Torts Outline
Torts Outline
1 
 
TORTS  FALL 2010 -  Prof. EWING 
 
Introduction 
  Liability for wrongs that people inflict on each other by various means 
o  Assaults, car accidents, malpractice, defamation 
o  Gives victim a remedy against person who wronged them 
  Torts and criminal law was combined in English Common Law 
o  Here there is a broad division between criminal and civil wrongs 
o  Criminal- brought by government 
o  Criminal- there may not be any injury to anyone else 
o  Malpractice may be strictly a tort 
Standards: Criminal  (reasonable doubt)  ****  Civil/Tort (preponderance of evidence) 
I.   Intentional Torts 
 
A. Battery 
Intentional bodily contact, which is harmful or offensive. The intent element does not require a 
desire or purpose to bring a specific result of injury, it is satisfied if the actors affirmative act 
causes an intended contact, which is harmful or offensive.  Un-consented touching- may or 
may not have to be intentional- usually does  
 
Note contact can be with an actors clothes or purse/bag. And, for offensive contact, all thats 
necessary is for that the actor intended to cause the other, directly or indirectly to come in 
contact w/ a foreign substance in a manner which the other will reasonably regard as offensive. 
 
1) Intent and Volition 
The Intent element does not have to be intent to harm, simply intent to make contact. 
And, intent maybe unlawful depending on circumstances of location/place. 
 
a) Vosburg v. Putney 
12 yo boy kicks 14 yo boy in classroom after teacher called class to 
order. 14 yo injured in shin. The court notes the location of the accident, 
and implies that if this was horseplay in the playground, a P would know 
the risk of the actions. The court stated because school had commenced, 
there was no implied license to do the act/kicking. 
  Court defines unlawful- intention must be lawful, or defendant must be at 
fault- courts reasoning seems circular 
o  The intended act was to kick the other kid- how do we know this?- 
court assumes that it is 
 
RULE: If the intended act is unlawful, the intention to commit it 
must necessarily be unlawful.  
 
Also note, children held liable for their intentional torts. 
 
b) Knight v. Jewett 
Touch football game between friends gets a bit rough. D knocks P over 
during play and steps on her finger and injures her. It appears as though 
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accident occurred during game play. Act was not wrongful.  And, P 
conceded that D did not intend to step on her hand and did not intend to 
hurt her. 
 
RULE: A requisite element of assault and battery is intent   
  No intent = no claim. 
 
  Reconciling Vosburg and Knight- Knight- she knew the risks of playing 
the game- assumption of risk- defendant didnt intend to step on her 
finger- it was an accident- Vosburg- it wasnt an accident and act was 
wrongful 
 
c) White v. University of Idaho 
Piano teacher walks up behind student, while she was seated at a counter, 
and touched her back with both of hands in a motion made to simulate 
striking a keyboard. Student suffered serious injuries which required 
surgery. The act was voluntary and intentional. 
 
RULE: Battery elements are met when intended contact is un-
permitted and is harmful or offensive. The contact and result may be 
physically harmless, but if offensive, its battery.  
 
The test for determining if touching was offensive/unpermitted 
touching is: What would a reasonable person want?  Or, is this 
contact reasonable given these circumstances. 
 
  Piano teacher intended to touch- conduct was intentional- closer to Vosburg 
o  Is this common in teaching piano? 
  How do we decide if it is consented? 
o  Subjective v. objective- would probably want a reasonableness 
standard. 
  How do you determine intent?- usually up to a jury- difficult to determine 
 
Polmatier v. Russ 
Ct. finds L for D (insane man) who shoots his father in law with a 
shotgun.  Ct. says the action was intentional  insane person acts 
intentionally, even though his reasons or motives leading to intention 
may be entirely irrational.  He is not criminally liable, but is civilly 
liable.  Court reasons that it makes sure the caretakers are responsible.   
  Restatement- all acts, except compulsive, are intentional 
 
Laidlaw v. Sage 
Ct. finds NL for D who uses a man as a human shield when a man comes 
into his business strapped with a bomb.  Ct. says self preservation is the 
first law of nature.  Where it is a question of whether one of two men 
will suffer, each is justified in doing the best he can for himself. 
 
d) Keel v. Hainline 
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Boys throwing erasers back and forth in horse play while waiting for late 
teacher to show up. The boys tossed the erasers toward one another at 
opposite ends of the classroom until one hit a girl in the face.  None of 
boys intended to strike or injure P, who brought suit against several boys, 
including those who had not thrown the eraser, but were involved in 
game.  Ct. finds L for D who threw the eraser and Ds involved in game. 
 
RULE: If the act was wrongful, the intent was wrongful.  The fact 
that the act was done is enough.   
 
Intent may be transferred, its no defense for A to say he intended to 
make contact with B after he actually hit C. As intentions toward B 
are combined with the harmful contact of C to create battery.  B is 
also liable because he was included and encouraged the wrongful 
act. 
 
Keel was the one the eraser was thrown atHe may be held liable if 
he is encouraging or abetting an act..but not mere provocation.. 
 
e) Manning v. Grimsley 
Pitcher is being heckled by fans sitting nearby while warming up. Pitcher 
throws the ball at the stands and towards hecklers. Ball goes through a 
mesh fence and hits P who may or may not have been a heckler.  Ct. 
finds L for D where a jury could infer that Pitcher intended to cause 
harm to one or more of the hecklers.  Regardless of who he intended to 
harm, D is L if he harms someone else. It may be reasonable behavior to 
heckle. 
 
RULE: Liability in battery is not diminished if actor is provoked. 
The behavior of plaintiff not examined.  
 
Lecture Note- Although Grimsley was provoked, this does not alter 
his liability.The case would have been different had the other 
people been throwing car batteries at him or somethingNo 
reasonable assumption of risk from heckling fans.. 
 
All thats required is that P intended to do AN action. It doesnt 
matter if P was direct target of Ds intent, L for battery exists for 
anyone who is physically injured as a result intentional harmful 
contact either at him or a 3
rd
 party. 
 
 
2) Minimum Requirements 
How direct or invasive does contact need to be to constitute harmful or offensive? In 
some cases, smoke purposely blown in anti-smokers face is considered contact thats 
harmful and offensive. 
 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
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  Leichtman v. WLW Jacor Communications, Inc. - Guest on radio show- smoke 
intentionally blown in his face by D.  Ct. finds L for D - smoke is particulate matter capable 
of making physical contact and of offending a reasonable sense of personal dignity 
 
  Madden v. DC Transit System, Inc.- plaintiff injured by bus fumes- Ct. finds no L for D - no 
wrongful intent- distinguishes the 2 cases b/c no intent 
 
a) Morgan v. Loyacomo 
P purchases underwear from Ds store and leaves. Ds manager only sees 
P paying for one and follows P out of store and pursues her for a block. 
Then, before several other people, D explains he has to inspect purchase 
to make sure she paid, forcibly grabs bag and looks through it. P sues for 
battery. Ct finds L for D. 
 
RULE: It is not necessary to touch a plaintiffs body or, even, 
clothing, or bags attached to Ps person, when its done in a rude 
and insolent manner.  
 
Store manager had better alternatives than taking her bag!! 
What if she has stolen property?- case would probably differ- may 
be a type of consent b/c she had stolen goods 
 
b) Wallace v. Rosen 
During fire drill, teacher told P (student) to move it, put fingers on her 
shoulder then turned P 90 degrees towards stairs. P then slipped and fell 
down stairs. NL for teacher. Note, could have been L if teacher had 
pushed/shoved P, instead of simply touching. 
 
RULE: In a crowded world, a certain amount of personal contact is 
inevitable and must be accepted. The license of the situation, and the 
relationship between the parties, will determine the reasonable 
contact permitted. 
 
3) Consent and limitations/Affirmative Defenses 
 
Sometimes a defendant will offer a plaintiffs consent as an affirmative 
defense/privilege to battery. Other times consent will render otherwise offensive contact 
inoffensive. 
 
Consent is willingness in fact for conduct to occur. It may be manifested by action, or in 
action, and need not be communicated to the actor (apparent consent). 
 
Mohr v. Williams 
P agrees to have D operate on one ear.  Upon examination immediately 
prior to surgery, D found that Ps other ear was actually in need of 
surgery.  P awoke and came to have pain and loss of hearing in the ear 
that was operated on.  Ct. finds L for D because he did not have consent 
of P to perform the operation on the ear that he did.  Consent is only 
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implied when necessary to preserve life or limb and the person is 
otherwise unable to communicate consent. 
     
a) Grabowski v. Quigly 
P slips on ice and hurts back, hires D to perform back surgery. P later 
discovers that during surgery/while under anesthesia, Surgery was not 
performed by D, but by other doctor. App. Ct finds L for D - battery b/c 
he didnt consent for that doctor to do that surgery.  This case protects 
patients right to choose!!! 
 
RULE: Consent to one person can not be transferred to another. 
 
RESTATEMENT: However, note, in hospitals, consent to doctors may 
be interpreted to include acts of another, assistants, or subordinates. (not 
case in Grawbowski though) 
 
b) Brzoska v. Olson 
D is a dentist with HIV. Doesnt tell patients and about a year after HIV 
diagnosis dies. Former patients, who had not known he had AIDS, bring 
suits against estate alleging battery. None of patients contracted AIDS. 
SC affirms TCs decision that D had not committed an offensive touching 
of any of the Ps.  No L for D.  Ps had consented to touching and 
willingly attended Ds practice.  Ps failed to show any specific exposure 
to HIV  may have made things a bit different. 
 
RULE:  Cant evaluate actual touch, if unwanted offensive, after the 
fact. Therefore, to determine offensiveness standard a court can ask 
Would a reasonable person mind/object if X happened? 
 
c) Cohen v. Smith 
P admitted to hospital to deliver baby, tells doctors she can not have man 
other than husband see her naked. During procedure male nurse sees her 
naked. P sues nurse and hospital for battery. Ct. finds L for D as they 
acted in the face of Ps expressed refusal of treatment involving any male 
seeing her unclothed. 
 
