blaw test 2 part 4
In a case in which a doctor is sued for negligence due to an accidentally botched surgery, the reasonable person standard would be that of:
a reasonably skilled, competent and experienced doctor
The Constitution was amended almost immediately to ensure that there was:
adequate protection for individual rights
Substantive (legislative) rules issued by agencies are:
administrative statutes with the same force and effect of law as statutes passed by Congress
Tort law can be classified as:
all of the other choices
Postal authority is an example of:
an area states may not regulate
A federal law passed by Congress granting powers to an agency is called:
an enabling statute
Intentional conduct that places a person in fear of immediate bodily harm or offensive contact is the tort of:
assault
If Congress is not satisfied with the way an administrative agency is performing it:
can change how the agency operates
Intentional torts:
concern the interference with personal or property rights
The Bill of Rights is the:
first 10 amendments of the U.S. Constitution
The proximate cause of an injury is the ____ cause of the injury.
legal
Administrative rules are classified as substantive (legislative), interpretative, and:
procedural
Administrative agencies enforce regulations by doing which of the following:
requiring businesses to self-report and direct observation by agency personnel
A law must relate rationally to a legitimate government interest to:
satisfy due process requirements
Proximate cause limits liability to harms:
that bear a reasonable relationship to the defendant's negligent conduct
Administrative agencies are often created by Congress because:
they can consider technical details more effectively than congress and have the ability to monitor a regulated industry on a continuous basis (dont include last part)
The primary purpose of the Administrative Procedures Act is:
to define procedural rules and formalities of administrative agencies
Tort suits generally come from:
unexpected instances of carelessness or bad behavior
In Palsgraf v. Long Island Railroad, where Palsgraf was hit by machinery that fell when an explosion occurred at a train station, and she sued the railroad for negligence, the New York high court held that the railroad:
was not liable because of a lack of proximate cause
To determine if a person's conduct was negligent, one asks
what would a reasonable, qualified person have done under the same or similar circumstances?
Which of the following types of speech are not protected by the First Amendment?
yelling "Fire" at a crowded basketball game