Intentional Torts
Negligence
Strict Liability
Immunities, Defenses and Privileges
Multi-factor Tests, etc
100

Elements of Battery

  • The actor intends to cause a contact with the person of another
  • The actor’s affirmative conduct causes such a contact; and
  • The contact
  • - Causes bodily harm to the other, or
  • - Is offensive
100

Andrews's Approach to Duty

Defendants owe a duty of reasonable care to the entire world, foreseeability is analyzed under proximate cause

100

Liability for domestic animals

If defendant aware of vicious propensities and those propensities the same as harm plaintiff suffered, then defendant strictly liable

100

qualified immunity 

state: bad faith (discretionary? Bad faith? gross neg or reck?

Federal : clearly established: 1) was the right clearly established, 2) if yes then would/should reasonable D know it was clearly established?

100

Tunkl Factors - what are they and when are they applied?

1. To determine whether to enforce an express waiver of liability 

2. Tunkl factors:

-Should government regulate this industry?

-Contract of adhesion?

-Disproportionate bargaining power between the parties?

-Is this a business open to the public?

-Plaintiff paid defendant with expectation of protection?

-Good or service of importance to the public?

200

False Imprisonment 

  • Intends to confine
  • And does confine another
  • Through affirmative conduct, or
  • By failing to release the other from a confinement despite a duty to do so, and
  • The other is aware of the confinement or suffers bodily harm as a result of the confinement
200

Cause in Fact tests 

- But for (Concurrent causes)

- Overdetermined cause

- Alternative Liability 

-Concerted Action

-Multiple Sufficient Causal Sets

-Substantial Contribution to the risk

200

When is a warning required and what do courts say you should always warn about

1. When there is a risk of harm that the normal user would not be aware of

2. Is the warning adequate?

- Adequately indicate scope, extent and consequences of danger

- Adequate in content and intended audience 

- Balance of cost benefits of additional warnings 


should warn about: 1)irreducible risk, 2) how to mitigate risk 3) what to do if risk occurs, 4) how not to use in a dangerous way 

200

entity immunities?

state: discretionary/ministeral, gov/proprietary 

discreationary 

1) is it discreationary 

2) is this discreationary jusgmdnet one we want to protect? (social, political, economic reason?) 

consider peavler factors 


gov/properitary: 

1) traditionally done by gov?

2) can only be done by gov? (police) 

3) charged a fee?

4) if fee then did they make a profit?

200

Peavler Factors - what are they and when are they applied?

1. Used when determining whether conduct was discretionary or ministerial

2. Factors:

- Nature of the conduct?

- Effect on government operations?

-Court's capacity to evaluate the properity of government action

300

IIED

  • Extreme and
  • Outrageous
  • Conduct
  • That intentionally or
  • Recklessly
  • Causes (and proximately causes)
  • Severe emotional distress
300

Professional Standard of care:

Who does it apply to and what is it?

Applies to: medical professionals, lawyers, accountants, vets, surveyors, engineers, architects, sometimes pilots

Standard: Objective standard considering the average professional's level of skill and training  

If off duty, then reasonable person standard applies rather than professional standard, but special skills and training may be considered 

300

tests for each kind of "defect" and what prima facie evidence are needed for each?

Manufacturing- R2 "consumer expectation" and R3 departs from intended design 

design- R2 consumer expectation and majority risk utility (must show alternative design feasible in all JX) 

warning- was the danger of the type that required a warning to the average consumer? was the wanring adequate? 


warning need to prove D,B,C,PC, Harm 

M/D- C and PC and H only 


300

public duty doctrine (duty or immunity/)

Duty- nonfeasance only 

1) did the city assume a voluntary duty?

2) the city knows their inaction could lead to harm 

3) did injured party justifiable rely on this promise 

4) (only in some JX) was there direct contact between P and city?

300

Frolic v. Detour test

1. Time and space of deviation

2. Length in time of deviation

3. Incidental to work

4. Employee's intent

5. Freedom employee permitted in performing duties

6. Type of work employee hired to do 

400

Participation Liability 

  • Knowingly and
  • Substantially
  • Instigated, encouraged or assisted the other’s commission of an intention tort
400

Non-delegable duties

1. Activities involving trespass or nuisance

2. Activities that create peculiar risk 

3. Duty to maintain land and chattels

4. Where imposed by statute 

5. Repossession of collateral 

6. Medical malpractice 

400

RIL In Strict products liability and which beach RIL is closer and why?

In SL- was the incident of teh kind that would not ordinarily occur without a defect? and Was the incident not solely caused by something other than a product defect at time of sale/distribution?

closer to the R3 breach test, no sole control element 

400

excuses for neg per se?

5

1) incapable due to physical incapacity (not needed to be perm) or minority 

2) did they reasonable try to comly?

3) was it safer for anyone not to?

4) statute too vague? 

5) D did not have reason to know the facts of this circumstance gave rise to this statute

400

Custodial Factors

  • Was defendant in a better position to anticipate and understand potential risks?
  • Did Defendant have superior knowledge or ability to mitigate risks?
  • Was plaintiff particularly venerable and dependent on defendant?
  • Was plaintiff acting under an expectation of defendant’s protection?
  • Was defendant in a position where the expected financial gain from their dealings with plaintiff?
500

Trespass to Chattels 

  • Defendant intentionally
  • Uses another’s chattel
  • Dispossesses the other of a chattel
  • Deprives other of us of the chattel for a substantial time, or
  • Harms the possessor’s property
500

Special Relationship Categories 

1. Common carriers and passengers 

2. Innkeepers and guests

3. Those that open their land to the public

4. Landlords and tenants

5. Schools and their students

6. Custodian and those in their custody 

7. Employees and Employees

8. Co-adventures 

If none of the above, apply custodial factors 

500

misuse in products liabulity

If its a foreseeable misuse then liability, if not foreseeable likely no liability 

500

consent: types and definitions 

actual: willingness, within the scope of time and nature, capable of giving consent, no mistake or duress 

apparent: is actor reasonably believes the person is actually consenting 

presumed: under social normals D has no reason to believe P would not have actually consented if asked 

500

Criminal Conduct on land

- Specific Harm rule: No duty unless D is aware of specific imminent harm about to befall P

-Prior similar incident tests: The harm is only foreseeable if there were prior similar incidents on that property

-Totality of the circumstances test: If third-party criminal was foreseeable under the circumstances, then duty

Balance test: Balance the foreseeable harms verse the burden of preventing them (Learned Hand Formula)

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