Torts Flashcards

1
Q

Prima Facie Case general Elements

A

(1) Voluntary Act
(2) Intent (Specific - D acted with purpose to cause offensive contact OR General - D knows that consequence is substantially certain to occur)
(3) Causation
conduct was “substantial factor” in bringing the harm.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

Battery

A

(1) harmful contact
(2) w/ plaintiff’s person
(3) Causes by D
(4) w/ intent (general or specific)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

Assault

A

(1) Reasonable apprehension
(2) of imminent harm or offensive bodily contact
(3) Causes by D
(4) w/ intent (specific or general)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

intentional infliction of emotional distress

A

(1) extreme or outrageous conduct
(2) which causes or is substantial factor in causing
(3) severe emotional distress
(4) w/ intent to cause severe emotional distress OR acts with recklessness as to the risk of causing severe emotional distress

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

Cause

A

caused harm or conduct was substantial factor that caused harm.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

General Intent

A

D knows that harm is substantially certain to occur.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

Trespass to land

A

(1) Causes or is substantial factor
(2) a physical invasion in P’s real property
(3) w/ Intent (specific or general)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

Trespass to chattels

A

(1) Causes or is substantial factor
(2) An interference with the plaintiff’s right of possession in a chattel
(3) w/ intent (specific or general)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

Conversion

A

(1) Causes or is substantial factor
(2) an interference with P’s right of possession in chattel
(3) where interference by D deprives P entirely of the use of the chattel
(4) w/ intent (specific or general)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

Defenses to Intentional Torts

A

(1) Consent
(2) Self-defense
(3) Necessity

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

Consent (defense to intentional tort)

A

(1) Consent - Express or implied; BUT must be (valid and D’s conduct did not exceed scope of consent)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

Self-Defense (intentional torts)

A

(2) Self-defense - D reasonably believed P was going to harm him or another AND D used reasonably necessary amount of force proportionate to threat

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

Necessity (intentional torts)

A

(3) Necessity - D enters onto P’s land or interferes with P’s personal property to prevent an injury or some other severe harm
(private necessity - benefit limited ppl = D liable for any damages to P’s property)
P cannot use force to exclude D.
(public necessity - public good = D is not liable for property damage that he caused.)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

Negligence

A

(1) D owed a duty to P to conform to a specific standard of care
(2) D breached that duty
(3) Actual and Proximate cause
(4) damages

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

To whom is duty owed?

A

A duty of care is owed to all foreseeable plaintiffs that may be harmed by D’s breach of applicable standard of care

(1) majority view - D liable to Ps in foreseeable zone of danger
(2) minority view - D owes duty to everyone harmed.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

Affirmative Duty to Act

A

In general, NO affirmative duty to act affirmatively to help others.

However, D has duty to act affirmatively if:

(1) D places P in danger
(2) D has special relationship with P (common carrier/passenger, innkeeper/guest, family members, etc.)
(3) Duty to act imposed by law
(4) Begins to administer aid or attempt to rescue P

17
Q

The Reasonable Person Standard of Care

A

Default standard of care.
“A reasonably prudent person under the circumstances as measured by an objective standard.”

  • Physical disabilities are considered; “reasonably prudent blind person under circumstances”
  • Intoxication not disability unless involuntary.
18
Q

Children standard of care

A

Standard of care of a reasonably prudent “child of similar age, experience, and intelligence” under these circumstances.

UNLESS, child engaged in “adult activity” then, court applies Adult standard of care.

19
Q

Professionals Standard of Care

A

A professional ( nurse, lawyer, accountant, engineer, architect, etc.) is expected to exhibit the knowledge and skill of a member of the profession in good standing in similar communities.

20
Q

Physician Standard of Care

A
  • National Standard of Care
  • Duty to disclose the risks of treatment to enable a patient to give informed consent.
  • Duty breached ONLY if an undisclosed risk was so serious that a reasonable person in patient’s position would not have consented to treatment due to high risk.
21
Q

Psychotherapists

A

Duty to warn potential victims of a patient’s serious threats of harm if:

(1) the patient has the apparent intent and ability to carry out such threats, AND
(2) the potential victim is readily identifiable

22
Q

Landowners/Land Possessors Standard of Care

A

Depends on the status of the entrant.

