Intentional Torts
Negligence
Defenses on the Merits
Defenses not on the Merits
Vicarious Liability
100

This concept comes into play when a defendant intends to commit a battery against one person but instead inflicts harm against a different person

What is transferred intent?

100

These are the 5 traditional elements of a negligence claim

What are duty, breach, actual cause, proximate cause, and damages?

100

These defenses must be pled and proven by the defendant

What are "affirmative defenses?"

100

This concept sets the maximum time allowed to initiate legal proceedings after an event or harm occurs

What is a statute of limitations?

100

Under this concept, employers can be held liable for the torts of certain employees

What is respondeat superior?

200

This tort involves the intent to cause a harmful or offensive contact to the plaintiff 

What is battery?

200

This concept is often used to describe the "zone of risk" or "scope of liability"

What is proximate cause?

200

This defense completely bars recovery if a plaintiff is even 1% at fault

What is contributory negligence?

200

This describes situations in which the statute of limitations begins to run when accumulated effects of exposure manifest themselves to the claimant in a way which supplies some evidence of a causal relationship to the product

What is "manifestation theory?"

200

This concept describes an employee’s conduct if it is of the same general kind as authorized or expected, and the employee was acting within authorized time and space limit

What is within the course and scope of employment? 

300

These damages may be awarded to an intentional tort victim who only suffers trivial harm or offense

What are nominal damages?

300

This is the standard duty of care in a negligence case

What is the care that a reasonably careful person would use under like circumstances?

300

This defense allows a plaintiff to recover damages, but reduces the damages awarded based on the plaintiff's percentage of fault

What is pure comparative negligence?

300

This concept allows the statute of limitations to be paused

What is tolling?

300

This concept is be used to eliminate employer liability for accidents during the commute to work

What is the going and coming rule?

400

This intentional tort occurs when a defendant INTENDS to cause the plaintiff to ANTICIPATE an imminent and harmful or offensive contact with the plaintiff's person

What is assault?

400

This is the majority rule for the standard of care required of a minor who engages in an adult activity 

What is the standard of care required of an adult under reasonably similar circumstances?

400

This concept bars recovery when the plaintiff is greater than 50% at fault

What is modified comparative negligence?

400

This concept allows the statute of limitations to be extended

What is a grace period?

400

A business is generally not responsible for torts committed by this type of worker

What is an independent contractor?

500

This tort occurs when a person confines another intentionally, without lawful privilege, and against his consent within a limited area for any appreciable time, however short

What is false imprisonment?

500

This doctrine simplifies proving negligence by establishing a violation of a statute as prima facie evidence of negligence

What is negligence per se?

500

These defenses which were at one time an absolute bar to recovery have been merged into the defense of comparative negligence

What are primary and secondary assumption of the risk? 

500

This concept means that no cause of action at all exists under state law on which to base any claim for damages

What is federal preemption?

500

This word is used to describe when a vehicle owner knowingly consents to other person's possession of it

What is "entrustment?"