Torts Flashcards
Last Clear Chance Doctrine
Under the last clear chance, a plaintiff can recover despite their own contributory negligence.
Under this doctrine, the person with the last clear chance to avoid an accident who fails to do so is liable for negligence. (so if other party had last clear chance to avoid the accident, they can’t use contributory negligence of other party as a defense.)
Respondeat Superior
Under the doctrine of respondeat superior, an employer can be held liable for an employee’s torts if the tort was committed within the scope of the employment.
An act will be considered to have been within the scope of the employment if it was 1) expressly authorized by the employer, or of 2) the same general nature as the employee’s job and motivated by a desire to serve the employer.
Causation
A person cannot be held liable in negligence unless the plaintiff can prove that the person was both the actual and proximate cause of the injury.
An act is an actual cause of an injury if the injury would not have occurred but for the act.
Proximate causation is a limitation on liability. The general rule of proximate cause is that the defendant is liable for all harmful results that are the normal incidents of and within the increased risk caused by his acts. Furthermore, if a particular harmful result was at all foreseeable from the defendant’s negligent conduct, the unusual manner in which the injury occurred or the unusual timing of cause and effect is irrelevant to the defendant’s liability.
Liability generally is determined by a foreseeability test. (ASK: was this personal injury to X a foreseeable result to someone in the zone of danger? Even if the exact sequence of events might not have been foreseeable, an injury to X person was)
Negligence
The prima facie case for negligence requires the plaintiff to show:
1) A duty on the part of the defendant to conform to a specific standard of conduct for the protection of the plaintiff against an unreasonable risk of injury,
2) Breach of that duty by the defendant,
3) That the breach was the actual and proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury; and
4) Damage to the plaintiff’s person or property
Duty to Provide Aid
As a general rule, no duty is imposed on a person to come to the aid of another absent a special relationship between the parties.
However, if the person gratuitously comes to the aid of the other, the actor must exercise due care in providing the assistance, and must not leave the person in a worse position than he found her.
Duty to Warn
Generally, there is no duty to prevent a third person from injuring another.
However, such a duty will be imposed when the defendant had a special relationship with the third person that gave the defendant the actual ability and authority to act (ex: psychiatrist), and the defendant knew or should have known that the third person was likely to injure the other person.
[a generalized threat will not be enough but if threat is made against a specific person, then psychiatrist had a duty to alert authorities even if it did not seem likely that the person would act on the threat]
Eggshell Skull
The well-settled rule is that a tortfeasor takes its victim as it finds her. Under the “eggshell-skull plaintiff” rule, the fact that the extent or severity of the plaintiff’s harm was not foreseeable does not relieve the defendant of liability.
If the defendant’s negligence causes an aggravation of the plaintiff’s existing physical or mental illness, the defendant is liable for the damages caused by the aggravation.
Battery
An intentional act that causes harmful or offensive contact.
The prima facie case for battery consists of:
1) an act by the defendant that brings about harmful or offensive contact to the plaintiff’s person
(Harmful contact is contact that causes pain, injury or physical discomfort. Contact is offensive if it would be considered offensive by a reasonable person and P has not consented.
2) Intent on the part of the defendant to bring about such harmful or offensive contact, and
(Intent is satisfied when the defendant acts with the desire to produce the legally forbidden consequence.)
3) Causation - There must be direct or indirect contact to plaintiff’s person. There is causation if the defendant sets in motion a force that brings about harmful or offensive contact to the plaintiff’s person. (Ex: D oils floor so P slips)
-Plaintiff does NOT need to be aware of contact to constitute battery
-P does NOT need to prove physical harm for battery. P just needs to show that the contact would be offensive to a reasonable person & that the def. had the intent to cause the contact.
Normal Duty Standard
Whenever a person engages in an activity, he is under a legal duty to act as a reasonably prudent person engaged in the same or similar activity to all foreseeable plaintiff’s in the zone of harm.
Reasonably prudent person standard requires the defendant to act as a reasonably prudent person would under the same circumstances with the same knowledge and capacity as an average person. OBJECTIVE standard.
Foreseeable plaintiff’s are persons who are in the zone of danger which is the area in which the person is reasonably at risk of suffering harm from the defendant’s conduct.
To be owed a duty, ask: are plaintiffs within the foreseeable “zone of danger” from the defendant’s activity.
Negligence & Evidence of Custom?
Evidence of custom, usage, or industry standards, while relevant, is not dispositive on the question of whether certain conduct constitutes negligence. Ultimately, the jury will need to determine whether failure to _____ constituted a breach of the duty of care owed by defendant to plaintiff.
Negligence: Standard of Care for Children
Under 5 → A child under the age of 5 is usually without the capacity to be negligent.
5-18 → Children are held to the standard of a child of like age, intelligence, and experience. (SUBJECTIVE standard, pro-defendant)
EXCEPTION for child engaged in an inherently dangerous adult activity: Reasonably prudent person standard (ex: operating motorized vehicle, car, farm equipment, tractor, jet ski)
Pure Comparative Negligence
Under the modern comparative negligence approach, fault is apportioned between parties.
The plaintiff’s percentage share of fault reduces his total damages award by that percentage.
Joint and Several Liability
When two or more defendants are found liable in tort to a plaintiff, they are generally found to be jointly and several liable. Joint and several liability means that any defendant can be required to pay the entire judgment, and then seek repayment from the other tortfeasor.
Where two or more defendant’s contribute to plaintiff’s injury, plaintiff can go after either defendant to recover for full amount. Defendant’s can then recover from each other.
Where the requirement of actual proof under these facts would result in a harsh result on an innocent victim, courts have traditionally held defendants to be jointly and severally liable for the cause-in-fact, considering the injury to be indivisible as a matter of policy. The wrongdoers, rather than the victim, should bear the burden of the impossibility of apportionment.
