits against the mother of a kindergartner dismissed after a week of school for “extreme incidents”; a father who signed an enrollment contract but withdrew his son ahead of the academic year because of alleged bullying; and a couple who moved out of state. Schools pointed to the contracts signed by parents, which generally state that they are binding after a spring or summer deadline, at which point they hold parents to a full year of tuition. In court paperwork and hearings, their attorneys argued that administrators relied on commitments from families while budgeting and hiring for the school year, and the loss of expected tuition put them in a bind. [/quote] years 140 cases over ten years throughout the entire metro region is a tiny amount, particularly considering the high transience of our population. To me, it shows that schools rarely sue families for tuition. I strongly suspect the overwhelming majority of schools going after families are smaller, less prestigious ones that will be legitimately damaged by the disenrollment. I would bet less than 5 (maybe even 0) involve schools like Sidwell, GDS, Maret, NCS, St. Albans, Bullis, and Potomac have ever sued a family to recover tuition. This because -- I explain again -- that a school is going to have to show that they made efforts to mitigate damages. If they can fill the seat with a full-pay family waiting in the wings, they're not going to have many or any damages. [/quote] You are insane, it’s a huge number. Most parents buy tuition insurance which covers moves and the vast majority of other no fault reasons for leaving a school. You show an incredible inability to recognize when you are wrong. It must make life difficult for you.[/quote]
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