Tort - Negligence Flashcards

1
Q

Definition + case

A

Act or omission resulting in personal injury or property damage. (Blyth v Birmingham Waterworks)

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2
Q

Duty of care case?

A

Donoghue V Stevenson - Neighbour principle

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3
Q

Novel situation?

A

Three Stage test (Caparo V Dickman)

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4
Q

Caparo test and cases

A
  1. Was damage/harm reasonably foreseeable? (Kent V Griffiths)
  2. Was relationship sufficiently proximate? (Mcloughlin v O’brien)
  3. Fair, just, reasonable? (Hill v CC W. Yorkshire)
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5
Q

Not novel?

A

Robinson v CC W. Yorkshire - similar precedent that established DOC should be followed

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6
Q

Breach of duty?

A

Standard is objective and that of a reasonable person

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7
Q

1st factor of breach?

A
  1. Professionals judged to standard of whole profession. (Bolams case)
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8
Q

2nd factor?

A

Learners judged by standard of experienced. (Nettleship v Weston)

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9
Q

3rd factor?

A

Children judged at standard of D’s age at time. (Mullin v Richards)

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10
Q

5 Risk factors?

A
  1. Special characteristics (Paris v Stepney BC)
  2. Size of risk (Hayley v LEB)
  3. Appropriate Precautions (Latimer v AEC ltd.)
  4. Knowledge of risk (Roe v Minister of health)
  5. Public Benefit (Watt v Hertfordshire CC)
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11
Q

What is damage?

A

What was caused by the breach and if it was too remote

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12
Q

Two types of causation?

A

Factual: ‘But for’ test (Barnett v Chelsea & Kensington hospital)
Legal: Intervening acts (Knightly v Johns)

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13
Q

Remoteness of damage case and two factors

A
  1. The Wagonmound
    - Type of injury was foreseeable (Hughes v Lord Advocate)
    - Take as find ‘eggshell’ (Smith v Leech Brain)
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14
Q

Contributory negligence cases and principles?

A
  1. Partial defence (25% reduc.) - Sayers v Harlow Urban District Council
  2. Possible for 100% reduction - Jayes v IMI (Kynoch) Ltd.
    - No crash helmet (O’connell v Jackson)
    - No seatbelt (Froom v Butcher)
    - Accept lift from drunk (Stinton v Stinton)
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15
Q

Consent cases and principles?

A
  1. Knowledge of precise risk (Stermer v Lawson) - Doesn’t need to know all risks (Sidaway)
  2. Exercise free choice (Smith v Baker)
  3. Voluntary acceptance of risk
    - Police (Haynes v Harwood)
    - Firemen (Ogwo v Taylor)
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