chapter 2- first element of negligence DUTY
omission
a failure to act
foreseeable risk
a risk reasonable person could anticipate
Duty of reasonable care
exercising the same level of care as a reasonable prudent person would under similar circumstance
scope of duty
the people to whom one has a duty
5 elements of Negligence per se
1. an applicable statue 2. violation of the statue 3. the violation caused injury,4 the statue was created for safety reasons 5. the statue was designed to protect certain class of people, of which plaintiff is a member
four elements of Negligence
all must be proven...duty, breach, cause, damages
commission
an act
presumption
an interference tending to prove the truth or false hood of a fact
Duty
an obligation for a person to meet a certain standard of care. duty is the first element to prove in negligence
risk -utility test
formula use to weight the risk versus the utility of conduct , to determine whether the conduct was negligent
Foreseeability
how much something can be known before it occurs
Negligence per se
negligence in and of itself. conduct which is in arguably negligent because either it is a violate of statue or obvious reasonable care was not used.