Negligence Per Se
A statute may establish the standard of care in a negligence case if:
1) the plaintiff is in the class intended to be protected by the statute, and 2) the statute was designed to prevent the type of harm that the plaintiff suffered.
In most jurisdictions, an unexcused violation of a statutory standard of care is negligence per se, which means that it establishes the first two prima facie elements of negligence (duty and breach of duty).
However, while violation of an applicable statute establishes a conclusive presumption of duty and breach of duty, compliance with the statute does not establish a conclusive presumption of due care. If there are unusual circumstances or increased danger beyond the minimum that the statute was designed to meet, it may be found that there is negligence in not doing more.
Indirect Cause Cases: Intervening Force
In indirect cause cases, where an intervening force combines with the defendant’s conduct to cause the plaintiff’s injury, proximate cause exists only if the defendant’s negligence causes a foreseeable harm or caused a foreseeable reaction from an intervening force.
Intervening Forces that are ALWAYS Foreseeable:
-subsequent medical malpractice
-negligence of rescuers
-“reaction” forces: natural responses or reactions to situations created by def’s conduct (ex: p drives into a crowd of ppl, ppl then stampede each other)
-subsequent disease or accident (man in car accident breaks leg, man never used crutches before now falls & breaks hip using crutches. D is liable for leg & hip)
Intervening Force NOT Always Foreseeable → Acts of God. This is an independent intervening force that will only be considered foreseeable if the def’s conduct significantly increased the risk of harm from that force
Superseding Force
Intervening events that produce a harm outside the scope of what one would normally anticipate from the defendant’s negligence are generally deemed unforeseeable and superseding. Such a superseding event will breach the chain of causation and relieve the defendant of liability.
Abnormally Dangerous Activity
An activity that involves substantial risk of serious harm to people or property even when reasonable care is exercised AND activity is NOT a matter of common usage in the community.
Whether an activity is abnormally dangerous is a question of law that the court can decide on a motion for directed verdict.
Ex’s of Commonly Dangerous Activities:
-blasting
-mining
-transporting toxic waste
-using explosives
Negligence & Rescuers
The well-settled rule is that a rescuer is a foreseeable plaintiff as long as the rescue is not reckless (“danger invites rescue”). Therefore, the defendant will be liable if he negligently puts a third person in peril and the plaintiff is injured in attempting a rescue.
Vicarious Liability w/ Independent Contractor’s
Vicarious liability will only attach if the individual was an agent or employee.
In general, a principal will not be vicariously liable for the tortious acts of its agent if the agent is an independent contractor.
One broad exception, however, is when the contractor is engaged in inherently dangerous activities (ex: excavating next to a public sidewalk). Such an activity does not have to be classified as abnormally dangerous for which strict liability applies; it need only be an activity in which there are special dangers to others inherent in or normal to the activity.
Assault
An intentional act by the defendant creating plaintiffs reasonable apprehension of immediate harmful or offensive contact to P’s person or something closely attached to P’s person.
Elements:
1) Act by D that creates a reasonable apprehension in P
-Apprehension does not mean fear, only means awareness of a harmful/offensive contact.
-Apprehension has to be reasonable & is from plaintiff’s perspective. If reasonable for someone in P’s position to assume gun is loaded, then there could be imminent apprehension.
2) Of immediate harmful or offensive contact to P’s person
3) Intent
4) Causation
-For assault, talk is cheap → need something more than words
-Def’s words can also negate the imminence of his actions
False Imprisonment
An intentional act by D resulting in P’s restraint or confinement to a bounded area.
Prima facie elements for False Imprisonment:
1) Act or omission to act on the part of the defendant that confines or restrains the plaintiff to a bounded area
(Restraint or confinement does not have to be physical. Threats of force or invalid use of legal authority are sufficient)
2) Intent on the part of the defendant to confine or restrain the plaintiff to a bounded area
(P must be aware of or harmed by the confinement. P must not be aware of any reasonable means of escape. If reasonable means of escape then no false imprisonment)
3) Causation
Shopkeeper’s privilege → limited defense to false imprisonment. A store may detain a suspected thief if:
1) Store has reasonable cause to believe a theft occurred
2) Store detains suspect in a reasonable manner (only non-deadly force is permitted) for purposes of investigation; and
3) Detention is reasonable in length & scope.
Shopkeeper may be held liable for any harm caused by acts exceeding the privilege.
Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress
Prima facie case for IIED:
1) Act by the defendant that amounts to extreme and outrageous conduct
(Extreme & outrageous must transcend all bounds of decency tolerated by society)
2) Intent on the part of the defendant to cause the plaintiff to suffer severe emotional distress OR Recklessness as to the effect of def’s conduct
3) Causation
4) Severe emotional distress (severe meaning more than a reasonable person could endure)
-actual damages are required for IIED
-physical injury does not need to be established.
-physical symptoms caused by emotional distress are not required.
-Severe emotional distress is sufficient damages.
NIED - Bystander
A bystander may recover damages for her own distress on the basis of NIED when the defendant negligently injured another as long as:
1) Bystander and the person injured by the defendant are closely related family members (ONLY: spouse, parent, minor child)
2) Bystander was present at the scene of the injury, and
3) Bystander personally observed or perceived the event
NIED - Threat of Physical Impact
A plaintiff can recover damages from emotional distress from the threat of physical impact to her when she is in the zone of danger from the def’s conduct. P has to prove:
1) Plaintiff was in the zone of danger, and
2) Plaintiff must suffer physical symptoms from the distress
Must have physical damages
-EXCEPTION: Where damages don’t have to be shown, in special situations where the defendant’s negligence creates a great likelihood of severe emotional distress: 1) Mishandling of a corpse, 2) False report of death