RULE:  Informing others about objections can constitute implicit 
refusal of contact. 
 
  Lecture Note- Distinction between Broska - she told them before the 
operation that if she was to be operated on that she should not be 
touched or seen by any men while she is unclothed, wishes were 
violated, no consent, the touching was a battery  
 
d) Werth v. Taylor 
P was Jehovahs Witness, not allowed to have blood transfusion.  Fills 
out form before operation that says she refuses to have blood transfusion. 
P looses blood during  D&C procedure, doctors give her blood. She sues 
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for battery. NL for D. (note, Ewing thinks it should have been L b/c of 
consent form. Court saw wavering of Ps husband as sign they did not 
understand the optionsdeath or transfusion). 
 
RULE:  There are limitations of consent/lack of consent that can be 
overruled in times of emergency/duress. 
 
The law implies consent of an unconscious patient to medical 
procedures needed to preserve patients life. 
 
Ewing said that there was no consent here for the blood transfusion.  
The court held that since the plaintiffs request to not have a blood 
transfusion under any circumstances did not explicitly cover a life or 
death situation, and therefore, since it was a life or death situation, 
the court held that there was implied consent because it was an 
emergency procedure required and there was no opportunity to 
obtain actual consent or where the patient seeks treatment or 
otherwise manifests a willingness to submit to the particular 
procedure. At the moment of life and death, we can imply that she 
gave consent to a blood transfusion. 
 
What are you complaining about? Youre alive!!! 
Maybe a doctor wouldnt operate if he cant do a transfusion if 
necessary 
 
4) Consent to illegal acts 
Consent is effective to bar recovery in a tort action although the conduct consented to is 
a crime. 
  Rains- plaintiffs were patients at a psychotherapeutic center- plaintiffs consented to use of 
physical violence in sluggo therapy- defendants won but did not get total immunity- problem 
was that the plaintiffs could not prove their claim- plaintiffs won 
  Freedman- went into labor- called her doctor- hospital gave her a drug- was told the drug was 
to prevent infection- it was to induce hard labor contractions- court found for the doctors- not 
really a harmful or offensive act- doctors may be liable for negligence- physical contact is not 
the essential character of the misrepresentation- plaintiff alleged at court that inducing labor 
was so the doctor wouldnt be at the hospital over the weekend- if this was the case, different 
result 
  Neal- wife discovered her husband was having an affair- sued for battery- she would not have 
had sex with him if she knew he was having an affair- what result? 
  McNiel- two men on horse and carriage- road rage- got into a fight- plaintiff sued for injury- 
Ct. finds L for D.  Breach of peace cases were held to a different standard because the state is a 
party and consent to an assault is no justification. 
o  Self defense differs - ok as long as it is not an excessive response 
  consent 2 a crime usually means no liability unless the law is designed to protect a certain class 
(statutory rape cases) 
  consent is ineffective if drunk (Hollerud) 
 
 
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a) Hart v. Geysel 
2 men engage in illegal prize fighting. One of the men dies from injuries 
sustained in fight and estate sues D for damages. D defends on ground 
that P consented. TC dismissed complaint, NL for D. Ct. says Ps 
decedent consented to the combat as a matter of business and sport. 
 
IMPORTANT NOTE:  (On page 26 of the textbook, it says that Hart v. 
Geysel is the minority opinion, and the majority opinion is McNeil, and 
allows for one to collect in mutual affray).So in this situation, consent 
is not effective to bar recovery of a battery. 
 
RULE: No man shall profit from his wrong doing.   
One who has sufficiently expressed his willingness to suffer a 
particular invasion, has no right to complain if another acts upon the 
consent given. However, if the consent is exceeded (i.e. fist-fight 
agreed upon, but gun is used) then its an intentional tort. 
 
b) Hollerud v. Malamis 
P was drinking all night at Ds bar. The two men engage in Indian 
wrestling and P gets injured. Ct. finds L for D. 
 
RULE: An intoxicated actor is incapable of expressing a rational will 
or consent.   
(Is this always the case?) 
 
Consent is nullified when there is fraud involved that goes to the very character of the act that 
was being consented toExample- A choir teacher tells a pupil that a sexual exercise is helpful 
for the voice, when in fact it is not, and he is just doing it for his own pleasure.  The boys consent 
to do the action is nullified, and would not bar his recovery against the choir teacher because he 
the deception was to the very character of what the act was.. 
 
B) Trespass 
 
Trespass protects the right to exclusive enjoyment of the land. A defendant can invade Ps land 
OR, D may institute a physical invasion of property with objects or animals. 
 
One is subject to another for trespass if he intentionally:  
1) enters land in possession of the other or causes a thing or 3
rd
 person to do so.  
2) Remains on the land. 3) Fails to remove from the land a thing which he is under a duty to 
remove. 
 
1) Consent 
A conditional or restricted consent to enter land creates a privilege to do so as 
long as the condition or restriction is complied with. 
 
EXAMPLE: A allows B to park truck in As barn. While in barn B does 
automotive work on truck and accidentally starts a fire. B is a trespasser. 
 
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a) Desnick v. ABC (note, full case) 
P runs franchise eye clinic in mid-west. Ds reporters/producers pose as 
patients and go to clinics, secretly taping transactions. P sues claiming he 
would not have consented to Ds presence if he knew their true identity. 
COA/TC finds NL for D.  Consent is effective even though it may have 
been obtained by fraud. 
 
Court admitted, entering land w/o consent is trespass and, there is no 
journalists privilege to trespass.  However, consent can be effective 
even when procured by fraud. In this case it is because none of the 
interests that trespass seeks to protect were violated by the fraud. 
 
Ct. sees this case different than phony meter checker lying in order to 
gain access into a house to snoop around. 
 
Ct. also saw that no trespass b/c office services not disrupted, other 
patients not disturbed, and occurrence took place in office where P 
advertised and charged for services. 
Also, Ct. may have considered the social usefulness of Ds work, it had a 
social importance. 
A restaurant wants to have customers- a food critic is not trespassing- 
doesnt disrupt control of your property- open a store- you want people 
to come in- media is doing a public good 
Public policy? E.g., limitations on 1st Amendment? 
 
RULE: If consent procured by fraud, may be valid consent/defense 
as long as entry is not invasive in the interest of P or interference 
with ownership or possession of land. 
 
2) Knowledge 
Generally, the relevant intent in regard with trespass is the intent to go where 
you went, NOT whether or not you had intent to trespass. With torts, intent 
doesnt have to be to harm, hurt, trespass, rather, its the intent to do the act that 
ended up violating the law. 
 
a) Pegg v. Gray 
P owns farm with 70 cattle, D has adjoining farm with hounds used to 
hunt foxes. D often lets dogs out and they chase foxes onto Ps land and 
incite cattle to stampede and break down nearby fences.  
 
P sues D for trespass, Ct. finds L for D.  Owner knew or should have 
known that the dogs would enter neighbors property. 
 
RULE: Owner of a dog not answerable for its entry upon lands of 
another. However, if owner has actual or constructive knowledge 
that dogs/animals will go on lands of others (or they send dogs onto 
the lands of others) that is trespass.  
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RULE 2: Farmers and Ranchers are held Strictly Liable for damage 
done by their trespassing animals regardless of fencing efforts.  
 
b) Malouf v. Dallas Athletic Country Club 
P lives near country club. Ps car was hit 3 separate times by golf balls 
that went astray. P sues for trespass, TC finds NL.  
 
In this case, the golfers were aiming at the right flag on the golf course, 
but were merely poor golfers 
 
RULE: For trespass one has to have intent to enter land (i.e golfer 
aiming for flag on your property b/c they thought it was flag on 
course).  
 
  Intent plays some role in trespass- more intent in the dog case- it was 
enough that the owner had constructive knowledge the dogs would end 
up on the land. 
 
  Mistake- if theres a mistake and you think you should be there, 
however reasonable, you trespass.  But if the property owner is the 
one who misleads you, its not. 
 
  If its an accident- not liable!!! 
 
c) Van Alstyne v. Rochester Telephone Co. 
P owns hunting dogs. D Telephone Company comes onto Ps property, 
via consent for easement, to do necessary work.  They had a right to 
enter the property.  While performing operations they use lead and drop 
some of it onto land. Ps dogs eat the lead and die. 
 
P sues for trespass, Ct. finds for P, saying workers were responsible for it 
regardless of fault. P gave permission for D to come on land, but not to 
leave droppings there. 
 
RULE: An actor is liable for consequences regardless of whether the 
results could or should reasonable have been foreseen of whether 
acts constituted negligence. There is no intent, but they should have 
known better- case could easily go the other way b/c there was no 
intent. 
 
*Lost on negligence, won on trespass- probably changed the outcome 
 
If action interferes with use of property by landowner, even if 
unintentional act, its trespass. 
 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
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Consent may be given, but if D exceeds boundaries of consent given- 
thats trespass.  They had a limited license to be on the property.  
They exceeded the scope of that license. 
 
Similar to ABC case- went beyond the license- but werent harming 
the property 
 
What about Maloof case? - why is there liability here- people using 
the lead were acting in a more professional capacity 
 
HOWEVER- be mindful of Section 166- An unintentional and non-negligent entry does not amount to 
a liability for trespass. 
 
Edwards v. Lee 
Edwards was stopped from using caves that went underground because 1/3 were owned by Lee  even 
though he built the business and the entrance was on his land. 
   
C) Conversion 
Conversion is an intentional exercise of dominion or control over a chattel, which so seriously 
interferes with the right of another to control it that the actor may be required to pay for it. 
 