1) Trespassers (discovered (anticipated)/undiscovered
(2) Licensees
(3) Invitees

23
Q

Landowner Duty to Trespassers (discovered & undiscovered)

A

Tresspasser = entrant w/o valid consent or necessity.
(1) Discovered/Anticipated - entrant w/o consent but may be expected….
Duty to warn of (OR make safe) hidden dangers on the land that pose risk of death or serious bodily harm.
[Only to artificial and KNOWN conditions by landowner]
(2) Undiscovered - entrant w/o consent and unexpected.
No duty owed.

24
Q

Landowner Duty to Licensees

A

Lawful entrant with purpose of personal benefit (not to the landowner’s benefit = social guests, etc.)
- No duty to inspect the property
- Duty to warn (OR make safe) hidden dangers on the land that pose unreasonable risk of harm.
(applies to both artificial + natural KNOWN conditions.)

25
Q

Landowner Duty to Invitees

A

Entrant invited for Landowner benefit or mutual benefit. (store customers, etc.)
- Duty to reasonably inspect the land for hidden dangers (artificial or natural) that pose an unreasonable risk of harm AND if discovered, duty to make them safe.

26
Q

ATTRACTIVE NUISANCE

A

Duty to CHILD trespassers to warn of (OR make safe) artificial conditions on the land.

  • landowner knows or has reason to know of child trespassers at location of artificial condition
  • known that artificial condition can cause serious bodily harm
  • child cannot appreciate risk
  • risk of harm outweighs expense to make safe.
27
Q

Res Ipsa Loquitor

A

P must show that harm was of kind that ordinarily does not occur in the absence of negligence; AND

Caused by agent or instrumentality within the defendant’s exclusive control

28
Q

Respondeat Superior

A

Tort occurs:

(1) during employer-employee relationship in existence
(2) tort occurred within the scope of employment.

29
Q

Joint and Several Liability

A

2 or more liable parties are jointly and severally liable, each party is independently liable for the FULL extent of the damages stemming from the tortious act.

P may collect FULL judgment from either D.

D who pays in full may commence contribution action to recover share from other liable Ds.

30
Q

Negligence Causation

A

D must be Actual and Proximate cause
Actual - P would not have been injured BUT FOR D’s breach of applicable duty.
Proximate - P’s injury was foreseeable result of D’s conduct.

31
Q

Superseding Cause (Proximate Cause Analysis)

A

an outside force or action that contributes to the plaintiff’s harm AFTER the defendant’s act or omission has occurred. If the intervening cause is UNFORESEEABLE, it is a “Superseding cause” and D’s liability is cut off.

32
Q

Strict Liability

A

D will be liable for damages regardless of how careful she was.

(negligence not required for D to be held liable)

33
Q

Domestic v. Wild Animals (Strict Liability)

A

Domestic - no SL for harm caused by animal UNLESS O knew or should have known of dangerous propensity.

Wild - SL for any harm caused by animal regardless of safety precautions taken. UNLESS P was a trespasser.

34
Q

SL - Abnormally Dangerous Activities

A

D is SL for damages caused to P by his engagement in abnormally dangerous activities.

Abnormally Dangerous Activity -

(1) Inherently dangerous,
(2) Inappropriate for chosen location,
(3) Virtually impossible to make safe, AND
(4) Of little value to the community

35
Q

SL - Products Liability

A

P must show:

(1) Product was defective in manufacture, design, or failure to warn;
(2) Defect existed when the product left D’s control
(3) Defect caused P’s injury when used in foreseeable way

36
Q

SL - Manufacture Defects

A

(1) Deviated from its intended design, AND

(2) Fails to conform to the manufacturer’s own design.

37
Q

SL - Design Defects

A

(1) Consumer Expectation Test: P must show product is less safe than the ordinary consumer would expect
(2) Risk-Utility Test: P must show product’s risks outweigh its benefits and there is reasonable alternative design.

38
Q

SL - Failure to Warn

A

(1) P was not warned of risks regarding use of the product,
(2) Risks are not obvious to an ordinary user, AND
(3) Designer/manufacturer was in fact aware of such risks.

39
Q

Scope of Products Liability

A

Any person foreseeably injured by a defective product (purchaser, etc.) may pursue a products liability claim.

SL claim under products liability may only be brought against merchant who is in the chain of distribution (manufacturer-wholesaler-retailer)