I can't tell to what extent your comment is tongue-in-cheek. But to the OP's request for advice, and with the skeletal facts presented, the honest truth is that one potential result of rejecting the professor's offer (or rejecting the offer and filing a lawsuit) could be that the OP would end up with nothing. It's possible the only recourse would be against the student.bloke wrote:...which is why it might be a good idea to sue the professor, the student, and the school. A good judge should be able to sort it out.Uncle Buck wrote:It is not at all clear to me that the university is financially responsible for the negligence of a student. It would be a different story if the student were an employee or agent of the university.
If a customer rear-ends your car in a McDonald's parking lot, can you sue McDonalds?
- The student was careless, but
- The professor was in charge of class management, yet
- The university agreed to hire the plaintiff to come on campus and perform with the ensemble.
Possible that the OP would win, too. But neither outcome is as certain as the offer on the table.




