Breach Flashcards
Breach is a question for who?
Question of fact for the jury
Malfeasance
doing an illegal act
misfeasance
doing a legal act improperly
nonfeasance
failing to act
If an actor has skills or knowledge that exceed those possessed by most others,
these skills or knowledge are circumstances to be taken into account in determining whether the actor has behaved as a reasonably careful person. The standard of care usually flexes toward more care, not less, when taking into account a D’s intelligence and experience.
Sudden Emergency Rule
A person who is faced w/ a sudden or unexpected emergency that calls for immediate action is not expected to use the same accuracy of judgment as a person acting under normal circumstances who has time to think and reflect before acting. A person faced w/ a sudden emergency is required to act as a reasonably careful person placed IN A SIMILAR SITUATION. A sudden emergency will not excuse the actions of a person whose OWN NEGLIGENCE created the emergency.
Child standard of care
Child soc is that of a reasonable person of like age, intelligence, and experience under like circumstances.
Exception to child standard of care
An exception to the rule may arise when then child engages in an activity which is NORMALLY undertaken ONLY by adults, AND for which adult qualifications are required. May be held to standard of adult skill, knowledge, and competence, and no allowance may be made for his immaturity.
When negligence per se is applicable
(1) did D violate the statute?; (2) Was the statute a safety statute intended to protect against the event that occurred?; (3) was P in a class the legislature intended to protect?
Excuses for violating statute (in negligence per se)
(1) violation is REASONABLE bc of childhood, disability, or incapacitation; (2) REASONABLE CARE was exercised in TRYING to comply; (3) actor did not know and SHOULD NOT HAVE KNOWN of facts that make statute applicable; (4) violation due to CONFUSING way requirements are presented to public; (5) compliance w/ statute would involve GREATER RISK of harm to actor or others than noncompliance.
Negligence per se majority rule
If P can show the statute provides the soc and it was violated, then duty and breach are proven and there is no factual question for the jury UNLESS D provides an excuse. I.e. there is a directed verdict on breach.
Generally, who decides standard of care?
Normally for the jury bc we want the soc to represent current society and its customs.
When does a judge decide standard of care?
(1) when judge determines no reasonable jury could find otherwise; (2) it is a recurring fact pattern (no need to waste judicial resources); (3) there are reasons of normative reasonableness, so that the judge wants to prevent the jury from making a mistake.
Baseball rule SOC
Owners need to exercise reasonable care by (1) screening most dangerous section of the field and (2) the screening must be sufficient for those spectators reasonably anticipated to have access to the protected seating. This is an example of a court making up a SoC.
Liability per se
No excuses statutes