In conversion, and damages, court considers:  
A) Extent and duration of actors exercise of dominion or control;  
B) Actors intent to assert a right inconsistent with the others right of control;  
C) The actors good faith;  
D) The extent and duration of the resulting interference with the others right of control;  
E) The harm done to the chattel;  
F) The inconvenience and expense caused to the other. 
 
One who intentionally destroys a chattel, or, materially alters its physical condition to change 
its identity or character is liable for conversion. 
 
In conversion one seeks damages. If you want the property returned, institute a suit for 
replevin. 
 
1) Intentional dominion 
 
a) Russell-Vaughn Ford v. Rouse 
P visits Ds car dealerships looking for a new car. During 3
rd
 visit, Ds 
salesman asks P for keys to Ps car and pretends to not know where they 
are until P calls police. Ds salesman admits he wanted to see P cry a 
while. During trial, D admits this is common practice w/car salesman.   
 
P sues for conversion, wins at TC, Ala. SC affirms. Damages were 
$5,000, value of car, and he gets to keep the car. EWING sees a lot of 
damages, but perhaps damages were message to D after admitted it was 
usual practice to lose keys.  Court wants to deter coercion- 1 hour isnt 
worth the entire value of the car!!! 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
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Also, note, P involuntarily placed in this position and had little 
protection/bargaining power. There would be a difference if this was a 
rental car place and you had signed a contract. 
 
HYPOTHETICAL:  I rent a car from Hertz, and two days before the car 
is due, I loan the car to Serra to go to Montana. Now Hertz sues Myself 
and Serra for conversion.  Does the person I loaned it to become 
responsible?  I am definitely responsible. 
Answer:  The other person would also be responsible, even if I had told 
him that the car was in fact mine.  (Look at Section 164 with regard to 
trespass). 
Even if it was done by mistaken belief, if you actually engage in the act, 
like take the keys and drive a way, you are liable for a conversion 
I rent a car, and Im an hour late returning it, should I have to pay the full 
value of the car?- contractually accounted for- late fees written into 
contract 
 
RULE: Conversion is met when actor exercises dominion over 
property in exclusion or dominion of plaintiff.  
 
P does not need to exhaust all possible means of gaining possession of 
a chattel that is withheld by a defendant after demanding its return. 
 
Refusal without legal excuse to deliver a chattel constitutes 
conversion. 
 
If the court allowed the dealer to keep the car and pay for it, the dealer 
would have allowed the practice to continue.  This case calls the 
damages compensatory, but theyre really punitive damages 
 
b) Palmer v. Mayo 
P rents carriage to D for trip to East Haven on business. Along the way, 
D lends carriage to 3
rd
 party, who thinking cart belongs to D, takes it for 
ride and crashes it. 
 
P sues D and 3
rd
 party for conversion. Jury finds L for Ds. 
 
RULE: A bailee is liable in an action of tort for an injury to property 
bailed occurring during a use of it by him, or by others with his 
consent, which was never expressly or impliedly authorized by the 
original owner, even if the damage to the property was an accident 
and not negligence in way property was used. 
 
Think P allows D to take car for errands, on way home D stops to 
grocery shop while in parking lot car hit by someone else whose 
negligent. D is still liable, even though other driver negligent. 
 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
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Spooner- Manchester rented a horse to drive- went the wrong way- 
got directions- horse became lame- plaintiff sued- no negligence- he 
did the best he could- no conversion 
 
c) Wiseman v. Schaffer 
D is tow truck driver and received a telephone call from man claiming he 
was P. Asks him to tow a truck from a truck stop to a welding yard and 
told D that $30 needed to tow truck would be in visor of truck. D tows 
truck to welding yard and it is promptly stolen. Caller was phony and P 
was actually in diner during whole sequence.  
 
Court found L for D. 
 
RULE: Liability for conversion occurs even under reasonable mistake of 
fact or law. Even if something is a reasonable mistake, it wont get you 
off the hook. 
Ask, who is in the best position to prevent something like this from 
happening? -  Nobody except the tow truck driver could prevent this 
 
Restatement 244 covers this 
2) Theft 
A thief acquires no title to the property he steals. However, if victim looses 
goods to a fraud, that fraud voidable title, which can be voided when/if victim 
discovered the misdeed. Victim can seek damages or rescind transaction. 
 
a) OKeeffe v. Snyder 
Ps paintings stolen from art gallery, she tells friends about it, but does 
not tell police. Years later, D buys painting from other party, who claims 
his father inherited paintings. Impossible to tell if story is true. P sues for 
conversion, seeks replevin, L for D. 
 
RULE: A thief can not acquire title to a good nor, can good title be 
transferred to others, regardless of their good faith and ignorance of 
theft.  people down the line get fucked too! (theyll be L to the 
original owner) 
 
Conversion by fraud protects the buyer, conversion by theft protects 
the original owner. 
 
b) Phelps v. McQuade 
P approached by man claiming to be Gwynne, a man with good credit. 
Turns out mans credit is terrible, but P doesnt know that. P delivers 
jewelry to man, who turns around and immediately sells it to D. P learns 
of this and sues D. 
 
The question in court was if imposter had received title for jewels b/c if 
yes, then title could be transferred. 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
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Note, jeweler, unlike OKeeffe had intent to sell and was in best position 
to investigate potential buyers. 
 
RULE: When a vendor intends to sell his goods to the person he 
deals with, then title passes, even if vendor deceived about identity. 
It is a question of the vendors intention. 
 
They gave the jewels over to the crooks!!!  This is a main distinction- 
court wont allow liability since the original owner could have and 
should have checked on the buyer. 
 
c) Kelly Kar v. Maryland Casualty Co. 
Thief steals money from bank in Oklahoma and goes to Ca. to buy car. 
Pays for it in cash and trades in other car he bought with robbery cash. 
Banks insurance co. sues to recover $ from car company. Ct. finds NL 
for car company. 
 
Cash is universal means of transacting business, its hard to trace down 
the origins of cash (buyers means of protection), which is seen as the 
grease of the wheels of commerce.  Every merchant couldnt ask where 
you got your money- higher duty buying a painting 
 
RULE:  Only bad faith on part of such purchaser of a chattel 
purchased with stolen money can deprive him of ownership of 
chattel. 
 
d) Anderson v. Gouldberg 
D took logs from Ps property. P sues for replevin and Ds defense is that 
P had acquired logs by trespassing onto someone elses property. Ct. 
found L for D, saying that a thiefs title is better than anyone elses title 
other than the person thief stole from. The policy is to prevent a never-
ending cycle of crooks stealing from crooks. 
 
RULE: Possession, even if stolen, is good title against all the world 
except those having a better title, such as the original owner. 
 
  Armorie v. Delamirie 
Plaintiff found a jewel set when cleaning a chimney- gave jewel to one of his 
bosses- bosses refused to give it back- finder has rights to all except the true 
owner.  L for D. 
   
Moore v. Regents of the University of California 
Moore had hairy cell leukemia- doctors removed his spleen- w/o his consent, 
they tested the cells in the spleen- white blood cells overproduced certain 
proteins- developed a cell line from this and patented it- line valued at $3 
billion- trial court dismissed- app ct. reversed- the plaintiff believed that his 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
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spleen may be tested, but its not reasonable to believe that the spleen would be 
used in the way it was- not within the accepted understanding, so its conversion 
   
California Supreme Court reversed this claim!! 
  The spleen served a use to society- concerned about civil claims in this sense. 
Moore has a cause of action for breach of fiduciary duty and performance of 
medical procedures without his consent-  
   
Kreman v. Cohen 
Kreman registered sex.com with a firm designated to give the name- Cohen- 
released from prison, sent a fraudulent letter to the firm stating he was from 
Kremans firm and Kreman wanted to relinquish the name- gave domain name 
to Cohen- Kreman won $65 million- Kreman then brought a suit against the 
firm, Network Solutions- 3 part test to a property right 
1.  an interest of precise definition 
2.  must be capable of exclusive possession 
3.  putative owner must have established a legitimate claim to exclusivity 
Domain names satisfy the requirements- are valuable and capable of exclusive 
possession- jury might find that Kremans intangible property right was 
violated- NS wrongfully disposed of this property right- district curt concluded 
that since the property right was intangible, it is not subject to conversion- but 
NS gave away Kremans property- facially suspect letter-  
 
Compu Serve v. Cyber Promotions 
CS sues b/c of spam its customers got- court found that it was a trespass issue-  
 
D) FALSE IMPRISONMENT                                           
Protects the plaintiffs interest in freedom of movement- one party confines another party 
without authorization- not just formal incarceration- anywhere liberty of movement might 
wrongfully be restricted 
An actor is subject to liability to another for false imprisonment if:  
A)  He acts intending to confine the other or 3
rd
 person within boundaries fixed by the 
actor.  
AND 
  B) His act directly or indirectly results in such a confinement of the other 
  AND 
  C) The other is conscious of the confinement or is harmed by it. 
 
What constitutes confinement? 
  To make the actor liable for false imprisonment, the others confinement within the 
boundaries fixed by the actor must be complete. The confinement is complete even though 
there is means of escape UNLESS actor knows of it.  
 
1) Confinement  
 
a) Peterson v. Sorline/Eilers v. Coy 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
15 
Both cases involved Ps who joined cults and parents become concerned. They attempt to deprogram 
kids by kidnapping them and taking them to deprogramming center where it is difficult to 
escape/leave. In one case (Peterson) P escapes once she pretends to agree with deprogrammers. 
 
