Damage Flashcards
Introduction
- C can claim for foreseeable personal/psychiatric injury or damage to property.
- Causation and remoteness need to be considered.
Factual causation
But for test
But for test:
-But for Ds breach the damage would not have occurred. If it would have
happened anyway, there is no factual causation.
-Barnett: the man would have died regardless of the doctor’s failure to treat
him so there was no factual causation.
Multiple Causes
-If other factors could have caused the result, D will only be liable if C can
prove D’s breach was the more than likely cause of the damage.
-Wilsher v Essex AHA: five factors may have caused Cs blindness so there was
no link between Ds actions and the damage.
Legal Causation
Remoteness
- Legal causation applies the test of remoteness.
-This means the damage C suffered must not be too remote from Ds actions, i.e. the damage was reasonably foreseeable by D otherwise it cannot be
attributed to him.
-The Wagon Mound: Ds ship leaked oil which spread a distance across the water where C was welding. A spark caused the oil to set alight and damage Cs wharf. This was not reasonably foreseeable by D and therefore too remote.
Extent of damage
- Even if the extent (severity) of damage was unforeseeable, as long as some
related type of injury could be foreseen, then the damage will not be too
remote, and D will still be liable. - Bradford v Robinson Rentals: the extent of injury (frost-bite) was unforeseeable, however, some cold related injury was reasonably foreseeable after C had to drive a van in very cold weather without heating and thus the frost bite was not too remote.
Egg shell skull
Intervening acts will break the chain of causation unless the Egg Shell Skull Rule applies
- D must take C/property as found and will be liable for the end result if his negligent act caused damage that led to it.
- This also applies to rare/expensive property.
Egg shell skull
Cases
- Smith v Leech Brain: C suffered a minor burn which developed into cancer. As D was responsible for the minor injury to C, he was also liable for the cancer.
- Corr v IBC Vehicles: C suffered a severe head injury at work. This brought on PTSD which led to deep depression (C did not have this before) and to C then committing suicide. D was liable for the initial injury and also for the suicide because there was no other cause of the depression and the chain did not break.