Tort Flashcards
Types of duty to care (2)
- Established
- Novel
Criteria for establishing novel duty to care
- Foreseeabiliy
- Proximity
- Fair, just and reasonable
What are the exceptions to lack of a general duty to act?
- Special relationship (parent-child)
- Control (police-arrested person)
- Actions of third parties under the defendant’s control or responsibility (parents over children)
- Rescue situations (i.e., not to make the situation any worse)
What is the standard for establishing a breach of duty to care?
Reasonable care (i.e., care expected from a reasonable person in the defendant’s position; the test is objective and impersonal)
What is the standard for establishing a breach of duty to care for skilled professionals?
Whether the defendant acted in accordance with a responsible body or professional opinion.
What is the standard for establishing a breach of duty to care for children?
A reasonable child of the same age.
What are the criteria for the assessment whether the defendant’s conduct fell below a reasonable standard of care?
Magnitude of the risk: [1] likelihood of harm and [2] seriousness of potential harm (i.e., how likely and how serious)
vs.
Practicability of precautions
vs.
Social utility
Res Ipsa Loquitur
- There is an absence of any explanation of how the incident happened.
- The ‘thing’ that caused the accident must have been under the control of the defendant.
- The accident must be such as would not normally happen if proper care had been taken.
What is the test for establishing “causation in fact”?
‘But for’ (the defendant’s breach of duty).
What is the standard of proof for the “but for” test?
Balance of probabilities (i.e., more likely than not).
What is the standard for determining whether an intervening act will break the chain of causation?
Whether the act was reasonably foreseeable.
When can the claimant’s own act break the chain of causation?
When the claimant has acted entirely unreasonably.
Can a natural event break the chain of causation?
Yes.
Why “remoteness of damage” is being assessed in the context of causation?
The defendant will not be liable if the damage is too remote a consequence of the defendant’s act.
What is the standard for determining remoteness of damage?
Reasonable foreseeability