EOB test 6
Professional negligence by business professionals such as doctors, accountants, and lawyers is known as malpractice.
True
Public figures typically have a difficult time winning defamation lawsuits.
True
Punitive damages are intended not to compensate the plaintiff but to deter the defendant from ever engaging in similar conduct.
True
Strict liability applies in only a few limited circumstances.
True
Strict liability applies when restaurants serve alcohol to visibly intoxicated persons.
True
The norms that society protects make up the basis for tort law.
True
The tort of false imprisonment requires an actual and present confinement.
True
Trespass to personal property is the unlawful taking of another's personal property without the owner's permission.
True
When physical touching is absent, courts sometimes permit the tort of intentional infliction of emotional distress to be claimed.
True
If someone is convicted of a crime, he/she is automatically liable in civil tort law under the _____ doctrine.
negligence per se
An act from which an injury results as a natural and direct consequence is called:
proximate causation
An advertisement that promises "the best food in town" is an example of _____ since it is opinion.
puffery
Oral defamation is considered _____.
slander
The oral form of defamation is considered:
slander
If a tortfeasor is engaged in certain activities and someone is injured or killed, then under _____ the tortfeasor is held liable no matter how careful or careless he or she may have been.
strict liability
The most important area of strict liability application is _____.
strict product liability
Often, the same conduct can be both a crime and a tort.
True
Product misuse is a defense to strict product liability.
True
Defense of others is a reasonable and proportionate force used to defend another person from harm or injury.
True
Identify the rule under which the jury is asked to determine to what extent the plaintiff is at fault, and the plaintiff's total recovery is then reduced by that percentage.
Comparative negligence
Which of the following is true about the tort of assault?
A sense of apprehension is enough for assault
Which of the following can be a defense to strict product liability?
Assumption of risk
_____ is a defense which bars the plaintiff from recovery because the plaintiff voluntarily and knowingly assumed known perils.
Assumption of risk
_____ is any unconsented touching, even if physical injuries are not present.
Battery
Which of the following statements is true about compensatory and punitive damages?
Compensatory damages can be awarded for past, present, and future losses
_____ is the act of wrongfully hurting a living person's good reputation.
Defamation
Which of the following laws establish strict liability for taverns, bars, and restaurants for serving alcohol to minor or visibly intoxicated persons who then cause death or injury to others?
Dram shop acts
Which of the following is an example of invasion of privacy?
Hacking into a person's computer
By definition, crimes are intentional and therefore foreseeable.
False
Compensatory damages apply to contract law and tort law, but they are much more difficult to calculate in contract law.
False
Contract law usually allows for the award of punitive damages, something never permitted in tort law.
False
If a plaintiff unknowingly and involuntarily assumes the risk of participating in a dangerous activity, then the defendant is not liable for injuries incurred.
False
If an injury is foreseeable, then proximate cause does not exist.
False
In tort law, only people that you are a third-party-beneficiary to can probably sue you for breach of contract.
False
Most states limit Good Samaritan laws to professionals only.
False
Negligence torts require intent to harm and some level of carelessness to be committed.
False
Since comparative negligence is a fairly harsh rule, most states follow the contributory negligence rule instead.
False
Since product liability is strict liability, the plaintiff's comparative negligence is a defense.
False
Soot, noise, or odor cannot become the basis for trespass.
False
Strict liability applies to commercial sellers and private citizens.
False
The law of negligence is an expression of democracy at the community and local level, because ultimately, legislatures decide what conduct leads to liability.
False
The open and obvious doctrine shields those who aid the injured from negligence liability.
False
The right of a business owner to use extreme force in detaining a suspected shoplifter for a reasonable period of time is known as the shopkeeper's privilege.
False
The tort of tortious interference is similar across all states.
False
There are no constitutional limits to the award of punitive damages.
False
There is no liability for defamatory remarks left on a Facebook wall.
False
To prove negligence, plaintiffs have to demonstrate that five major elements are present.
False
_____ takes place when someone intentionally confines or restrains another person's movement or activities without justification.
False imprisonment
In 1994, President Clinton signed the _____ Act into law, imposing an 18-year statute of repose on product liability claims brought against general aviation aircraft manufacturers such as Cessna and Piper.
General Aviation Revitalization
_____ is the intrusion into the personal life of another without legal justification.
Invasion of privacy
Which of the following statements is true regarding intentional infliction of emotional distress (IIED)?
It is extreme conduct (measured objectively) that intentionally causes severe emotional distress to another
Which of the following statements is true about the open and obvious doctrine?