  Peterson- 21 year old at college joined a cult- sold everything- even a car her parents gave her- 
her parents became concerned- her grades declined- family concluded that she was in a state of 
psychological bondage- parents arranged to have her deprogrammed- she begged to be released 
and was at the house for a few weeks- got better- after a few weeks, she asked the police to take 
her back to the cult- sued parents for false imprisonment- kidnapping done by parents- there 
was a judgment against the programmers, no judgment against the parents (ds). 
o  She was willingly in the house for at least 13 days- she could have left- issue was if the 
daughter voluntarily participated for the first 3 days- jury concluded that her behavior 
constituted a waiver 
o  Society has a compelling interest in deprogramming 
o  SHE ASSENTED AT SOME POINT  no liability for parents here 
o  Dissent- shes not a child- the groups activities may be suspect, but she had the right to 
make that decision 
  Eilers- same scenario- 24 year old son joined a cult- parents worried about suicide- 
deprogramming- he was handcuffed to a bed in a room with boards on the windows for a few 
days- when he was allowed to go to the bathroom- ran- one of the guards stopped him- after a 
few days- he pretended to consent- got away- kidnapping done by the deprogrammers- just 
suing deprogrammers- courts deciding what is and is not a cult 
o  Court found for plaintiff- distinguished Peterson  P clearly did not consent 
*Ewing doesnt see a clear rule coming out of these cases and that in both, its false 
imprisonment as theres really no consent by either party.  She didnt consent to the initial 
kidnapping!!!- court states that this is the least restrictive alternative- is it?- one persons cult 
is another persons religion 
 
*Seems Peterson was not quite under the same circumstances as Eilers.  Eilers was handcuffed and 
held clearly against his will.  Although, Peterson was still certainly held against her will. 
 
b) Bright v. Ailshie 
Vincent Bright arrested and charged, gives name/SS as brother to bail 
bonds company and then is released from jail. He disappears.  Bail bond 
firms hires D, a bounty hunter, to bring P back to Missouri.  Once in 
Missouri its determined that Dennis Bright was the wrong party and 
wrongly arrested. P sues D for false imprisonment.  Mich. SC finds L for 
D  
 
RULE: Private persons may arrest other person if they committed 
felony, but it does not grant authority if person simply has suspicion, 
or has not committed felony. 
 
  Liability based on statute- Bright was covered by common law 
b/c he had probable cause 
 
c) Baggett v. National Bank & Trust Co. 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
16 
P enters Ds bank to deposit a check. Unknown to P, someone had 
written on back of teller slip that he was conducting a stick up. P gets 
money, leaves bank and Ds employee notifies police. Police bring D 
back to bank and investigate matter. Its pretty clear P did not write 
notes, but hes still brought down to police HQ. Through questioning and 
investigation, police determine notes not written by P and then released.  
 
RULE: One who instigates or participates in the unlawful 
confinement of another is subject to liability for false imprisonment. 
However, if arrest made solely by police then not false 
imprisonment.  As was the case here.  No liability because in good 
faith. 
 
  Gave information to the police, the police took the case- the bank 
acted reasonably 
  For better or worse, the police have some objectivity in the matter 
  Bank did instigate his arrest- how is this reconciled with Mellon? 
 
d) Melton v. LaCalamito 
P rents U-Haul trailer to move. When he arrives to turn in U-Haul, 
employee insists that blankets in back belong to company. P and 
employee fight, P insists blankets are his, company calls police. Officer 
arrives and employee insists that blankets belong to company. Police 
arrest man, but solely on the basis of employees statement about 
blankets. It appears officers objectivity is compromised b/c of insistence 
of U-Haul employee. 
 
P goes to jail and spends several hours there, eventually charges are 
dropped. P sues D for false imprisonment, wins judgment. 
 
  Liability b/c there was no real evidence in this case- D could have 
called the other U-Haul place to see if he rented the mats- 
damages are really excessive- $10,000- maybe b/c U-Haul has a 
lot of money 
 
RULE: If an actor is regarded as having instigated the proceeding, 
or that his persuasion was the determining factor in the officers 
decision, or he gave false information, to influence the authorities, he 
may be held liable. 
 
 
D) Assault 
 
The threat of offensive touching.  An actor is subject to liability to another for assault if: A) He 
acts intending to cause harmful or offensive contact w/the person of the other or a third person. 
Or, imminent apprehension of such a contact, and B) The other is thereby put in such imminent 
apprehension. 
 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
17 
1) Imminence 
Imminence is required because most threats dont pan out. Example of what is 
imminent and what is not is when A threatens to shoot B and must leave room to 
get revolver, threat is not imminent. Imminent apprehension is necessary.  
 
a) Brower v. Ackerley 
Brower is an activist trying to stop billboards from being erected. 
Ackerly (2 brothers) is an advertiser on billboards trying to keep 
billboards legal.  Bower determined that some of the billboards are 
illegal and wanted to get them removed Brower gets aggressive phone 
calls, one night caller said he was going to find out where Brower lived 
and kick his ass.  Brower learns phone calls come from Ds house. 
Brower sued D for assault. TC gives SJ to D.   
 
RULE: With assault, it is the immediacy of the physical threat that 
is important, not the manner in which it is conveyed. Over the phone 
is not an immediate threat.  Near future is not the imminent future.  
If A threatens to shoot B, and leaves the room to get his gun- that 
threat is in the near future; its not imminent!! 
 
b) Bennight v. Western Auto Supply 
P is husband of employee at Ds store, which has a rear room filled with 
bats. Employee repeatedly protests working in area. One day she was 
attacked by bats, but not bit. The next day one did bite her. Ps husband 
sued for loss of consortium. Court noted that intentionally placing Ps 
wife in fear of harm, whether or not manager intended harm, was assault 
Even if bats did not come near Ps wife, it would still be assault b/c of 
the apprehension of harm. 
 
RULE:  For assault all one has to have is apprehension about 
impending harm, whether or not actor requires 
additional/subsequent harm. 
 
Langford v. Shu 
Langford visited her neighbor, Shu- saw a box danger, African 
mongoose, live snake eater- Shu said it was for her kids and told 
Langford to look in the box- it wouldnt hurt her- Langford was afraid- 
looked at it from several feet away- no mongoose- fox tail attached to a 
spring- Langford ran away, stumbling into a brick wall, tearing cartilage 
in her knee- sued Shu for assault: 
App Ct found for Langford- Shu set the stage for the prank  she should 
have expected that the mongoose would be sprung by one of her boys. 
 
Tuberville v. Savage 
P- put his sword on D- said if the judges werent in town, I wouldnt take 
this language from you- not an assault- no intention here.  Basically he 
said he wasnt going to do harm. 
 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
18 
Newell v. Witcher 
Ct finds L for D who goes into Ps room while she is sleeping and 
solicits her for sex. 
 
E) Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress (Outrage) 
One who by extreme and outrageous conduct intentionally or recklessly causes severe 
emotional distress to another is subject to liability for such emotional distress, and if bodily 
harm to the other results, for such bodily harm. Or, when conduct is directed to a 3
rd
 person, the 
actor is subject to liability if he intentionally causes severe emotional distress to: A) Member of 
persons family present or, B) To any other person who is present if such distress results in 
bodily harm. 
 
Ewings rules on IIED:  
1) Public Figures almost never win these suits as they have to prove malice 
 
2) Doctrine usually applies when P is a private individual in a captive situation (i.e patient 
in hospital, customer in cruise ship) 
 
3) Doctrine seems likely to succeed for P where D is a professional who owes a duty to P. 
 
4) P is more likely to succeed with claim of IIED if P can prove no arguable social value 
for Ds conduct.    
 
1) What is outrageous? 
 
a) Roberts v. Saylor 
P underwent surgeries and had stitches left in her. Saylor removed the 
stitches from her and then P sued earlier doctors for malpractice, and 
tried to enlist D for trial. D refused. P sued D as well. Later, when P was 
undergoing another surgery D saw her in pre-op room, walked up to her 
and said I dont like you, I dont like you. P sues for IIED, Ct. gives 
summary judgment to D.  
 
RULE: Liability for IIED does not arise from mere insults, 
indignities, threats, annoyances, petty expressions or other 
trivialities. Conduct for IIED muse be outrageous to the point that it 
goes beyond the bounds of decency. 
 
b) Greer v. Medders 
P underwent surgery and was recovering when his physician left town. 
Medders assigned to take care of D and does not show up for several 
days. When D does show up he insults P and then insults P wife, calling 
her a smart ass. D leaves room and Ps wife cries and he begins to shake 
uncontrollably. P sues D for IIED.  Ct. said these statements made to a 
post-op patient were potentially abusive and could result in a recovery 
for outrage.  
 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
19 
**Ewing thinks liability b/c of vulnerability of being under the persons 
care 
 
RULE: Outrageous conduct may be determined by an actors 
relationship with another.  
 
c) Muratore v. M/S Scotia Prince 
P is passenger on cruise ship, tries to enter and staff insists on taking 
picture. She declines and walks on ship backwards, they still take photo. 
Another time, they approach her with camera, and she declines, but they 
continue harassing her and saying derogatory sexual comments. P sues 
for IIED and D found L.  Ds continued to harass her throughout her 
vacation.  
 
With P the issue may be the context of where and when harassment 
occurs. One doesnt expect it on vacation, especially when paying money 
for trip. 
 
RULE: In appropriate cases, severe emotional distress may be 
inferred from the extreme and outrageous nature of Ds conduct 
alone. 
 
d) Pemberton v. Bethlehem Steel 
P is union leader and claims D is unhappy with his attempts to organize 
unions. D hired PI to trail him and place him under surveillance. D finds 
out P is conducting affair and sends this information, anonymously to 
wife, which precipitated affair. In addition, D gets mug shots from Ps 
earlier arrest and circulates them to union members. P sues for IIED, D 
gets summary judgment/NL  statements were true. 
 
One might argue some social good would come out of Ds actions and 
essentially court saying P should be thick skinned.  
 
