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Negligence

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Title: Negligence


1
Negligence
2
Negligence - definition
  • Failure to apply reasonable care in order to
    avoid foreseeable injuries to others
  • The law requires that we act reasonably toward
    other people and their property

3
  • "The rule that you are to love your neighbour
    becomes in law, you must not injur your
    neighbour. You must take reasonable care to avoid
    acts or ommisions which you can reasonably
    foresee would be likely to injur your neighbour."
    (Donoghue v. Stevenson,1932)

4
The reasonable person
  • The standard that we must meet is that of the
    reasonable person in the same or similar
    circumstances
  • The judges invented the notion of the reasonable
    man a meticulously careful person or a perfect
    person

5
  • "Negligence is the omission to do something which
    a reasonable man, guided upon those
    considerations which ordinarily regulate the
    conduct of human affairs, would do, or doing
    something which a prudent and reasonable man
    would not do. The defendants might have been
    liable for negligence, if, unintentionally, they
    omitted to do that which a reasonable person
    would have done, or did that which a person
    taking reasonable precautions would not have
    done." (Blyth v. Birmingham Water Works, 1856)

6
The Law of Torts
  • The Law of Torts (Tort Law) sets standards for
    our behaviour and provides remedies if we do not
    meet these standards
  • It imposes on each member of society the duty to
    take reasonable care to avoid causing harm to
    others

7
The Law of Negligence
  • It decides whether the tortfeasor was negligent
    in his or her behaviour
  • If the court finds the tortfeasor negligent, he
    or she may be ordered to compensate the injured
    party
  • The injured party (claimant) must show that the
    tortfeasor did not meet the standard of care owed
    to him or her and that the injury resulted from
    that failure

8
Failure to use ordinary care
  • Negligence is an allegation or accusation of
    failure to use ordinary care
  • Failure to use ordinary care can also occur by
    omission, or failing to do something that a
    reasonable person would have done
  • Negligence is therefore a judgment of both acts
    and omissions

9
Components of a negligence cause of action
  • When considering a nagligence cause of action,
    there are six primary elements to be considered
  • 1. Duty
  • 2. Breach of duty
  • 3. Causation
  • 4. Damage
  • 5. Remoteness
  • 6. Defences

10
Duty
  • The duty element is the legal requirement that
    the person being sued for negligence must adhere
    to a standard of conduct in protecting others
    from unreasonable risk of harm
  • Types of duties parental, personal, professional

11
Breach of duty
  • Would a reasonable person in a similar situation
    have done the same thing as the person being
    sued?
  • The objective (hypothetical) and subjective
    (actual) standard of breach of duty

12
Causation
  • Actual cause was the person being sued the
    actual cause of injuries sustained by the
    plaintiff?
  • Proximate cause were the injuries sustained
    foreseeable or too remotely connected to the
    incident?

13
Damage
  • Claimants must have suffered damage from the
    negligent act
  • Physical damage
  • Economic damage or
  • both

14
Remoteness
  • Only reasonably foreseeable damage may be
    recovered by an action in negligence
  • It must have been reasonably foreseeable that
    damage of the same kind as the claimant suffered
    would ensue from it (legal cause of the action)

15
Defences
  • The tortfeasor may have a complete or partial
    defence to the tort
  • A common complete defence is where the tortfeasor
    proves that the claimant consented either
    expressly or implicitly to the risk of damage, or
    where the tortfeasor proves that the claimant
    acted negligently

16
Damages
  • The court decides the amount of damages to be
    awarded
  • Special damages (precisely quantified)
  • General damages (not quantified precisely pain
    and suffering, future losses)
  • Punitive damages (where the tortfeasor
    intentionally committed the tort for economic
    gain)
  • Nominal damages (negligible damage)

17
Case StudyLiebeck v.McDonalds
  • Stella Liebeck (79) bought a cup of coffee for 49
    cents at the drive-through window of a McDonalds
    in Albuquerque, New Mexico
  • She placed the cup between her legs to remove the
    lid to add cream and sugar and spilled the
    coffee, burning herself

18
Injuries
  • Ms. Liebeck's injuries were severe. She suffered
    full thickness burns (third-degree burns) and
    scalding to her inner thighs, groin and buttocks.
    She was in the hospital for eight days and had to
    undergo extremely painful procedures to remove
    layers of dead skin, as well as several graft
    operations.

