Torts MBE Flashcards

1
Q

Statute—negligence per se:

A

If a defendant violates a statute and the plaintiff was in the class of people that the statute was trying to protect and the plaintiff received the injury the statute was trying to prevent, duty and breach are established.

Tip: the plaintiff still must prove causation and harm.

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2
Q

Custom generally is evidence of?

In professional malpractice cases, it is?

A

Custom generally is evidence of duty of care.

In professional malpractice cases, it is conclusive evidence.

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3
Q

Duty to control third parties: General rule

Special relationship exception:

A

Generally, there is not a duty to control the conduct of third parties.

However, one has a duty to act reasonably to control a third party if one has a special relationship with the third party (e.g., an owner and the occupiers of his land, a prison and its prisoners, or a mental institution and its patients).

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4
Q

Landowner; Duty owed to an undiscovered trespasser generally

A
Undiscovered trespasser (a person the premises possessor does not or should not know of): No duty of care is owed. 
However, the premises possessor cannot act wantonly or willfully.
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5
Q

Landowner: Duty to discovered trespasser?

A

Discovered trespasser (a person the premises possessor knows or should know is trespassing):

The premises possessor must warn of or make safe unreasonably dangerous artificial
conditions that it knows of.

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6
Q

Duty owed to Licensee (eg. Social guest)

A

Licensee (social guest): the premises possessor must warn of or make safe all concealed dangers that it knows of.

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7
Q

Duty to Invitee (one that enters a public place or business):

A

the premises possessor must warn of or make safe all dangers that it knows or should know of.

Tip: this is the only case where a duty to inspect is imposed on the premises possessor.

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8
Q

breach of duty

A

A plaintiff must show that the defendant breached its duty of care.

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9
Q

Res ipsa loquitur:

A

When the circumstances surrounding the injury are unclear, if a plaintiff can show that the injury likely was the result of negligence and that it likely was the defendant that was negligent, the plaintiff has made a case for breach.

Tip: If the plaintiff can show res ipsa loquitur, it means that the case should go to trial and no directed verdict should be entered for the defendant. It does not necessarily mean that the plaintiff wins his case.

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10
Q

There are two types of causation that must be present

A

—actual (but for) and proximate.

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11
Q

Actual (but for) cause:

A

there must be a factual connection between the breach and the injury suffered.

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12
Q

Proximate cause:

A

the harm must be a foreseeable result of the breach.

Examples of harm that is considered foreseeable:

(1) medical malpractice that occurs after an accident,
(2) harm that occurs during rescue efforts to protect life and property endangered by defendant’s negligence, and
(3) a disease or subsequent accident that occurs after an accident.

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13
Q

Multiple causes: If there are two or more defendants, use the what type of test for actual cause?

A

substantial factor test. If a defendant’s breach was a substantial factor in causing the harm, the defendant is liable.

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14
Q

Alternative causes:

A

The plaintiff must show that all potential defendants are joined in the lawsuit and all defendants are negligent.
The burden then will shift to each defendant to show its breach of duty was not the actual cause of the harm.

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15
Q

A plaintiff must suffer actual harm to successfully sue in a negligence action.
However, can a plaintiff recover punitive damages or nominal damages in a negligence action?

A

No, a plaintiff cannot recover punitive damages or nominal damages in a negligence action.

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16
Q

A plaintiff is not permitted to recover in negligence or strict liability if he has suffered a pure _________ loss (i.e., no injury to himself).

A

economic loss

Tip: in this case, the plaintiff may have a remedy in contract (but not tort).

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17
Q

Comparative negligence:

A

a judge or jury compares the plaintiff’s fault with the defendant’s fault and assigns percentages to each.

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18
Q

Pure comparative negligence:

A

The plaintiff can recover no matter how negligent he is. His damages simply are reduced by his percentage of fault.

Tip: this is the default on the MBE unless otherwise stated.

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19
Q

Partial (modified) comparative negligence:

A

if the plaintiff was more at fault than the defendant (or in some states, if the plaintiff and defendant were equally at fault), the plaintiff cannot recover.

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20
Q

Contributory negligence:

A

The plaintiff cannot recover if he was even a little bit negligent unless the defendant had the last clear chance to avoid the injury.

(Do not apply this doctrine on the MBE unless you are told to!)

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21
Q

Assumption of risk:

A

If the plaintiff knew of the risk and voluntarily assumed it, he generally cannot recover damages. (However, some courts will analyze assumption of risk using a comparative fault analysis.)

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22
Q

Joint and several liability:

A

In a joint and several liability jurisdiction, the plaintiff may recover all of his damages from any single defendant (and the defendant may seek contribution from a codefendant).
In a several liability jurisdiction, each defendant is liable only for his percentage of fault.
Tip: apply joint and several liability on the MBE unless told otherwise.

