Final Countdown Flashcards
What are the elements of negligence? (Feldman) (Themis)
The elements of negligence are duty, breach, causation (both actual and proximate), and damages.
How do you establish duty? (Themis)
Defendants owe foreseeable plaintiffs a duty to exercise reasonable care in conduct that risks physical harm. (30)
Do people usually have a duty to act?
No.
What are the exceptions to the no duty to act rule? (Feldman)
The exceptions of the no duty to act rule are assumed duty, custody, and control.
What is assumed duty? (Feldman)
In assumed duty cases, defendants are held to have duties to act – to rescue or protect persons whose peril they are not legally responsible for creating – because they have deliberately or inadvertently brought that responsibility upon themselves.
What is custody? (Feldman)
Custody cases involve an exception to the “no duty to act” rule justified by the dependence of the person in custody on the care and protection of the party with custody.
What is a landowner’s duty to invitees? (Feldman)
Landowners owe invitees a duty to exercise reasonable care to keep
the premises in a reasonably safe condition.
What is a landowner’s duty to licensees? (Feldman)
A possessor of land is liable for harm to a child trespasser caused by an artificial condition if the possessor knows or has reason to know that children are likely to trespass near the condition, the possessor knows or has reason to know that the condition causes an unreasonable risk of serious injury to child trespassers, the children because of their youth do not discover the condition or recognize the risk involved, the utility of the condition to the possessor and the cost of eliminating the danger are slight compared to the risk to child trespassers, and the possessor fails to exercise reasonable care in eliminating the danger or in protecting the child trespassers.
What is a landowner’s duty to trespassers? (Feldman)
The person in possession of the property has a duty “not to do any
willful or wanton or aggressive act with respect to [a trespasser’s] safety.” This duty has been interpreted to include the duty to not maintain “traps,” which are generally defined as “hidden dangers intentionally placed
to injure [trespassers]
What is a landowner’s duty to a child trespasser? (Feldman)
Due care must be exercised to protect child trespassers against attractive nuisances.
What makes a nuisance attractive? (Feldman)
An artificial condition upon the land is an attractive nuisance if “(a) the place where the condition exists is one upon which the possessor knows or has reason to know that children are likely to trespass, and (b) the condition is one which the possessor knows or has reason to know and which he realizes or should realize will involve an unreasonable risk of death or serious bodily harm to such children, and (c) the children because of their youth do not discover the condition or realize the risk involved in intermeddling with it or incoming within the area made dangerous by it, and (d) the utility to the possessor of maintaining the condition and the burden of eliminating the danger are slight as compared with the risk to children involved, and (e) the possessor fails to exercise reasonable care to eliminate the danger or otherwise to protect the children.” (481)
Are landowner’s able to keep open and obvious risks? (Feldman)
Yes, but if they are unreasonable they may be required to eliminate the risk.
How do you establish a breach of duty? (Feldman)
BPL Formula, ARP Standard, or Customary standard for the industry.
What is negligence per se? (Feldman)
A. The statute must be a safety statute (contrast the skating rink case [Pelkey] with the liquor case [Schooley]
B. directed against the kind of injury that occurred (contrast being pinned by a moving
car with being harmed by fire or explosion [De Ponzia]), and
C. for the benefit of the class of persons of which the plaintiff is a member (see the fire
code case [Snapp]).
Safety Statute
Against the Kind of Injury
For the benefit of the persons being injured
What is res ipsa loquitor? (Feldman)
- The accident must be of a kind that ordinarily does not occur in the absence of someone’s negligence. RIL permits the use of general evidence to establish the specific negligence of the defendant. (Not Ordinary)
- It must be caused by an agency or instrumentality within the exclusive control of the defendant. Exclusive control may involve either physical possession or legal responsibility (ownership of the plane in Newing). (Defendant in control?)
- It must not have been due to any voluntary act or contribution – i.e., causal precipitation – on the part of the plaintiff. (Plaintiff contribution?
Doesn’t happen without fault
Defendant in exclusive control
Plaintiff did not contribute
What do you need to prove for the causation element of negligence?
Actual and proximate cause.
What are the ways you can establish actual causation?
Actual causation can be established using the but-for test, the substantial factor test, joint liability, alternative causation, and loss of chance.
What is the but-for test for determining actual causation? (Feldman)
When we have a single negligent injurer, we ask “but for the defendant’s breach of
their duty of care, would the plaintiff have suffered the same injury?” This can also
be stated “in the absence of the defendant’s breach of their duty of care, would the plaintiff have suffered the same injury?” If the answer is “yes,” then the defendant’s breach is not the “but for” cause of the harm.
What is the substantial factor test for determining actual causation? (Q)
Under the substantial factor test, each defendant’s negligence can be considered an actual cause of the harm if that defendant’s negligence was a substantial factor in the injury. It is not necessary that either act of negligence be the sole cause of the harm, as long as each act of negligence played a significant role in bringing the harm about.
What is the loss of chance doctrine? (Feldman)
The loss of chance doctrine states that the defendant’s malpractice increases the plaintiff’s chance of suffering some harm (e.g., death) from a preexisting condition or disease. There is only one breach of duty, but the harm that it causes is hard to distinguish from the harm inflicted by the preexisting condition or disease. In other words, either the breach or the background risk may have caused plaintiff’s injury; either cause is sufficient to cause some such injuries and neither is necessary to cause any particular injury.
What is joint liability? (Feldman)
Because each and both A’s and B’s negligence together is the “but for” cause of the injury and the harm is indivisible, each wrongdoer is severally liable for the whole harm, and both are jointly liable for the whole harm
What is alternative liability? (Feldman)
Alternative liability is the court shifts the burden of proof to the defendants: each defendant must come forward with evidence that the shot which struck the plaintiff was not fired from their gun.
What is the purpose of alternative liability? (Feldman)
The purpose of alternative liability is: (1) if we don’t shift the burden of proof we confer a windfall benefit on a negligent defendant at the expense of an innocent plaintiff and (2) each defendant is in the best position to exculpate
themself.
What is the doctrine of joint and several liability? (Feldman)
The doctrine of joint-and-several liability means that each defendant contributing to the same harm is liable to [the victim] for the whole amount of recoverable damages.
What is contribution? (Feldman)
Contribution is a right that exists between or among two persons who are jointly and severally liable upon the same indivisible claim for the same injury, death, or harm, whether or not judgment has been recovered against all or any of them.
What is indemnity? (Feldman)
Indemnity is also a right that exists between or among parties liable to the
same victim for an indivisible harm. Unlike contribution, which is an equitable sharing of the loss, indemnification is a shifting of the entire loss from one tortfeasor to another, either (a) by prior agreement or (b) by operation of law based on equitable considerations such as “where one party has primary or greater liability or duty which justly requires [them] to bear the whole of the burden as between the parties.”
What is proportionate liability? (Feldman)
Proportionate liability means that each defendant contributing to the same harm is liable to the victim only in proportion to their
tortious responsibility for the victim’s injury.
What two tests are used to determine proximate cause? (Feldman)
The foreseeability and the hindsight/directness tests.
What is the purpose of the proximate cause doctrine? (Feldman)
The effect of proximate cause doctrine is to cut off responsibility for consequences at some point, even though the consequences would not have happened but for the tortious conduct of the defendant.