General Considerations Flashcards

1
Q

To establish a prima facie case for any intentional tort, P must prove:

A

(1) Act by D
(2) Intent by D
(3) Causation of result to P from D’s act

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2
Q

Act by D

A
  • Act required is a voluntary movement by D
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3
Q

Intent

A

(1) D must have intent to bring about forbidden consequences that are basis of the tort.
(2) D does not need to intend specific injury that results.

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4
Q

Transferred Intent

A
  • Transferred intent doctrine: applies when D intends to commit a tort against one person but instead:
    (1) Commits a different tort against that person
    (2) Commits same tort as intended but against different person OR
    (3) Commits a different tort against a different person
  • Intent to commit a certain tort against one person is transferred to tort actually committed/person actually injured for purposes of establishing a prima facie case.
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5
Q

Limitations on Use of Transferred Intent - BAFTT

A
  • Transferred intent may be invoked only if both the tort intended and the tort that results are one of the following:
    (1) Assault
    (2) Battery
    (3) False imprisonment
    (4) Trespass to land
    (5) Trespass to chattels
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6
Q

Tip:

A

Everyone is “capable” of intent. Incapacity is not a good defense. Thus, young children and persons who are mentally incompetent will be liable for their intentional torts.

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7
Q

Causation

A
  • The result must have been legally caused by the D’s act or something set in motion by the D.
  • Causation is satisfied if the D’s conduct was a substantial factor in bringing about the injury.
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