19
The coffee
  • The McDonald's coffee Ms. Liebeck purchased was
    served at a temperature of between 180 and 190
    degrees Fahrenheit. For home use, coffee is
    generally brewed at 135 to 140 degrees. If
    spilled on skin, any beverage heated to between
    180 and 190 degrees will cause third-degree burns
    in two to seven seconds.

20
The action
  • Ms. Liebeck's original intention was to obtain
    legal help in order to be reimbursed for her
    medical expenses, which were said to have
    totalled nearly 20,000. However, McDonald's
    refused to pay her medical bills. This led Ms.
    Liebeck to file a product-liability suit.

21
Allegation
  • Liebeck sued McDonalds, alleging that the coffee
    was too hot

22
Decision
  • The jury awarded her 160,000 to compensate her
    for her injuries and 2.7 million to punish
    McDonalds

23
Advocates of tort reform
  • They claim this is a clear case of lawsuit abuse
    everyone knows that coffee is hot and if you
    spill it, you can burn yourself
  • No one is willing to accept the consequences of
    everyday accidents judges and juries have
    allowed plaintiffs to pass their misfortune on to
    someone with a deep pocket

24
Defenders of tort law
  • They see Liebecks case as the evidence of how
    well the tort system works
  • McDonalds had received over 700 complaints about
    the temperature of the coffee (20 degrees hotter
    than competitors)
  • Liebeck was in hospital for a week with
    third-degree burns requiring skin grafts

25
Jurys reasoning in the case
  • 2,7 million was the amount that McDonalds made
    from two days of coffee sales the punitive
    damage award
  • Liebeck was partially responsible for her
    injuries because she was not careful, so it
    reduced the damages awarded to her accordingly

26
The judges decision
  • The trial judge further reduced the punitive
    damages to 480.000

27
The result
  • After this case, McDonalds reduced the
    temperature of its coffee
  • A wrongdoer was forced to compensate an injured
    victim and to remedy its dangerous conduct

28
Vocabulary
  • Fill in the blanks with appropriate words from
    the lost below
  • duty, damage, care, liability, conduct, breach,
    liable, intention
  •  
  • Negligence which harms another unjustifiably is
    not only a tort in itself, it is also a condition
    of _________________ for tort. From this point of
    view it is, like __________, a mental state. One
    may say that it is a failure to use proper
    _________ in one's conduct. Negligence will in
    general involve liability for ___________ caused
    by it but before we can say that there has been
    negligence of which the law will take account,
    one must make sure that there is a legally
    recognized _________ to take care.
  • The House of Lords held in 1969 that a barrister
    or solicitor normally owes his client a duty of
    care, any ____________ of which will render him
    ______________ to his client, except where he is
    acting as an advocate, when he will not be liable
    for negligence in his ____________ of a case.

29
  • Negligence which harms another unjustifiably is
    not only a tort in itself, it is also a condition
    of liability for tort. From this point of view it
    is, like intention, a mental state. One may say
    that it is a failure to use proper care in one's
    conduct. Negligence will in general involve
    liability for damage caused by it but before we
    can say that there has been negligence of which
    the law will take account, one must make sure
    that there is a legally recognized duty to take
    care.
  • The House of Lords held in 1969 that a barrister
    or solicitor normally owes his client a duty of
    care, any breach of which will render him liable
    to his client, except where he is acting as an
    advocate, when he will not be liable for
    negligence in his conduct of a case.
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