It is used to defend against suits by persons injured while on someone else's property
Which of the following statements is true of fraud?
It requires the tortfeasor to misrepresent facts, with reckless disregard for the truth
_____ is the written form of defamation.
Libel
Which of the following is a civil tort involving numerous plaintiffs against one or few defendants?
Mass tort
Exploiting a known sensitivity in a child, the elderly, or pregnant women can constitute intentional infliction of emotional distress.
True
_____ takes place when a person or company uses someone else's name, likeness, or other identifying characteristic without permission.
Misappropriation
_____ is about breaching the duty we owe others, as determined by state tort law.
Negligence
Which of the following is an example of the tort of battery?
Picking up a chair and hitting another person with it
To which of the following would the attractive nuisance doctrine most likely apply?
Piles of sand
If consumer misuse of a product is foreseeable, manufacturers must warn against that misuse.
True
_____ is an act from which an injury results as a natural and direct consequence.
Proximate causation
_____ refers to promotional statements expressing subjective views.
Puffery
_____ are damages awarded to the plaintiff when the defendant acts wantonly, to punish the defendant and to deter future wrongdoing.
Punitive damages
In strict product liability, any retailer, wholesaler, or manufacturer that sells an unreasonably dangerous product is strictly liable.
True
Many businesses see tort lawsuits as a nuisance at best and ruinous at worst, and would like to see them disappear altogether.
True
Identify the doctrine that holds employers liable for tortious acts committed by employees while acting within the scope of their employment.
Respondeat superior
_____ is a reasonable and proportionate force to defend oneself from harm or injury.
Self-defense
Which of the following is NOT true about the shopkeeper's privilege?
Store employees are allowed to use excessive force in detaining the suspect if the suspect resists detention
_____ provides strong protection for sensationalist "news" organizations that cover celebrity gossip, and courts have held that public figures must show actual malice before they can win a defamation lawsuit.
The Sixth Amendment
Which of the following statements is NOT true about the duty of care?
The general rules surrounding when a duty exists cannot be modified in special situations
Misappropriation takes place when a person uses someone else's name, likeness, or other identifying characteristic without permission.
True
Negligence is about breaching the duty we owe others, as determined by state tort law.
True
Defamation can take place against goods or products instead of people.
True
Identify the correct statement about strict liability torts.
They require neither intent nor carelessness
_____ is the intentional damage of another person's valid contractual relationship.
Tortious interference
_____ occurs whenever someone enters onto, above, or below the surface of land owned by someone else without the owner's permission.
Trespass to land
A product may be defective because of a design defect.
True
A statute of repose functions like a statute of limitations and bars plaintiffs from filing tort claims after a certain period of time has lapsed.
True
To demonstrate that a product is unreasonably dangerous, plaintiffs have two theories available to them. They might allege that the product was defective either because of a flaw in the manufacturing process, or because of:
a design defect
A _____ is demonstrated by showing the defendant failed to act reasonably, when compared with a reasonable person.
breach
Strict liability torts exist because:
businesses that engage in covered activities profit from those activities
In a state that follows the _____, a plaintiff's own negligence, no matter how minor, bars the plaintiff from any recovery.
contributory negligence rule
If you gave your roommate permission to borrow your car for a day and he/she stole your car instead, it would be considered:
conversion
The tort of _____ takes place when someone takes another person's property permanently.
conversion
Many product liability cases arise from the _____ theory because courts have held that the warning labels on products, as well as accompanying literature, are all part of a product's design.
defective design
To prove negligence, plaintiffs have to demonstrate four elements are present. The first element is that the plaintiff has to:
demonstrate that the defendant owed it a duty of care
If a tortfeasor did not act intentionally but nevertheless failed to act in a way a reasonable person would have acted, then _____ has taken place.
negligence
Puffery is also known as _____.
eller's talk
Strict liability is:
imposed in certain situations without regard to fault or due care
Tort law:
is a reflection of American societal values
Good Samaritan statutes are:
limited by most states to laypersons and medical actions only
Negligence committed by certain professionals is known as:
malpractice
Punitive damages are:
money damages awarded to punish the defendant for gross and wanton negligence and to deter future wrongdoing.
The tort of conversion is the civil equivalent to the crime of:
theft
Negligence is distinguished from intentional torts in that:
there is a lack of intent to cause harm
A _____ can be broadly defined as a civil wrong, other than breach of contract.
tort
A _____ is a person who commits a tort.
tortfeasor
In most states, _____ takes place when someone publishes false information about another person's product.
trade disparagement
Punitive damages are awarded:
when the defendant acted with willful and wanton negligence