Florida Torts Flashcards
FL Negligence > Duty
A duty of care is owed to all persons who may foreseeably be injured by the defendant’s failure to act as a reasonable person of ordinary prudence under the circumstances
Florida Negligence Law: Rear-end collisions
“presumption of negligence” on the part of the driver who rear ended the plaintiff
* duty, breach, and causation established
* ONLY NEED TO PROVE DAMAGES
Can rebut the presumption by showing one of the following:
- Lead driver made an abrupt or arbitrary lane change in a manner
a reasonable driver would not expect; - Illegal stop by lead driver; OR
- mechanical failure of car without fault of driver.
Statute of Limitations for Negligence Actions
An action based on negligence must be brought within two years.
Florida Negligence Law: Good Samaritan Statute
1) Non-Emergency Personnel vs
2) Hospitals/Emergency Physicians
Generally, there is no affirmative duty to act. However, if you do render aid, Florida’s Good Samaritan Act provides that…
1) Non-Emergency Personnel: OUTSIDE of an Emergency Room –NEGLIGENCE
“Any person who renders emergency care or treatment…
- gratuitously,
- in good faith, and
- without objection by the injured party
…will not be held liable for damages resulting from such care, as long as the person acts as an ordinary reasonably prudent person would have acted under the same or similar circumstances.”
2) Hospitals/Emergency Physicians INSIDE EMERGENCY ROOM– RECKLESSNESS
“Any hospital or emergency physician who renders emergency services (ER), will not held liable for damages as a result from such services unless acted with reckless disregard for risks to patients.”
Emergency services
- ANYTHING IN THE EMERGENCY ROOM. Not surgery 10 days later. If not in ER, regular standard for professionals.
- Does not matter how stable the Plaintiff is. They could have a papercut. As long as they are in the actual Emergency room
Standard of Care > Physicians
1. Generalists v. Specialists
2. Informed Consent
1. Physicians Negligence
- Generalists: held to local standard
- Specialists: held to national standard
2. Informed Consent
No negligence action for failure to provide informed consent may be brought against protected medical professionals if either of the following conditions is met:
The medical professional:
* 1) Acted in accordance with the accepted standard of similarly situated medical professionals (i.e., those with similar training and experience); OR
* 2) The information given was such that a reasonable individual would have a general understanding of the nature of the procedure, the risks associated with the procedure, and any alternatives (NRA); OR A patient who was not properly informed reasonably would have consented to undergo the procedure under the circumstances if the medical professional had properly provided informed consent.
Informed consent is presumed (rebuttable) if the doctor:
- Gets consent in writing and signed by the patient (or patient’s representative); and
- Provides information about NRA.
Florida Negligence Per Se: Violation of a PENAL Statute vs. Violation of a NON-PENAL Statute
Violation of PENAL Statute:
- ESTABLISHES negligence per se.
- serious, punishable, criminal statutes
Violation of OTHER Statute:
- DOES NOT ESTABLISH negligence per se,
- but it can be used as evidence of negligence
- traffic statutes, texting and driving, seatbelt ordinance
Negligent Infliction of Emotional Distress
Direct Injury Claims – we want legit, concrete, genuine claims
Florida plaintiff cannot recover for negligent infliction of emotional distress unless they suffer:
- A physical injury or physical impact (which can be relatively slight); OR
- Manifestation of injury or distress in the form of a severe and discernable physical illness, such as a heart attack.
Bystander Claims:
As in other jurisdictions, a plaintiff who witnesses physical injury negligently inflicted upon another may recover upon a showing of three proximities:
- SPATIAL proximity—be at the scene
- TEMPORAL proximity—be there in time to actually observe the injury
- RELATIONAL proximity—injured party is a close relative
Florida determines “close relatives” on a case by case basis
Also look for physical symptoms of the emotional distress caused by witnessing the accident.
Wrongful Death and Survival Actions
Florida’s Wrongful death action— Compensates the people affected by the deceased’s death
- Action brought by the personal representative of a deceased person
- Recover damages on behalf of the estate of the deceased person and survivors if negligently killed by defendant
DAMAGES Include the following:
- Loss of support;
- Loss of companionship and protection (only for a surviving spouse);
- Loss of parental companionship (only applicable if there are minor children, or adult children when there is no surviving spouse);
- Medical or funeral expenses;
- Loss of earnings from the date they were injured to the day they died, less any amount that would have been paid as support; and/or
- Loss of prospective net accumulations of the estate (reduced to present value)
Florida also allows these survivors to recover for mental pain & suffering:
* Surviving spouse;
* minor children;
* All children (including adult children), if no surviving spouse;
* Parents of a deceased minor child; and Parents of a deceased adult if there are no other survivors
Survival action: Allows claims to survive the death of the person who could bring it
- Florida allows all claims to survive a person’s death, even those for personal or intangible harms, such as defamation. (florida specific)
Recovery for Permanent Injuries to Family Members
Loss of Parental Companionship Claims
- Available when natural or adoptive parent is permanently disabled
- Claimant must be an unmarried dependent (often a minor child)
Loss of Filial Companionship or Consortium Claims
- Available to parent when child is permanently disabled
- Recovery limited to time between injury and child’s 18th birthday
Florida > Landowners
1) Trespassers
2) Invitees
3) Licensees
1) TRESPASSERS Only Liable if…
Undiscovered – (i) Uninvited entry; (ii) Undetected; and (iii) Remain undetected within 24 before the injury
* intentional misconduct causing injury
Discovered– (i) uninvited or unpermitted entry; (ii) actually detected or discovered; and (iii) Discovered within 24 hours before the injury.