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23
Q

Employees and other agents: Respondeat Superior generally

Intentional torts?

A

Employers or principals are vicariously liable for the torts of their employees or agents that are committed in the scope of employment.

(Note: intentional torts usually are outside the scope of employment unless they were foreseeable or they were committed for the purpose of serving the employer.) If an employer/principal is found liable under this theory, it may seek indemnity (i.e., full payback) from its employee.

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24
Q

Independent contractors: general rule

exception

A

A principal is generally not liable for the torts of his independent contractors.

However, a principal is liable if the duty is non-delegable or the activity is inherently dangerous.

The principal also may be liable for his own negligence in hiring, firing, or supervising the contractor. Tip: a duty generally is non-delegable if it involves safety.

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25
Q

Parental relationship: and vicarious liability

A

Generally, parents are not vicariously liable for the acts of their children. However, a parent may be directly liable for his own negligence (e.g., failure to supervise).

26
Q

Assault as an intentional tort

A

Assault: Defendant acts with intent to cause a harmful or offensive contact (or imminent apprehension) and an imminent apprehension directly or indirectly results.

Tip: Apprehension does not mean fear. Apprehension is knowledge or anticipation of the impending contact.

27
Q

Battery as an intentional tort

A

Battery: defendant acts with intent to cause a harmful or offensive contact (or imminent apprehension) and a harmful or offensive contact directly or indirectly results

28
Q

False imprisonment:

A

defendant acts with the intent to confine or restrain the plaintiff to a bounded area, actual confinement occurs, and the plaintiff either knows of the confinement or is hurt by it.

29
Q

Intentional infliction of emotional distress (IIED):

A

Defendant intentionally or recklessly engages in extreme or outrageous conduct that causes the plaintiff to suffer severe emotional distress.

Tip: The plaintiff does not need to show physical symptoms to prevail. However, the plaintiff must show she suffered “severe emotional distress.”

30
Q

Trespass to land:

A

defendant physically invades the land of another and intends to be where he is.

31
Q

Trespass to chattels:

A

Defendant intentionally interferes with another’s personal property and harm results.
The damages are the cost to repair the property.

32
Q

Conversion:

A

Defendant intentionally interferes with another’s personal property and a serious and substantial harm results. The damages are the fair market value of the property.

33
Q

Defenses

Consent:

Self-defense

Public necessity

Private necessity:

A

Consent: this can be express or implied.

Self-defense: the defendant reasonably believes force is necessary to protect against the unlawful use of force.

Public necessity: defendant acts to protect the public from a greater harm that would have occurred had he not acted.

Private necessity: Defendant acts to protect an interest of his own. He is not liable for a tort, but he still must pay for actual damage caused.

A note on transferred intent: intent can transfer for torts involving assault, battery, false imprisonment, trespass to land, and trespass to chattels.

34
Q

A note on transferred intent: intent can transfer for torts involving

A

assault, battery, false imprisonment, trespass to land, and trespass to chattels.

35
Q

Private nuisance:

A

the defendant uses his property in a way that causes a substantial unreasonable interference with the plaintiff’s use or enjoyment of his land.

Tip: Do not take into account the plaintiff’s peculiar use of his land. Ask if the defendant’s use of his land would substantially interfere with an average member of the community’s use and enjoyment of his property.

36
Q

Public nuisance

A

: Defendant unreasonably interferes with the health, safety, or morals of a community. In order to successfully sue, the plaintiff must suffer unique damages.

37
Q

Elements of Misrepresentation

A

MISREPRESENTATION

(1) There is a material misrepresentation by the defendant,
(2) the defendant knew his statement was false or said it with reckless indifference to the truth,
(3) he had the intent to induce the misrepresentation, and
(4) the plaintiff relied on it and suffered pecuniary damage.

38
Q

INTENTIONAL INTERFERENCE WITH BUSINESS RELATIONS

A

(1) There is a valid business relationship or expectancy that existed between the parties that the defendant knew of;
(2) the defendant intentionally coerced one of the parties to terminate the relationship, breach a contract, or withhold a business expectancy;
(3) the defendant was not authorized to interfere; and (4) the interference resulted in damages.

39
Q

The general elements of NIED:

A

(1) the defendant is negligent,
(2) the plaintiff suffers physical symptoms from its emotional distress, and
(3) the plaintiff is either in the zone of danger or the plaintiff witnesses a negligent injury to a person closely related to the plaintiff.

Note: There are special cases where physical symptoms are not necessary to prove. These include cases where a corpse is mishandled and cases involving erroneous reports of a relative’s death to a plaintiff.