RULE: With IIED, the court must consider the conduct itself, but 
also the personality of the individual to whom the misconduct is 
directed.  Sending truthful information does not meet the necessary 
outrageousness requirement 
 
e) Class Example 
A tells B, his friend, about his marriage, including his affair. B tells A he 
needs to divorce spouse b/c A is not right for her. A divorces spouse and 
then B promptly marries spouse. Is B liable for IIED? No, not unless B is 
As psychologist/shrink/marriage counselor. 
 
RULE: The extreme and outrageous character of the defendants 
conduct may arise from his abuse of a position, or relation with 
another person, which gives him actual and apparent authority over 
him or power to affect his interest. 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
20 
 
Figueirdo- Torres v. Nickel 
Nickel- marriage counselor- Figuierdo sought help- Nickel and the 
plaintiffs wife were soon involved in an affair- plaintiff wins- Nickel 
tried to argue that the relationship was between consenting adults- but 
Nickel wasnt the guy next door- the patient/psychiatrist relationship 
should be carefully scrutinized by courts- psychiatrist told the husband 
he was a codfish and his wife deserves a fillet- certainly complicated the 
issue.  Ct. finds L for D. 
 
f) Hustler Magazine v. Falwell 
Hustler published a parody of a liquor advertisement featuring Falwell 
and lewd comments about him sleeping with his mother in an outhouse. 
Falwell sues for IIED. Court finds NL. 
 
RULE: Public officials may not recover for IIED by reason of 
publication without showing that publication contains false 
statement of fact made with actual maliceknowledge that 
statement was false. 
 
g) Van Duyn v. Smith 
P is abortion doctor trailed by activist, house picketed with signs and 
home picketed. COA allows trial after TC dismisses IIED claim. COA 
doesnt see P as a public figure merely because shes director of an 
abortion clinic and therefore doesnt have to prove malice.  
 
RULE: Sometimes, its the aggregate effect of acts that make a D 
liable for IIED. 
 
Lecture Note- the court said it was enough for IIED because in addition 
to everything, there was a physical confrontation. 
 
Walko v. Kean College 
Ann Walko- instructor at the college and assistant dean- name in satirical 
advertisement for whoreline- sued the college- court dismissed her 
claim- no reasonable person would think the ad was genuine- everyone 
knew it was a bad joke.  Limited purpose public figure perhaps 
 
Murray v. Schlosser 
Dog of the Week if this OUTRAGE? 
Think about the generational gap  we thought no, Ewing, yes. 
 
II. Affirmative Defenses/Privileges 
 
A) Defense of Person and Property 
 
1) Defense of property 
The law has always placed a higher value upon human life than mere rights in property.  
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
21 
 
a) Katko v. Briney 
Ds own farm and house in Iowa where they dont live. They post no 
trespass signs, but house is broken into many times. Finally, D sets a 
trap in a bedroom, jerry-rigging a gun to fire when door is opened. P 
breaks into house, enters bedroom and is injured by gun. After P gets out 
of jail, P sues D for battery.   Ct. finds L for D. 
 
Note, however, sometimes things such as a fence/barbed-wire is seen as 
notice/warning in and of itself. 
 
Wright v. Haffker 
Store clerk (D) not L for shooting P in back after he had assaulted him 
and robbed him.  Felony committed. 
 
Some states do not hold Ds liable when using deadly force to protect 
their homeP is inside your home. 
 
RULE 1: There is no privilege to use any force calculated to cause 
death or serious bodily injury to repeal threat to land/chattels unless 
there is such a threat to Ds person. 
 
RULE 2: A possessor of land cannot do indirectly and by a 
mechanical device that which, were he present, he could not do 
immediately and in person.  This generally holds to vicious 
dogs/electric fences 
 
Lecture Note- The amount of force which is being used should be commensurate to the amount of 
harm that is being avoided 
 
Harm imposed versus Harm avoided, seen as necessity by the law. 
 
What about electric fences?  Would a sign warning of an electric fence be sufficient to bar someone for 
recovery for injuries? 
 
Spring guns generally will not be allowed, for a few reasons:  
1.  It would be disproportionate to the amount of harm that would be done to the intruder. 
2.  Spring guns, electric fences are not discriminating. Therefore automated devices are not privileged.   
With regard to using other force, you may not use deadly force to protect property, and any force that 
you do use must be proportional to the piece of property.   Only that level of force that is necessary to 
protect your interest.  
 
B) Private Necessity 
With crimes its the harm imposed v. the harm avoided. If HA higher than HI, then action not 
wrong. 
 
1) Ploof v. Putnam 
Full case 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
22 
P sailing on Lake Champlain with children and wife when sudden storm comes 
along. P takes refuge on Ds dock and moors his ship there. Ds servant unties 
boat and Ps boat cast into lake where it crashes on shore, injuring P, wife and 
kids. P sues D. Ct. finds L for D. 
 
What harm did Ploof impose? None really.  
 
RULE: The doctrine of necessity applies to the preservation of human life. 
One assault and in peril of his life may run through the close of another to 
escape his assailant. 
 
2) Vincent v. Lake Erie Transporation Co. 
Full Case 
D discharging cargo while docked when storm moves into area. It would have 
been dangerous for D to leave dock, so D stays moored.  Then, D could not get 
tug to bring her out and instead of casting away ropes, and allowing D to drift 
away and possibly damage ship. D sat tied to dock and boat rubbed against 
dock, causing damage and P sues. Ct. finds L for D, saying that by replacing 
lines, and keeping ship docked, ship owners made a conscious choice to put 
their property above others.  D had a right to be at the dock, but any damages to 
the dock would have to be paid to the dock owner. 
; 
RULE: Private necessity will allow/permit trespass, but damages will have 
to be paid for/accounted for by D. 
 
3) Texas Midland Ry. Co. v. Geraldon 
Family at train station misses last train for night. Rain begins to pour and 
conductor instructs them they must leave, cant spend night at station. P explains 
his wife will get sick if stuck in rain, D doesnt care and sends them out into 
rain. Ps wife gets sick and they sue for damages. Ct. finds L for D. 
Under Vincent, family could have paid for time of railroad conductor stuck at 
station overnight. 
 
4) London borough of Southwark v. Williams 
D is homeless with family in London. They find abandoned house in public 
housing and became squatters. P moves to evict and D defends on private 
necessity. Ct. evicted them. 
 
Consider the duration and ability to pay for damages. In this case, unlike 
Geraldon where situation was temporary, this could last for unknown time. Also, 
its a question of resources. 
 
 
C) Public Necessity 
One is privileged to commit an act which would otherwise be a trespass to chattel or conversion 
if the act is or is reasonably believed to be necessary for the purpose of avoiding public 
disaster.  
 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
23 
With public necessity youre generally not compensated for eviction, use or destruction of 
property. The law generally prefers life to property. 
 
1) Mouses Case 
P on barge that is struck by storm and may drown if not lightened. Captain determines 
to save lives of passengers they must throw things overboard, including the casket that 
Mouse brought on board.  The boat was saved as well as all lives.  Only loss was some 
property on boat.  Owner of the barge sued Ds for throwing property overboard.  Ct. 
finds no L for D.   
 
RULE: When life is threatened property may be trespassed or destroyed in order 
to save life. 
 
  2) Surocco v. Geary 
D sued for ordering Ps house destroyed in attempt to stop fire raging through area. P 
claimed they were in process of removing their stuff when city blew up their home. P 
sues D for trespass. CA SC finds for D. 
 
RULE: The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few.  
 
III. Breach of DutyThe negligence standard 
Conduct of a reasonable manUnless the actor is a child, the standard of reasonable conduct to which 
he must confirm to avoid being negligent is that of a reasonable man under like circumstances.  Did he 
have a duty?   Was that duty breached? 
 
A. Mental ability 
The general rule is that an insane person is just as responsible for his torts as a sane person. 
 
1) William v. Hays1 
D was Captain of ship during storm. He stayed on deck during whole time and became 
delirious, refusing help from passing tugs after the ships rudder broke. The ship 
eventually crashed. D claims insanity, but court wont accept it as a defense. 
 
RULE: The law looks to the person damaged by another and seeks to make him 
whole, without reference to the mental or physical condition of the person causing 
the damage. 
 
2) William v. Hayes2 
The case returns and this time the D argues he was made temporarily insane by events 
and it was impossible for him to do his duty. 
 
RULE: Impossibility is an excuse in law, and there is no obligation to perform 
impossible thing. 
 
3) Vaughn v. Menlove 
D builds haystack near edge of his property, P repeatedly complained it was a fire 
hazard and dangerous. D responded his property was insured and hed chance it. When 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
24 
fire destroys property, Ds defense is that he ought not to be responsible for the 
misfortune of not possessing the highest order of intelligence.  Notice of danger. 
 
RULE: The standard for negligence is that of a reasonable person, its not 
individualized. 
 
4) Lynch v. Rosenthal 
P was a 22 yo man with the mental capacity of a 10yo. He lived with D, who took him 
out corn picking one day with a machine. D instructs P, but does not tell him not to 
come close to machine. P does and gets injured, sued D. TC finds P contributorily 
negligent, but SC disagrees.  No notice of danger. 
 
RULE: Mental deficiency is a different standard to be measured by for 
contributory negligence. Its what would a reasonably mentally retarded person 
do. Note, if Lynch was defendant, it would simply be a reasonable person 
standard. 
 
NOTE: Look at nature of disability. Compare Lynch with Weirs, case where man 
couldnt read English and didnt notice signs on bridge. W/determining negligence 
when it involves a disability, consider if the nature of the disability is one that 
person could change/control (i.e. learning another language) vs. one that person 
could not control (mental retardation). 
 
5) Friedman v. State 
16 yo orthodox Jewish girl becomes hysterical when trapped on ski lift overnight in 
company of young man. Jumps down and runs to get help, injures herself. Ct. finds Due 
to religious belief and situation, her behavior was reasonable. 
 
