3. Causation Flashcards

1
Q

Factual Causation: Standard Test

A

The ‘but for’ test
- But for the defendant’s breach, would the claimant’s harm not have occurred
- If answer is YES, satisfied factual causation
- If answer is NO, not satisfied

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2
Q

Who has the burden of proving factual causation? What standard?

A

Claimant, on balance of probabilities

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3
Q

What modified test will the court apply (wrt factual causation) where there are multiple, simultaneous causes

A

The Material Contribution Test
- must have a material contribution to the harm
- would fail the but for test

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4
Q

Material Increase in Risk test - when is this used

A

Cases of scientific uncertainty (like mesothelioma)
- Defendant’s actions must have led to a material increase in the risk of injury
- Same type of thing (eg dust)

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5
Q

What happens if a claimant is injured more than once?

A

If the claimant has already suffered damage, a later defendant who cases a later injury should only be liable to the extent that they make ‘the injury worse’

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6
Q

Divisible Injury: One main example, how do divisible injuries apportion damages?

A

Asbestos
- Longer the exposure, the more severe the injury
- disease can be apportioned on a time basis between different defendants (eg. employers)
- C can only obtain a % of damages from each defendant

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7
Q

Indivisible Injury with multiple defendants: how are damages given?

A
  • Court can divide blame between D’s
  • C can obtain 100% of damages from any D
  • D must claim contribution from other D’s to recoup the funds
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8
Q

Establishing Legal Causation: Key Steps

A
  1. Are there any intervening acts
  2. Is the damage ‘too remote’
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9
Q

Acts that WILL break the chain of causation

A
  • negligent (careless) acts of a 3rd party WILL break the chain if their actions are not reasonably foreseeable
  • reckless or intentional acts of a 3rd party will generally break the chain
  • C’s actions, if they are wholly unreasonable
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10
Q

Acts that WILL NOT break the chain of causation

A
  • Instinctive act of a 3rd party will not break the chain
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11
Q

Remoteness in damage: Key question

A

Is some / all of the harm suffered by the claimant too far removed from the actions of the defendant for them to be responsible

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12
Q

Basic Test: Remoteness

A

Is the TYPE of damage reasonably foreseeable

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13
Q

‘Similar in Type’ rule for Remoteness of Damage

A
  • the precise way the harm occurred does not need to be reasonably foreseeable
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14
Q

‘Egg Shell Skull’ proviso

A
  • the precise extent of the harm suffered by C does not need to be reasonably foreseeable
  • Must take victims as we find them
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