Negligence Flashcards

1
Q

There is negligence liability only if

A

The claimant can show that the tortfeasor fell short of the degree of care expected of the reasonable person

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2
Q

Objective test for reasonable person

A

It requires asking how the reasonable person would act in the given circumstances, not how the particular tortfeasor with his characteristics should have acted

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3
Q

The test for reasonable child

A

The objective standard is adjusted to that of a child of their age

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4
Q

Criticism of the objective standard of reasonable person

A

The objective standard does not vary even to take into account illness on the defendant’s part. The standard just responds to the defendants conduct, asking what a reasonable person would’ve done in the circumstances.
Assessment of professional skills is an issue, it’s difficult to assess whether risk taking by professionals falls short of the standard professional

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5
Q

Negligence criteria

A
  1. Defendant owes claimant a DOC
  2. Duty has been breached: the defendant was negligent
  3. D’s breach caused C to suffer relevant loss or damage
  4. Damage was caused by the defendants negligence, isn’t too remote, is within the scope of duty.
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6
Q

Nettleship v Weston

A

Learner drivers have the same duty owed by every driver. There is an objective standard, learners are not entitled to take less care.
Her learner status may go to mitigation of sentence, but not to exculpation of guilt.

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7
Q

Lord Macmillan, in Glasgow corporation

A

“The learner driver may be doing his best, but his incompetent best is not good enough”

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8
Q

We are beginning to apply the test of ‘on whom should the risk fall?’

A

The law is moving away from the concept of no liabilty without fault. Morally rhe learner driver is not at fault, but legally she is liable to be because she is insured and the risk should fall on her

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9
Q

Dunnage v Randall

A

The capacity and state of mind of the defendant is irrelevant to whether they have breached their duty.
The schizophrenic defendant is still held to a reasonable persons standard

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10
Q

Mullins v Richards

A

Age is a relevant factor to whether something is foreseeable. An adult may have seen 2 children play fighting could result in injury, but that dies not mean the children would have. The question is whether an ordinary, prudent 15 year old in the situatioj would’ve foreseen a risk of injury

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11
Q

Bolam v Friern Hospital

A

The test for professionals excersising a skill is whether a reasonably competemt expert/professional would have done the same in D’s situation.

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12
Q

Elements of negligence law

A

Duty of care
Breach of duty
Causation
Damages
Remoteness
Defences

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13
Q

Lord Atkin’s neighbour principle

A
  • Take reasonable care where harm is foreseeable
  • D may be liable where C is closely or directly affected by his conduct
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14
Q

Caparo Test - lord Bridges 3 requirements

A
  • reasonably foreseeable harm
  • proximity
  • justice, fairness and reasonableness
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15
Q

Lord Reed’s approach in Robinson

A
  • precedents and established principles should be followed where there is an established doc
  • the existence if a doc doesn’t depend on caparo, but on the facts of the case
  • in novel cases judges should consider whether to develop the law incrementally
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16
Q

Considerations relevant to breach of duty

A

Cost of taking care - Latimer

Seriousness of the harm - paris v stephney

Probability of harm - Read v Lyons

All relevent to the overarching consideration - was the conduct reasobable?

17
Q

Qualcast Ltd v Haynes

A

The reasonableness of D’s conduct must be judges in the light if all relevant circumstances

Negligence law is receptive to any proposition of good sense that is relevant in the circumstances - lord denning

18
Q

Factual causation

A

But for D’s conduct, would the end result have occured.

19
Q

Legal causation

A

Real, direct or effective cause

20
Q

De minimis non curat lex

A

The law does not take account of inconsequential or trifling harms

21
Q

Remoteness: a scope rule

A

Establishes the extent of liability. Draws a line between recoverable loss and irrecoverable loss

The damage must be a reasonably foreseeable type - oversees tankship ltd

22
Q

Eggshell Skull rule

A

Smith v Leech Brain

Where C’s susceptability to harm means that his or her losses extend beyond the threshold of reasonable foreseeability, they can still recover compensation.

23
Q

Lord Parker LJ in Smith v Leech Brain

A

‘It has always been the law of this country that a tortfeasor takes his victim as he finds him’.