Duty Of Care: Omissions and Third Parties Flashcards

1
Q

Omissions General Rule

A

Mere failure to act is generally not actionable

Stovin v Wise:
-no positive duty to act: not liable for pure omissions

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2
Q

Exception 1: Control

Reeves v Commissioner of Police for the Metropolis

A

Facts: • Police commissioner owed a DoC to a prisoner to take reasonable care to prevent him from committing suicide

Judgment: claim successful

L.P: •Police were under a DoC yo take reasonable care not to give the prisoner the opportunity to kill himself
•contributed to his death

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3
Q

Exception 2: Assumption of Responsibility

Barrett v Ministry of Defence

A

Facts: • Navy man promoted and got very drunk
•He was escorted to his cabin where he was left
•He choked on his own vomit and died

Judgment: DoC Established

L.P: •DoC was formed when he collapsed and his friends assumed responsibility for him

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4
Q

Exception 3: Creating or Adopting Risks

Goldman v Hargrave

A

Facts: • Tall tree struck by lighting caught fire
• Man moved combustible material away and sprayed water around
• A few days later the fire started again and damaged nearby property

Judgement: DoC owed

L.P: • was foreseeable and proximity to neighbour

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5
Q

Exception 3: Creating/ Adopting Risks

General principle

A

D becomes liable if D creates the danger or if D takes positive action and makes the situation worse

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6
Q

Liability for Acts of Third Parties

General rule

A

No liability for deliberate interventions.

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7
Q

Acts of Third Parties

Exception 1: Control - D- TP relationship

Dorset Yacht v Home Office

A

Facts: •Borstal boys were under control of D’s officers
• Officers failed to supervise boys properly
• Boys caused damage to owners of Yachts, C

Judgment: Claim successful

L.P: •Damage occurred as a direct result of officers failure to supervise

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8
Q

Exception 2: Assumption of responsibility D-C relationship

Palmer v Tees Health Authority

A

Facts: • A third party underwent mental assessments and was released
• TP went on to injure Cs child
• C argued D should not have released him

Judgement: no DoC found

L.P: •Not a sufficient enough link to establish DoC between D and C

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9
Q

Exception 3: Creation of Risk

Third party actions exacerbate a danger created by D

Topp v London Country Buses

A

Facts: • Bus left running with keys in ignition
• People took bus and ran someone over
•C sued bus people

Judgment: No DoC

L.P: •No reason to expect bus being taken

• May have been at fault but D did not CREATE the risk

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10
Q

Exception 4:

Failure to Abate a known danger

Smith v Littlewoods

A

L.P: • A general Duty on occupiers to take care with respect to things on their premises which might foreseeably cause harm to neighbouring property

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