Chapter 4: Negligence: Res Ipsa Loquitur Flashcards

1
Q

General Rule

A

Even without specifying what the ∆ did negligently, the π may proceed if 1) does not ordinarily occur (>50%) 2) ∆ had exclusive control

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2
Q

McDougland v. Perry (Spare-y tire)

A

π needs only to prove event likely not to occur without evidence

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3
Q

Larson v. St. Francis (Catholic chairs)

A

RIL does not apply if ∆ does not have exclusive control

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4
Q

Cruz v. Daimler Motors (clean airbags)

A

A manufacturer/seller may still be liable for RIL if other possibilities have sufficiently been eliminated

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5
Q

James v. Wormuth (James and the Giant wire)

A

RIL cannot be applied if wire/object was not left negligently but intentionally

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6
Q

Sullivan v. Crabtree (Crap!Thee gravel)

A

RIL creates burden on ∆ to show reasonable explanation, the strength of which depends of facts and strength of the inference

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7
Q

Byrne v. Boadle (put flour on that burn)

A

The fact that some types of accidents occur, proves negligent cause with not more evidence needed

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