Torts Flashcards
Act - definition
Volitional movement by the defendant
Intent - defintion
Desire to produce the legally forbidden consequences
**Young children and persons who are mentally incompetent will be liable for their intentional torts
Transferred Intent
Applies when Defendant intends to commit a tort against one person but instead:
- Commits a different tort against that person
- Commits the same tort as intended but against a different person
OR
- Commits a different tort against a different person
** ONLY WORKS FOR
- Assault, Battery, False Imprisonment, Trespass to Land, and Trespass to chattels
Battery
- Act creating harmful or offensive contact
- Intent to bring harmful or offensive contact
- With plaintiff’s person
- Harmful = Causes actual injury, pain, or disfigurement
- Offensive = to a reasonable person
- Contact can be direct or indirect… also does not have to be instantaneous (Poisoning someone)
Assault
- Act creating reasonable apprehension
- Of immediate battery
- Intent to do the act
Reasonable apprehension
- Knowledge of harmful or offensive contact must be reasonable
- Plaintiff must be aware of the threat
o Fear or intimidation is NOT required
- P must anticipate battery!
- If D has the apparent ability to commit battery = reasonable apprehension
o Unloaded gun hypo
If P knows gun is unloaded = No Assault
If P does not know gun is unloaded = Yes Assault
If P does not know? = Yes Assault = reasonable apprehension
Immediacy
- Victim of IMMEDIATE BATTERY
- Words are NEVER enough -> must be coupled with conduct
o Words can negate reasonable apprehension and immediacy
Ex. -> D shakes their fist but states they are not going to strike to P
False Imprisonment
- Act of restraint
- P must be confined in bounded area
- Intent to do the act
Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress (IIED)
- Extreme and outrageous conduct
- Severe emotional distress
- Actual Damages!
- Intent to do the extreme conduct!
IIED bystander Cases
D’s conduct is directed at 3rd person, and the plaintiff suffers severe emotional distress because of it, the plaintiff may recover by showing either the prima facie case elements of emotional distress or that:
(1) they were present when the injury occurred
(2) the distress resulted in bodily harm or the plaintiff is a close relative, and
(3) the D knew these were facts
Trespass to Land
- Physical Invasion
- Of land
- Intent to physically enter onto the land (does not need to know)
2 Types of Invasion
- By person
o Awareness of boundary is not needed!!
Deliberate act is required
- By object
o Kicking a soccer ball onto plaintiff’s land is a trespass
o Invasion must be tangible
Land
- Includes air above/soil beneath to reasonable distance
Trespass to Chattels
Intentional interference with Plaintiff’s personal property that warrants D pay damages
- mistaken belief that they own the chattel is no defense
Types of Interference
- Intermeddling
o Directly damaging the chattel
- Dispossession
o Depriving the plaintiff of their lawful right of possession of the chattel
Small harm = Trespass to Chattels
Big harm = Conversion
Conversion
Intentional interference with Plaintiff’s personal property so serious that warrants D pay property’s full value
Acts of Conversion
- theft, wrongful transfer/detention, and substantially changing, severely damaging, or misusing a chattel
Small harm = Trespass to Chattels
Big harm = Conversion
Remedies for Conversion
- P may recover damages (FMV at time of conversion) or possession (replevin)
Consent - Defense
Express and Implied
Implied Consent
- Custom and Usage
- Body language consent
Can be liable if you you exceed your scope of consent
Cannot consent to criminal act
Protective Privileges Defenses
o Self-defense
o Defense of others
o Defense of property
Shopkeeper’s Privilege
- Reasonable belief as to the fact of theft
- Detention must be conducted in a reasonable manner
- Detention must be only for a reasonable period of time and only for the purpose of
investigation
** A shopkeeper is NOT required to notify the police in a reasonable amount of time to avoid liability for false imprisonment when detaining a suspect for shoplifting
Self-Defense
Person reasonably believes that they are being or are about to be attacked
- No duty to retreat
o Self defense not available to initial aggressor unless the other party responds to the aggressor’s nondeadly force by using deadly force
o May extend to 3rd-parties
o A reasonable mistake as to the existence of the danger is allowed
o One may use only that force that reasonably appears to be necessary to prevent the
harm (including deadly force)
o More force than necessary? -> defense is lost!
Defense of Others
o One may use force to defend another when they reasonably believe that the other
person could have used force to defend themselves
o A reasonable mistake as to whether the other person is being attacked or has a right
to defend themselves is permitted
o Defender may use as much force as they could have used in self-defense if they were
the one threatened with the injury
Defense of Property
o One may use reasonable force to prevent the commission of a tort against their
property
A request must first be made unless it would futile or dangerous
o Defense does not apply once tort has been committed
However, one may use force in hot pursuit of another who has tortiously
dispossessed the owner of their chattel because the tort is viewed as still in
progress if the defendant is in the act of fleeing
o THIS DEFENSE IS NOT AVAILABLE WHEN an individual has a privilege to enter onto the
land of another because of necessity, recapture of chattel, etc. that privilege will
supersede the privilege of the land possessor to defend their property
**NO DEADLY FORCE unless invasion of property also entails a serious threat of bodily harm
Reentry onto Land
A landowner may not use force to regain real property after being tortiously dispossessed
Most states today do not allow resort to “self-help”; one who has been wrongfully excluded from possession of real property may bring an ejectment action or other summary procedure to recover possession
Recapture of Chattels
When another’s possession began lawfully (for example, conditional sale), one may use only peaceful means to recover the chattel
An owner may use reasonable force to recapture a chattel when in “hot pursuit” of the tortfeasor
If an innocent third party has obtained the chattel, the owner is no longer privileged to use force to effect a recapture of the chattel
Defense of Necessity
A person may interfere with the real or personal property of another when it is reasonably and apparently necessary in an emergency to avoid injury from a natural or other force and when the threatened injury is substantially more serious than the invasion that is undertaken to avert it!
- Two Types
o Public Necessity
Defendant acts in emergency to protect community
* Absolute defense!
o Private Necessity
Defendant acts in emergency to protect own interests
* Limited or qualified defense
o Must pay compensatory damages
o But not liable for nominal/punitive damages
o Can remain as long as emergency continues
DEFENSE ONLY FOR PROPERTY TORTS
Negligence - 4 elements
- Duty (Standard of care)
- Breach
- Causation (Actual and proximate cause)
- Damages
Duty
- Duty of care owed to all foreseeable plaintiffs
- If D’s conduct creates an unreasonable risk of injury to persons in position of the
plaintiff, the general duty of care extends from the D to the P
Duty - Rescuers and Firefighter Rule
A rescuer is a foreseeable plaintiff when the D negligently put themselves or a 3rd person in peril - rescuers can recover damages!
o Danger invites rescue!
- Exceptions
o Firefighter Rule
Firefighters and police offices are barred by the “firefighter’s rule” from
recovering for injuries cause by the inherent risks of their jobs
Basic Standard of Care
Reasonably prudent person acting under similar circumstances
Low intelligence and retarded? -> don’t care! Still suppose to act as a reasonably prudent person!
Superior Skill or Knowledge - Standard of Care
A Defendant who has knowledge or experience superior to that of an average person is required to exercise that experience!
Hypothetical reasonably prudent person with same superior skill or knowledge!