Negligent Torts - BREACH Flashcards

1
Q

What is res ipsa loquitur?

A

The fact that the event occurred triggers a presumption of negligence (e.g., A well-secured barrel wouldn’t just wall out of a window)

[Used by plaintiffs who lack information about what D did wrong]

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2
Q

What are the two elements of res ipsa loquitur?

A

Plaintiff must show that:

  1. The accident in question is normally associated with negligence, AND
  2. The negligence would normally be due to someone in the D’s position (e.g., because of control)
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3
Q

What does a plaintiff need to show for a breach?

A
  1. What the defendant did
  2. Why that conduct falls short of the standard of care (can either be an act or omission)
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4
Q

What happens when you adequately prove the elements of Res Ipsa Loquitor?

A

The plaintiff withstands a motion for a directed verdict.

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5
Q

What are the five elements of negligent torts?

A
  1. D owed a DUTY to conform to a specific standard of conduct (to protect P from unreasonable risk of injury),
  2. D BREACHED its duty,
  3. Breach was the ACTUAL CAUSE of P’s injury,
  4. Breach was the PROXIMATE CAUSE of P’s injury, AND
  5. P suffered DAMAGE
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6
Q

What are the two ways someone can breach a duty?

A
  1. Affirmative action, negligently (ACT)
  2. Failure to take reasonable action (OMISSION)
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7
Q

What must you do to show breach?

A
  1. Identify the negligent behavior (the breach)
  2. Explain why the conduct is unreasonable
    (e. g., (1) D drank six beers before driving his car. (2) This was unreasonable because driving while intoxicated is a threat to the safety of others.)
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