8 - TORT - Psychiatric Flashcards
What are the basic requirements for claims for psychiatric harm?
- Suffered from a medically recognised psychiatric illness or
- shock induced physical condition
2. Categorise claimant
What is not sufficient to prove a medically recognised psych illness (for psych harm claims)?
- Grief
- Isolated flashbacks
- Fear
- Distress
What are the different categories of claimant?
- Actual Victim
- Primary Victim: someone caught up in incident but escapes physical injury, but suffers psych harm due to reasonable fear for their own safety
- Secondary Victim: not caught up in incident & no physical harm, but suffer psych harm due to fear for someone elseβs safety
- Beyond primary & secondary victims: where D assumed responsibility to ensure C avoids reasonably foreseeable psych harm
What are the requirements for a primary victim?
- does not suffer physical harm
- involved in the traumatic event and in the danger zone π₯
- reasonable fear for their own physical safety caused psychiatric harm π±π€ͺ
- Psychiatric harm must be shock-induced β‘οΈπ€ͺ
What is the DoC for primary victims
- D.o.C if D reasonably must have foreseen the risk of physical injury
Does D need to have reasonably foreseen psychiatric injury for primary victim?
No - reasonable foresee physical injury is enough
What are the cases on primary victims?
- D crashed through wall of pregnant barmaidβs pub - feared for physical safety so primary victim π€°π»π
- passenger in a car crash, unharmed but caused a worsening of mental illness - primary victim ππ₯
- firefighter sought to help colleagues in a burning building - at risk therefore primary victim. π¨βππ₯
Who is a secondary victim?
- not in danger zone
- fears for someone elseβs safety
What are the requirements for a secondary victim?
- Psych harm reasonably foreseeable in person of ordinary fortitude in same circumstances (note: diff to primary which only requires physical harm)
π§ππ€ͺ - Proximity of relationship between C & victim: one of close ties & affection; rebuttably presumed for parent/child; husband/wife & engaged couples π¨βπ©βπ§βπ¦
- Proximity in time & space: must be presence at scene/immediate aftermath & must see/hear it π°οΈπͺ
- Injury result of sudden shock β‘οΈ
- Fair, just & reasonable βοΈπ§ββοΈ
What are the cases for the secondary victim?
- Man on rescue boat for oil rig disaster at a safe distance. Not proximate π’οΈπ£
- Woman saw mild aftermath of crash and miscarried. not foreseeable that person of a normal fortitude would suffer. π€°ππ€ͺ
- saw aftermath of crash of family 2 hrs afterwards
- negligent medical treatment led to death of baby over 36 hrs - considered a series of sudden events. Sudden shock
πΆπ§ββοΈπβ οΈβ - father saw son in intensive care over 2 weeks and gradually realised negligent medical treatment. Not sudden shock
πΆπ§ββοΈππ°οΈβ οΈβ - D in accident of his own making, father fire officer responded. Cannot claim where D is the object of affection.
π§βπππ₯πΆβ
What are occupational stress claims?
Pysch harm caused by work stress:
1. Psych harm reasonably foreseeable to employer
2. Foreseeability depends on relationship between Cβs characteristics & employerβs requirements (nature of work, signs of stress, size/scope of business/availability of resources)