RULE: Plaintiffs, despite negligence of others, are still responsible for mitigating 
damages done to them. If injured, they should seek help, not refusing medical 
treatment. 
 
B. Physical Ability 
 
1) Kerr v. Connecticut/Davis v. Finstein 
In Kerr, a man with poor hearing walks home alongside trolley tracks. Gets hit by 
trolley, which he didnt hear, and estate sues for negligence. TC finds L on Kerrs part, 
but NL on trolly driver.  Kerr was contributorily negligent.  Should have known danger 
of where he was walking. 
 
In Davis, a blind man is walking down street using a cane and falls through an open 
cellar door. Court finds L for Finestein, shop owner who left door open.  Davis took 
necessary precautions and store owner was negligent in leaving the door open. 
 
Courts, in general, are more lenient when considering contributory negligence of a 
handicapped person. 
 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
25 
RULE: The law requires the disabled to care for their own safety in the same 
manner a reasonably prudent man, with the same disabilities, would exercise 
under the circumstances. 
 
C. Age 
A minor is held to an adult standard when conducting dangerous activities that are dangerous 
AND normally done by adults. This includes driving, speed boats, power tools, but not bicycles 
or hunting. With some activities one needs to consider the environment in which theyre being 
done. 
 
1) Dellwo v. Pearson 
D is a 12 yo boy who ran across Ps fishing line with his power boat and injured P. 
Minn. SC rules boy should be held to an adult standard because those on the other side 
of the lake (i.e. other boaters, drivers, etc.) are unable to protect themselves from kid 
drivers/evaluate whose behind the wheel.  Held to an adult standard. 
 
2) Roberts v. Ring 
P is 7 yo boy struck by driver of car who was 77 yo. Ct. finds P not cont. negligent and 
that a 7 yo should not be held to the same standard of care in self-protection as an adult. 
Also affirmed that if you are 18 or 88 youre expected to be a competent/safe driver, 
passengers and others cant be expected to guess who is behind the wheel. NOTE: kid 
was P and not a D, being evaluated for level of contributory negligence. 
 
RULE: When ones acts cause injury to others, his negligence is judged by the 
standard of care exercised by the ordinarily prudent normal man. 
 
3) Rule of 7 laws 
A) Minors under the age of seven are conclusively presumed incapable of negligence;  
B) Minors between ages of seven and fourteen are presumed incapable of negligence, 
but presumption is rebuttable;  
C) Minors over 14 are presumed capable of negligence, burden placed on minor to 
prove incapacity. 
 
NOTE: May be better to go with A child of life intelligence and reason. 
 
Purtle v. Shelton 
17 yo D accidently shoots P, a 16 yo friend while both are out hunting.  Court found 
contributory negligence for P and awarded no damages.  Ct. found no L for D on appeal 
based on the fact that minors frequently engage in hunting. 
 
D. Risks and Precautions 
  HAND FORMULA: Burden  < Probability of injury* Loss/injury [ B < PL ] 
*Burden is the untaken precaution P could have taken ;  
*P is the probability of accident happening, 
*L is the injury. 
*While its difficult to place a dollar amount on BPL, the relationship allows one to evaluate 
the relative relationships between BPL. Juries deciding negligence claims are generally told not 
to apply the Hand formula. 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
26 
*The one problem with the Hand formula is that its applied after the fact, difficult to use it 
during a forward looking situation (i.e. Eckert) 
 
1) United States v. Carroll Towing Co. 
Boat filled with flour moved to end of barge line. A bargee and captain readjust barge 
lines and b/c of negligence barge breaks away and hits another boat, which punctured a 
hole in the Anna C. To activate pumps, a bargee was supposed to be on Anna C, but 
was not, as a result, boat sank.  To determine negligence court looked at: 1) Probability 
boat will break away, 2) Gravity of resulting injury, 3) Burden of adequate precautions. 
Ct. found it was a reasonable expectation that bargee be on board during daylight hours. 
 
HAND FORMULA - RULE: B < PL is used to determine if a party took 
reasonable care in preventing an accident.  
 
2) Eckert v. Long Island RR 
P having conversation in neighborhood and sees train slowing heading down track, 
about to hit young boy sitting on track. P races onto track, saves child, but dies himself. 
D tries to say P is cont. negligent, but COA finds for P, saying negligence implies act of 
omission or wrongfulness, it appears under the circumstances it would be wrongful for 
P not to try and save child.  P weighed the probability of injury to himself over injury to 
the child. Both with regard to trying to save him and not trying to save him. 
 
With the Eckert situation, its not fair to use B< PL or standard of reasonable person b/c 
answer to both would be no, since were looking at it with hindsight and know P is 
dead. 
 
**Ewing thinks Eckert acted unreasonably, cts. judgment clouded by fact that Eckert 
saved the kid. Ewing doesnt think Eckert is necessarily negligent, but thinks there 
would have been a different outcome if kid had died. 
 
3) The Margharita 
A sailor on a ship falls overboard and leg injured by sea creature. Sailor brought back 
on board and its determined his injuries wont kill him Captain wont go off route, 
nearest doctor 3 weeks away, and continues on. P suffers pain, but nothing medically 
related. P sues for pain and suffering. COA finds for D.  If he had died from their 
refusal to stop, perhaps the result might have been different. 
 
Using the B<PL formula the burden is quite high and P is 1 because its the probability 
hes going to suffer, which we know he will. But L is in question. How do you put a $ 
on L.  Burden is stopping and not delivering cargo on time and is greater than the 
probability of injury as the leg was already gone and he was stabilized.   
 
4) Davis v. Consolidated Rail Corp. 
P goes to rail yard to inspect trains, drove unmarked van. P crawls under train and fails 
to put up warning flag that lets crew know hes working. Crews ordered to move trains, 
but fail to blow horn, ring bell or use radio to warn others, or, walk/look under trains.  
Jury found L for D, but reduced damages due to contributory negligence of P. 
 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
27 
Ewing sees B for companyblowing horn or using radiopretty low compared with 
the L and PL. But, contributory negligence on Ps part high, too since burdenraising 
flagwas so low. 
 
a) Custom/Medical Malpractice 
Adherence to custom may be a defense for medical malpractice claim, but is not 
allowed for business (i.e. TJ Hooper, radios on boats) because if court held 
operations to standard of custom, businesses could set custom and that could be 
wrong/incorrect. With the custom defense for businesses youre not creating an 
incentive for change.  Ps win as a radio was a precaution so imperative that 
even their universal disregard among the industry will not excuse their omission.    
 
With businesses one could evaluate instituting changes/new technology by 
considering burden placed on company to upgrade vs. PL (i.e. cameras on 
trucks). 
 
With a medical agreement, you and the physician understand, youre getting the 
standard customary care, the standard for the procedure is the practice. 
 
Custom is also used for technical practices such as law, architecture, accounting 
or other professions where lay people may find the area of expertise difficult to 
understand and may need an expert to explain/discuss.  The general rule for 
attys. custom is evaluation within the same state. 
 
i) Brune v. Belinkoff 
D is an anesthesiologist practicing in a small town 50 miles from Boston. 
P, who is delivering baby, given 8 mg of pitocin, usual amount. is 5 mg. 
Slips and injures herself. Sues D for injury. Mass. SC reverses lower 
decision and says traditional locality rule doctors measured by 
conduct of other physicians in similar communities--should not be used. 
Ct. finds proper standard is whether the physician had exercised degree 
of care and skill of average qualified practitioner, under this standard 
some allowance is made for type of community where P runs his 
practice.  Locality rule does not apply here as it is unsuited to present 
day conditions of medical practice.  Present conditions of medical 
practice are such that most precautions are afforded at least similar 
amenities.  Ct. finds L for D as industry standard was more closely 
related to 5 mg. 
 
RULE: A physician is evaluated by whether or not he exercised the 
degree of care and skill of the average qualified practitioner 
ordinarily found in some community of physicians.  
 
ii) Johnson v. Wills Memorial Hospital 
P is patient at hospital and starts acting strangely and agitated. Staff 
sedates him and locks him in room. He escapes and is later found and 
pronounced dead. Hospital defends suit by saying standard of care 
applicable was standard of care applicable in similar hospital in similar 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
28 
communities. Ct. affirms for locality rule, finding it appropriate for 
hospital facilities. 
 
**Ewing sees this as more of human error, not an issue of facility.  
 
RULE: A medical facility can be judged by locality rule, but it still 
must meet standards of reasonableness (i.e. beds for patients)  
 
Gambill v. Stroud 
Goes back to locality rule saying that physicians in small towns cannot 
be held to the same standard as all others in the profession.  similar 
locality rule 
 
Cook v. Irion 
Legal malpractice  locality rule does not apply by the very nature of the 
law.  Attys in specific locality would be familiar with laws & rules of 
practice in that particular locality. 
 
E. Negligence Per Se 
When the court determines that the defendant has violated some sort of rule, statutory or judge 
made, the violation establishes the defendants negligence as a matter of law. 
 
Generally, violation of a statute constitutes negligence per se when:  
1) Conduct prescribed by statute is clear;  
2) Plaintiff is in the group the statute seeks to protect;  
3) Plaintiff was injured by a consequence of Ds failure to comply with statute.  
*Also, P not NPS if statute would cause more harm than good. 
 
1) Violation of criminal statute 
a) Martin v. Herzog 
P and husband driving in buggy at night w/o light on despite statute that requires 
lights on buggies at night. P riding around curve when hit by Ds car, which 
crossed over center line. Ct. remanded case for new trial b/c of bad jury 
instructions, found omission of lights was a wrong and a negligent wrong, b/c 
lights were intended for the guidance and protection of the travelers on the 
highway. 
 
