Introduction Flashcards
Define a delict, including all of its elements.
A delict is the wrongful and culpable conduct of a person that causes another person harm. All five elements must be present:
1) act (voluntary; commission or omission; deeds or words)
2) wrongfulness (unlawfulness)
3) fault (negligent or intentional)
4) causation (factual – ‘but for’ test – and legal – sufficient causal link (non-remoteness))
5) harm (economic; non-patrimonial; pain and suffering)
Distinguish delict from breach of contract
Delict is aimed at damages, whilst breach of contract is aimed at fulfillment. Obligations in delict are not voluntarily undertaken, whereas contractual obligations are.
Distinguish delict from crime
Delict is aimed at compensating an aggrieved party, usually an individual, whilst criminal sanction is aimed at punishing a person or people for transgressing a public interest. Delict is therefore a civil wrong.