Intentional Torts
Defamation
Negligence
Liability
Other
100

An intentional Act by D creating P's reasonable apprehension of immediate harmful or offensive contact to P's person, or something closely attached to P's person (e.g., hat, cane)

Assault

(also considered Attempted Battery)

100

P's burden of proving ________ relies on the type of plaintiff, if statement is a matter of public concern, or if it is slander per se

Damages

100

D owes ________ -to behave like a reasonably prudent person under the circumstances- to all foreseeable plaintiffs

a duty of care

100

Under ________, D can be liable without fault

Strict Liability

100

a person who unreasonably interferes with health, safety, or property rights of the community at large 

a public nuisance

200

An intentional harmful or offensive contact to P's person by D.

Battery

200

One who has pervasive fame or notoriety, or who voluntarily assumes a central role in a public matter

Public figures

200

When D's conduct falls short of the standard of reasonable care owed under the circumstances

Breach of duty

200

When a product departs from its intended design, causing it to be more dangerous than all of the manufacturer's other products of the same kind

Manufacturing defect

200

Intrusion upon P's private affairs in a manner that would be highly offensive to a reasonable person

Intrusion upon seclusion 

300

A physical entry of P's real property by D without consent

Trespass to land

300

When the republisher of a defamatory statement is liable to the same extent as the original publisher

Liability for republication

300

_______ test is used when considering that P's injury would not have occurred if not for D's alleged breach of duty

"But-for" test

300

______ case states that D can be held liable without fault under strict liability when:

The nature of D's activity imposes absolute duty to make safe

Causation- actual and proximate cause

Damages to P's person or property


Prima Facie Case

300

Unauthorized use of P's name or likeness for commercial purposes

Appropriation

400

When D's conduct is directed at a third person and P (the bystander) suffers severe emotional distress

Bystander claims for emotional distress

400

A written defamatory statement

Libel

400

intervening forces that occur after D's conduct to cause P's injuries: where P's injuries were foreseeable and D's liability is not cut off.

Indirect causes

400

Owners are strictly liable for unprovoked injuries cause by ________, even if kept as pets

Wild Animals

400

widespread publication of a falsehood or material misrepresentation about P that would be highly offensive to a reasonable person

False Light

500

D's intentional interference with P's right of possession in tangible personal property

Trespass to Chattel and Conversion

500

When the statement made is in the public interest

Qualified Privilege

500

Personal Injury

Property Damage

Punitive Damages

Damages due to Negligence

500

(These people) are generally not entitled to recovery under strict liability

Hint: Strict Liability: Animal Conduct

Trespassers

500

Fraud and Deceit are two examples

Intentional misrepresentation