- Gross negligence
- Intentional misconduct causing injury
- Failure to warn of a known dangerous condition
Becomes INVITEE (duty of reasonable care) if:
- express invitation to trespasser after discovery; or
- manifested intent to hold property open to others pursuing similar purpose
Impaired – Anyone whose faculties are impaired by alcohol (BAC > .08) or drugs
- gross negligence or intentional misconduct
Child
- Attractive nuisance doctrine applies only if he was initially lured or enticed onto the property by the attractive nuisance.
- If A child trespasses first and then discovers the attractive danger cannot apply the attractive nuisance doctrine.
2) INVITEES– Invitees are owed a duty of reasonable care.
Public Invitees
- Those who enter a property thrown open for public use (and are using it for that purpose)
- Implied representation that the property has been made safe for use
Business Invitee
- Those who enter the property to confer a benefit to the business (i.e., as a customer)
3) LICENSEES
Invited – Social guests and those with an implied invitation
* Owed a duty of reasonable care
Uninvited Licensee– Treated as DT, Those on the property for the licensee’s own convenience or pleasure, Presence is tolerated. Duty owed is the same as the duty owed to Discovered Trespassers
- Warn of known dangerous conditions
- No intentional misconduct
- No gross negligence
Medical Malpractice Procedure (ESSAYS)
Medical Malpractice Procedure
- Plaintiff must conduct a reasonable investigation for a good faith grounds for negligence claim including a written opinion from expert stating there appears to be medical negligence.
- Give 90 days’ notice before filing suit plaintiff gives notice to defendants of intent to litigate.
- Defendant is required to conduct a pre-suit investigation and respond to plaintiff.
- Then there is mandatory mediation and settlement conference or nonbinding court-ordered arbitration.
Florida Medical Malpractice Actions: Pre-suit requirements
1) Plaintiff must conduct a reasonable investigation based on good faith belief that nelgigence occurred.
- Need a written opinion from doctor in the same specialty as doctor being sued saying negligence occured.
2) Verified affadavit from medical expert simply saying that there was negligence (open/discoverable-less detailed)
3) Notice of Intent to Initiate Litigation to the defendant doctor.
- Must include (i) verified affadavit, and (ii) certain medical records.
Notice of intent pauses the SOL for the claim and starts 90 day clock for Defendant Doctors investigation (Depo’s, Roggs, etc.) After 90 days, Doctor chooses 1 of 3 options:
- Reject Claim
- Offer to Settle
- Offer to admit liability and arbitrate damages
Medical Malpractice Essay Rule
Rule: In a Florida medical malpractice action, a reasonable investigation must be conducted to determine if there are good faith grounds for a negligence claim. Good faith is shown if a claimant received a written opinion from an expert stating there appears to be medical negligence.
Modified comparative fault does NOT apply to medical malpractice cases
Statute of Limitations: Florida medical malpractice claims must be brought within two years from either the time (i) the incident giving rise to the action occurred, or (ii) the incident is discovered or should have been discovered with the exercise of due diligence. The case may NOT be commenced more than four years from the date of the incident, except when the action is brought on behalf of a minor before her eighth birthday.
Florida Defenses to Negligence: Modified Comparative Fault
You must raise affirmative defenses in your torts essays. They will be half of the points on most issues
Note: Pure Comparative Fault has been abolished and FL has now adopted Modified Comparative fault
Modified Comparative Fault
- Plaintiff’s recovery is proportionately reduced by their % of fault and recovery is completely barred if their fault EXCEEDS 50%
On all torts essays, say: Pure Comparative Fault has been abolished and FL has now adopted Modified Comparative fault
Florida Defenses to Negligence: Modified Comparative Fault (for Intoxicated Plaintiffs)
You must raise affirmative defenses on your torts essays. They will be half of the points on most issues
In FL, Plaintiff cannot recover if:
1) Blood alcohol lvl .08% or more (not breath)
2) Intoxication caused accident
3) P more than 50% at fault
Florida Defenses to Negligence: Fabre Defendant
Defendant may argue there was a third party–one not named as a defendant in the lawsuit–whose actions also contributed to the accident
* think - hit and run
Florida Defenses to Negligence: Failure to wear a seatbelt
You must raise affirmative defenses on your torts essays. They will be half of the points on most issues
Defendant has burden to show:
1) Seatbelt was available
2) Seatbelt was operational
3) Failure to use substantially contributed to injuries.
= comparative negligence
On all torts essays, say: Pure Comparative Fault has been abolished and FL has now adopted Modified Comparative fault