**Ewing thinks both parties were negligent per se. 
 
b) Tedla v. Ellman 
Brother and sister walking along road way with baby carriages filled with junk. 
The 2-lane roadway had no footpaths on either side. P walking with lantern, but 
Ps walking on the wrong side of the road, in opposition of statute. However, the 
wrong side of the road had less traffic than other side and was safer. Ct. finds D 
negligent and COA affirms  no negligence per se of P. 
 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
29 
RULE: A statutory rule of conduct to promote public safety should not be 
construed as an inflexible command that must be followed even under 
conditions when observance might cause accidents. 
 
c) Tingle v. Chicago, B & Q. Ry. 
Ds train ran over Ps cow on a Sunday, a day when state law prohibited the 
operation of trains. SC finds for D.  Train not operated in a negligent manner 
even though it was operated in violation of the statute. 
 
RULE: When violation of the statute is the proximate cause of the accident 
then NPS. Need to look at the purpose of the statute. 
 
White v. Lauren 
D accidentally shot P while hunting on a day prohibited by statute.  Ct. found 
negligence per se for D. 
 
d) Selger v. Steven Brothers 
City ordinance requires shop owners to keep their sidewalks clean and free of 
debris. Dog poop often accumulates outside Ds business, but he regularly keeps 
it clean. One morning, D spots poop and is directing employee to clean it up 
when P slips and falls. P sues, but ct. found that the ordinance created a standard 
of care to the city, not the plaintiff. 
**Ewing point, think of it proportionally. This is an act where the fine was $20, 
does a city council create this ordinance in anticipation of a $400,000 trial ct. 
verdict. 
 
RULE: Municipal ordinances for care of property (i.e. clear of snow, ice, 
poop) generally creates a duty of care owed to the municipality, not citizens. 
 
F. Res Ipsa Loquitor 
Generally, RIL applies when something generally does not happen unless: 
 1) someone was negligent,  
2) D has more knowledge about a situation than P and  
3) an instrument has been in Ds exclusive control.  
*Also, P must be free of contributory negligence. 
 
1) Byrne v. Boadle 
P was passing in front of Ds premise when a barrel fell out from a window above. D 
had set up machinery to raise and lower barrels. Several people saw barrel fall, but no 
evidence as to how accident occurred. Ds servants were involved in work at the time of 
accident.  D held liable for RIL.  Ds burden to prove no negligence. 
 
RULE: An accident itself can be prima facie evidence of negligence under RIL. 
 
2) Combustion Engineering Co. v. Hunsberger 
P is workman on project rebuilding boiler room at construction site. Ds worker was 
attempting to do work, looses control of hammer, it slips, falls and hits P. P sues for 
injury, COA finds NL for D. Importance here is environment and that even under the 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
30 
best of care, tools might fall. Also, one could expect this type of occurrence here, as 
opposed to barrels falling from the sky. Lastly, look at the B for construction site.  
Burden too high to tell all workers at a construction site dont ever drop a tool. 
 
RULE: RIL may not be found depending on the environment and the expectations 
of that space. 
 
3) Larson v. St. Francis/Connolly v. Nicollet Hotel 
In Larson, P walking down street on V-J-Day and chair thrown out hotel window, hits 
and injures her. NL found for hotel, b/c not rational to think they have control over all 
their guests. 
 
In Connolly, mud hit P in eye. Came from exuberant conference attendees who hotel 
manager had earlier warned staff that they were rowdy/dangerous and could lead to 
arrests. L for hotel, with court finding that negligence may be inferred from all the facts 
and surrounding circumstances.  Hotel knew about possible cause of injury, but did not 
do anything to prevent it.   
 
RULE: RIL is generally applied when D has exclusive control over injurious items, 
or, control over people who cause injury. 
 
4) Brauner v. Peterson/Guthrie v. Powell 
In Brauner P drove his car into Ds black angus cow, which had strayed onto the 
highway. P produced no evidence as how cow escaped from Ds property.  TC finds NL 
for D stating that one could reasonable see how a cow could escape from confines, not a 
good use of RIL. 
 
In Guthrie, D buys and sells livestock at fair grounds in a 2-story building. P is visiting, 
sitting on 1
st
 floor and chatting with friends when a cow crashes through ceiling. Court 
finds RIL appropriate and finds L for D. 
 
RULE: Looking at RIL consider whats reasonable and whats not. Reasonable 
that a cow could escape, not reasonable to place cows on 2
nd
 floor. 
 
5) Haasman v. Pacific Alaska Air Expres/Walston v. Lambertsen 
 
In Haasman, P was on plane that disappeared during trip. No signs of bad weather and 
the plane, cargo or crew was never found. Ps estate sues under RIL and ct. finds L for 
D. D argues that neither side knew what happened, therefore, its NOT inequality of 
knowledge, but equality of ignorance. Court doesnt buy this, saying that rule doesnt 
apply. 
 
In Walson, Ps decedent was a member of the crew on a crab fishing boat that sunk 
while at sea. The cause of the boats disappearance was unknown, weather was good. 
But, ct. argues that RIL doesnt apply b/c of too many variables that could have 
interfered and caused the sinking. 
 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
31 
RULE: In most instances where technology has made an activity unusually safe 
(i.e. flying) that same technology has multiplied the possibilities for compliance 
errors relative to those unavoidable accidents. Thus, if something goes wrong, 
more likely RIL. 
 
6) Ybarra v. Spanguard 
P enters hospital for appendicitis operation and when he awoke, has a sharp pain in his 
shoulder. Later the pain progresses to paralysis. A doctor he sees subsequently said the 
paralysis was due to trauma or injury by pressure strain to neck. D claims that P cant 
claim RIL because 1) there was several defendants/division of responsibility and use in 
instrumentality and 2) where there are several instruments and no showing of which one 
caused the injury then RIL shouldnt apply.  
 
But, the court held when one is unconscious you dont need to show actor or 
instrument. Ct. finds it should be enough that P shows injury resulting from external 
force applied while hes unconscious.  
 
What else could P do w/o RIL? Hed be out of luck.  
 
RULE: Where P receives unusual injuries while unconscious, and in course of 
medical treatment, all those Ds that had control over his body/the instrumentalities 
which may have caused injuries may properly be called upon to meet the inference 
of negligence. 
 
HOWEVER- THIS IS THE MINORITY OPINION- MOST OF THE TIME, 
WHERE THERE ARE MULTIPLE DEFENDANTS, RES IPSA LiQUITOR 
DOESNT APPLY! 
 
IV. Duties and LimitationsNegligence 
A plaintiff bringing a negligence claim must show 5 things:  
1) Duty,  
2) Breach of Duty;  
3) Cause in Fact;  
4) Proximate Cause;  
5) Damages 
 
A) Duties Arising from Affirmative Acts 
The law generally imposes duties of care on people when they engage in affirmative actsones 
that create risks for others. Generally, a defendant can not be held liable for nonfeasance (doing 
nothing) where as the law applies liability for misfeasance (Affirmative acts done carelessly) 
 
However, according to 2
nd
 Restatement: If an actor knows that his conduct, whether tortious or 
innocent, has caused bodily harm to another as to make him helpless and in danger of further 
harm, the factor is under a duty to exercise reasonable care to prevent further harm (think of the 
hit and run driver).  Even if the driver does not negligently hit the person, but hits the person 
non-negligently.. 
 
 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
32 
The doctrine is different when on a ship/part of a crew. The general rule is that crews must take 
all reasonable steps to rescue someone. 
 
There is a duty of parents to children, there is no duty of children to parents. 
 
1) Doing nothing and doing something 
 
If you choose to get involved, you assume a duty not to make the situation 
worse 
 
a) Yania v. Bigan 
P comes to Ds coal strip-mining operation. D taunts P to jump into hole filled 
with water. P does and D does not try to save P.  No L for D.  P could decide 
for himself to jump into the water or not. 
 
RULE: The mere fact that an actor sees a person in peril imposes no legal 
duty to go to the others rescue. 
 
And mere taunting someone to do an unreasonable action is not enough to 
impose a duty on someone to save them if they in fact do itmay be 
different if a taunting a minor or person with deficient 
capacities/intelligence. 
 
b) Grieshaber v. City of Albany 
Jenna Griseshaber calls 911 when stranger in apartment. Operator tells her 
help is on the way and Jenna then starts screaming. Police arrive at her 
apartment and when they hear a dog barking they wait 30 min. for animal 
control to arrive before entering her apartment, where they find Jenna dead 
from a murder. 
 
Ct. Found NL for police because the general rule that a municipality cannot be 
held negligent in performance of police enforcement functions. 
 
There is an exception to the rule and 4 requirements for a special relationship 
must be met:  
1) Assumption by municipality of an affirmative duty to act on behalf of party; 
2) Knowledge by city that inaction could lead to harm;  
3) Direct contact between municipality and party and  
4) Actor relied on municipalities affirmative undertaking to her own detriment 
(i.e. forewent other options for safety) 
 
Ct. held that she relied on police, but not to her own detriment since attack 
already underway. 
 
RULE: Police/Fire generally can not be held liable for negligence in 
performance of their duties. 
 
 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
33 
Globe Malleable Iron & Steel Co. v. NY Cent. & HRR Co. 
RR Co. held L for not moving to allow fire fighters to get across tracks and 
thereby allowing a plant to burn on the other side.  RR should yield its rights 
to the public interest. 
 
c) Weirum v. RKO 
Radio station hosts contest where it tells listeners of DJs location and prizes 
awarded to first listeners to show up at new spot. Teens in car racing to get to 
spot run 3
rd
 party off road and kill him. Ct. finds L for D b/c while D normally 
didnt have a duty, D created an unreasonable risk of harm/general hazard. 
 
RULE: Duty doesnt matter if an actor, through an affirmative act, 
creates an undue risk of harm to others. 
 
d) Soldano v. ODaniels 
D owns 2 bars and a patron in one runs into bar and tells bartender to call 
police, or allow him to call 911, as man at other saloon was threatened. 
Bartender refuses and man was shot and killed. Mans decedents bring suit, 
alleging negligence. 
 
