Tort Law Flashcards
Tort law
Tort law provides recourse/remedy for wrong done to the plantiff or the plaintiff’s property.
Tort law is mostly common law.
Tort damages
Monetary damages that compensate
Intentional and unintentional tort
Tort law imposes a duty on persons and business agents not to intentionally or negligently injure others in society.
Assault
Threat of immediate harm or offensive contact; or action that arouses apprehension of imminent harm to a reasonable person.
Actual physical contact is unnecessary.
Battery
The actual wrong act of physically harming someone.
Unauthorized and harmful or offensive physical contact with another person.
Direct physical contact is unnecessary eg. Throwing rock
May or may not accompany assault.
False imprisonment
Total restraint on the plantiff. Without lawful justification. Depriving plantiff of liberty with no reasonable way to escape.
Need not have physical effect upon plantiff.
Balmain New Ferry Co Ltd v Robertson
False imprisonment
The ferry operated a service between Balmain and Sydney. Entry to the ferry was operated by inserting a penny in a slot in the machine. There was a sign stating ‘a fare of one penny must be paid before entering or leaving the wharf’. Robertson paid his penny to gain admission and finding out that he had just missed the ferry, he attempted to leave without paying another penny. He was stopped and forced to pay the attendants.
Held: there was no false imprisonment as Robertson had not been totally restrained. There was nothing stopping Roberson from getting on the next ferry and traveling to the other side of the harbour and getting of there.
Defamation
The publication of a statement which affects a person’s reputation in that it tends to lower him in the estimation of right-thinking members of the society generally, by making them shun or avoid him.
Defamation of character
Defamation covers:
- Slander- temporary or non permanent form eg. Speech or gesture.
- Libel- defamation in a permanent form eg. Film, newspaper, book etc.
Defamation - defences
- Justification
- Fair comment- must be matter of public interest, expression of opinion and not an assertion of fact, comment must be fair and not malicious.
- Privilege- statements in parliament and judicial proceedings.
Trespass to land
An individual or the object of an individual enters the land of another. Without a lawful excuse or permission. No intent or harm is required. No signs are required.
Negligence
The breach of a legal duty to take care which results in damage, undesired by the defendant, to the plantiff.
Unintentional wrongful act.
Ingredients of negligence
- Duty to take care
- Breach of that duty
- Consequential damage
Duty of care
The test for the existence is the ‘neighbour’ principle.
” You must take reasonable care to avoid acts or omissions which you can reasonably foresee would be likely to injure your neighbour.”
Neighbour: Person whom I can reasonably foresee will be affected by my acts/omissions.
Donoghue v Stevenson
‘neighbour’ principle
Mrs Donoghue suffered a personal injury as a result to consuming a decomposed snail infected bottle of ginger beer. She commenced a claim against the manufacturer.
Held: Her claim was successful. This case established the modern law of negligence and established the neighbour test.