40
Q

In a strict liability case, the plaintiff must prove

A

P must prove: duty (which is, in this case, absolute), causation, and harm.

Tip: in a strict liability case, whether the defendant was acting reasonably is immaterial.

41
Q

Abnormally dangerous activities

A

An abnormally dangerous activity is one that creates a foreseeable risk of serious harm even when reasonable care is exercised, and the activity is not a matter of common usage in the community.

Tip: examples include blasting, mining, explosives, etc.

42
Q

Wild animals:

A

A defendant is strictly liable for foreseeable harms caused by wild animals. Examples of wild animals include: skunks, bears, and monkeys.

Tip: strict liability is not available to a trespasser (the trespasser can sue under a theory of negligence but not strict liability).
Tip: Negligence must be shown if the harm is caused by a domestic animal (i.e., a pet or farm animal). Examples include dogs, cats, sheep, honey bees, rabbits, horses, and cows.

43
Q

Products liability:

A

The defendant must be a merchant. The product must be defective at the time it left the defendant’s hands.

44
Q

Types of Defects for strict products liability

A

Manufacturing defect:

Design defect:

Lack of warning/instructions: No warning:

45
Q

Manufacturing defect

A

Manufacturing defect: the product departs from its intended design and it is more dangerous than expected.

46
Q

Design defect:

A

Design defect: The product comes out exactly as the manufacturer intended. However, there is an alternative design that is safer, practical, and cost-effective.

47
Q

Lack of warning/instructions:

A

No warning: If there’s a hidden risk, there should be a warning. If risk is obvious, no warning necessary. Yes warning: examine the size of the warning, color, if there are pictures, etc. to see if it’s adequate.

48
Q

Liability: in the chain of distribution for strict products liability

A

Everyone in the chain of distribution is liable under a strict products liability theory.

Tip: pay careful attention to the call of the question to see if you are supposed to apply a strict liability standard or another standard (e.g., negligence).

49
Q

Defenses of strict products liability

A

Defenses: assumption of risk, comparative negligence, or unforeseeable misuse of a product.

50
Q

General defamation requires four elements:

A
  1. a defamatory statement about the plaintiff,
  2. an unprivileged publication of the statement,
  3. fault (at least negligence), and
  4. damages.
51
Q

In libel cases (cases where the defamatory statement is written or recorded), damages are _______.

In slander cases, damages are presumed if the slander is in one of the four slander per se (CLUB) categories:

A

presumed.

In slander cases, damages are presumed if the slander is in one of the four slander per se (CLUB) categories:

(1) Committing a crime of moral turpitude,
(2) suffering from a Loathsome disease,
(3) Unchastity if the plaintiff is a woman, or (4)something that reflects Badly on the plaintiff’s business or profession.

52
Q

Public figure cases

Define malice for this purpose:

A

Public figure cases: If the plaintiff is a public figure, he also must prove that the statement is false and that the defendant acted with malice.

Tip: Memorize the definition of malice for public figure cases. Malice is present when the defendant knows the statement is false or acts with reckless disregard as to whether it is true or false.

53
Q

Defenses to Defamation

A

Defenses

  1. Consent
  2. Truth
  3. Privileges:
54
Q

Types of Privileges

A

Privileges can be absolute (made during legislative, executive, or judicial proceedings) or
qualified (when candor is encouraged).

Tip: common examples of when a defendant may have a qualified privilege is when he is speaking as a past employer of the plaintiff for a job reference or if he is speaking to a police officer investigating a crime.

55
Q

Injunctions are generally not granted in defamation cases . Why?

A

Note: injunctions generally are not granted in defamation cases as they are viewed as prior restraints that interfere with First Amendment rights.

56
Q

INVASION OF PRIVACY Torts (FAID)

DEFENSES to privacy torts

A

False light:
Appropriation:
Intrusion:
Disclosure:

Defenses
Consent is a defense to all four privacy torts. Defamation privileges apply to false light and disclosure.

57
Q

False light: and defense

A

False light: defendant widely spreads facts about the plaintiff, which places the plaintiff in a false light that would be offensive to a reasonable person.

Defenses: Consent and Defamation privileges apply

58
Q

Appropriation

defense

A

Appropriation: defendant uses the plaintiff’s name or likeness in an unauthorized way to advertise a product.

Consent

59
Q

Disclosure of private info and defenses

A

Disclosure: defendant widely disseminates or publishes private information about the plaintiff that would be highly offensive to a reasonable person.

Defenses: Consent and Defamation privileges apply

60
Q

Intrusion

Defense

A

Intrusion: defendant intentionally pries or intrudes into a private place in a way that would be offensive to a
reasonable person.

Consent