chapter 5 (Negligence and Strict Liability)
Defenses to Negligence
1. Assumption of the Risk 2. Contributory Negligence 3. Comparative Negligence
Strict Liability Torts
Even though no fault of defendant either through intentional action or negligence, defendant is still held responsible. Two situations: 1. Abnormal dangerous activity 2. Strict products liability
Proximate Cause
Legal cause; exists when the connection between an act and an injury is strong enough to justify imposing liability. Foreseeable? Bizarre, far-fetched?
Duty of Care
Obligation to conform our conduct to a particular standard of care, so as not to expose others to an unreasonable risk of harm.
Injury
Plaintiff must prove that he/she suffered actual physical or economic damage.
Negligence
The Tort Negligence consists of 4 elements: 1. Duty of Care 2. Breach of Duty of Care 3. Causation - cause-in-fact, proximate cause 4. Recognizable Injury
Breach of Duty of Care
a failure to exercise care or to act as a reasonable person would act.
cause in fact
plaintiff must prove that the defendant actually caused the injury
Causation
the act of causing something to happen