The court found no special relationship, but said good social policy (i.e. 
encouraging good Samaritans) is a reason for imposing L, because a business, 
during business hours, should allow people to use public phones for 
emergencies involving serious physical injury.. 
 
RULE: Use of a telephone in a public portion of a business should be 
allowed for a legitimate (i.e. bodily harm/death) emergency call.  
 
Strangle v. Firemans Fund Insurance Co. 
Court says no L for D in not allowing P to call police to report to a robbery.  
This was an office building, not a public place.  Life or physical harm was not 
at stake. 
 
2) Duties arising from undertakings 
Sometimes a defendant with no duty to a stranger may acquire a duty by undertaking to 
provide assistance or voluntarily assuming responsibilities. 
 
RESTATEMENT OF TORTS 
Duty of one who takes charge of another who is helpless 
One who, being under no duty to do so, takes charge of another who is helpless is 
subject to liability to the other for harm caused by A) Failure of actor to exercise 
reasonable care to secure the safety of the other or B) The actors discontinuing his aid 
or protection, if by doing so leaves the other in a worse position than when the actor 
took charge of him. 
 
If one assumes a duty of rescue they must fulfill that duty until someone else assumes it 
(i.e. they pass it along). Also, if one prevents others from saving someone in claim that 
theyll rescue, theyve assumed the duty. (You tell others, get back, Im the expert 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
34 
swimmer, Ill save junior!) Many jurisdictions have statutes that protect good 
Samaritans from lawsuits. 
 
a) Hurley v. Eddingfield/ ONeill v. Montefiore Hospital 
Both cases dealt with doctors declining to see patients. 
 
In Hurley, doctor refused to see patient.  Ct. found no L because no duty was 
undertaken by doctor.  Never examined or assumed any role in care for P.   
 
In Montefiore, doctor listened to patients complaint via the telephone and 
then instructed him to go home and come back an hour later when doctor from 
insurance co. was on duty. Patient later dies. 
 
Ct. finds L in Montefiore because the doctor was considered to have 
undertaken an examination/treatment of the patient. However, in Hurley, NL, 
because doctor never learned of patients condition, just refused care. 
 
RULE: A doctor may refuse to treat someone, however, when a physician 
undertakes to examine and treats a patient, and later abandons him, a 
physician may be held liable for malpractice. 
 
b) United States v. Lawter 
Coast Guard tries to rescue woman and botches it by dropping her into the sea. 
Court finds L for Coast Guard b/c the rescue left the patient in a worse 
position that before. 
 
RULE: One who assumes the duty of rescue will be found L for 
negligence if they placed the victim in a worse position than when it took 
charge. 
 
Frank v. U.S. 
Ps sued U.S. for not saving the life of their decadent after he fell overboard 
during a fishing expedition rescue by the coast guard.  Ct. found no L for D. 
because rescue effort was diligent and did not worsen Ps position.  Even 
though it was unsuccessful, it was not due to Ds negligence.  
 
c) Octillo West Joint Venture v. Superior Court 
2 buddies drinking and golfing at golf course. Course staff refuses to give keys 
to one because he appeared intoxicated. Friend offered to drive him home, 
club gave friend keys and then, friend handed keys back to drunk man who 
later killed himself in an accident. Court found NL for club b/c friend had 
assumed the duty.  Ct. finds L for friend because he put him in a worse 
position than when he had his keys. 
 
RULE: When one assumes the duty of a helpless person, he assumes 
liability for that persons safety unless the duty is passed to another. 
 
B) Special Relationships 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
35 
There are generally relationships that exist between two parties where a level of care is 
impliedcaptain/crew; innkeeper/guest; carrier/passenger; school/child 
 
1) Brosnahan v. Western Airlines/Boyette v. Trans World Airlines 
In Brosnahan, P took his seat in a row on the plane. During an attempt to stuff 
a bag in an overhead compartment a passenger dropped the bag on Ps head 
causing injuries. P argued flight attendant should have been on board to help 
with baggage, etc. P sued and won jury b/c of carrier duty. 
 
In Boyette, P got off plane, drunk, and while in airport for layover stole golf 
cart, led staff on wild goose chase and hid in trash chute that dumped him in 
trash compactor where he died. NL for airport b/c duty had ended.  He was 
safely deposited at the airport.  Transport was over and so was the duty. 
 
RULE: A common carrier has a duty to exercise the highest degree of 
care to safely transport passengers and protect them while in transit. But 
this duty ends once a passenger reaches a reasonably safe place. 
 
RULE2 (alternative way of saying it): A common carrier is under a duty 
to its passengers to take reasonable action to protect them against 
unreasonable risk of physical harmfrom the common carriers conduct 
and from the conduct of third parties. 
 
Trans Pacific Fishing & Packing Co. 
D (captain) did nothing to go back and rescue his 3 crewmen that fell 
overboard.  Ct. found L for D because of the special relationship between 
captain and crew. 
 
2) Charles v. Seigfried 
Adult (D) hosts party where a 16 yo girl drinks alcohol and then D allows her 
to drive home. During drive she was killed in accident, her family sues, 
claiming host had a special duty.  Ct. finds no L for social hosts  no special 
duty.  Ct. says imposing duty here would open the door for too much L. 
 
The question with imposing liability is how would the test apply? What could 
they really do? Theres a difference compared with a bartender (who could 
better recognize drunkenness and has laws forcing him to be responsible). 
 
RULE: A social hosts duties may vary depending on jurisdictions, but 
generally there is not a special relationship. 
 
Kelly v. Grinnell 
Ct. finds social host L for actions of person who was served alcohol at their 
home and caused an accident with a 3
rd
 party.  Ct. said to hold social hosts 
liable would promote more care in these situations on the part of social hosts.  
Burden to social hosts to impose more care was much lower when weighed 
against misery and death from an accident that occurs because of the lack of 
care.   
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
36 
 
C) Duties to protect others from 3
rd
 Parties 
 
RESTATEMENT OF TORTS 
There is no duty to control the conduct of a third person as to prevent him from causing 
physical harm to another unless: A) A special relationship exists between the actor and 
the third person, which imposes a duty upon the actor to control the third persons 
conduct, or, B) A special relation exists between the actor and the other which gives the 
other a right to protection. 
 
1) Tarasoff v. Regents of UC (full case) 
Parents of Tarasoff bring lawsuit against UC after shes killed by a former 
patient of doctors at UC. Patient (Poddar) had confided to doctors that he 
wanted to kill Tarasoff. The doctors briefly detained patient, but later released 
him. Police watched him, but had no information as to his tendencies.  
 
P alleged daughters death resulted from Ds negligent failure to warn 
daughter or others about the threats. Ds argued they had no duty of care to 
daughter because she was not their patient.  
 
However, court found that there was a relationship between Podder and D, a 
doctor-patient one, and that such a relationship supports affirmative duties for 
benefit of a third person. The decision didnt discuss how imminent a threat 
must be for a psychologist to warn, that could be a fact left up to 
evaluation/debate. 
 
RULE: Health professionals have a duty to take reasonable steps to 
prevent harm from occurring if a patient indicates he wants to harm 
others/readily identifiable victim. EXAMPLE: A doctor must warn a 
patient if the patients condition or medication renders certain conduct, 
such as driving a car, dangerous to others. Or, a hospital must exercise 
reasonable care to control the behavior of a patient which may endanger 
others.  
 
2) Thompson v. County of Alameda 
P and their son live a few doors down from James F. a juvenile sex offender. 
James F. had indicated, if released from detention center, would kill a young 
child in the neighborhood. He kills Ps son and they sue County for his 
release, saying County had a special relationship and duty to warn. NL for 
county b/c potential victims not specifically known. 
 
RULE: For a duty to protect a third person from harm, there must be a 
special relationship between the first two actors and the potential 
victim/third person endangered must be identifiable or readily 
identifiable.  
 
3) Kline v. 1500 Mass. Ave. Corp 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
37 
P assaulted in building which had a doorman when she first moved in. Crime 
had risen in the area and D (the landlord) took no extra safety measures. Ct. 
found D had a duty to protect tenants from third parties. Ct. found it was the 
LLs exclusive control over the building/area that allowed the court to require 
additional precautions. The LL is best equipped and in best position to protect 
tenants.   LL had a security guard there previously  he knew of the prior 
incidents in the building. 
 
RULE: Landlords have duty to take reasonable measures to protect 
tenants from 3
rd
 party harm in common areas/public places.  
 
Bradshaw v. Daniel 
Ct. found L for D, doctor, who failed to warn P that her husband had a tick 
caused disease (which he died from).  Doctor had a duty to warn an 
identifiable 3
rd
 party. 
 
Hawkins v. Pizarro 
Ct. found no L for D, doctor, that diagnosed a woman as not having hepatitis.  
She did and infected her new husband.  No L for D as he was an unknown 3
rd
 
party to which doctor had no duty. 
 
D) Public Duty Doctrine 
Generally, police/fire and public rescue services have sovereign immunity, a common 
law doctrine forbidding lawsuits against government. Polices duty is to the public at 
large, not necessarily individuals. 
 
1) Riss v. City of New York/Schuster v. City of New York 
In Riss, P is threatened by ex-boyfriend, she repeatedly goes to police and asks 
for protection but nothing is done. Later, boyfriend attacks P and legally blinds 
her. Then, shes given round-the clock police protection. P sues D and theres 
NL because governments duty is to protect the public generally from hazards 
and is limited by resources of community. 
 
In Schuster, ct. found police had duty to provide surveillance/additional 
protection for P because he had been a police informant. Ct. found that police 
have a special duty to use reasonable care for protection of person who have 
collaborated w/police in arrest/prosecution of criminals. 
 
RULE: Police do not have a special duty to protect individuals unless 
those individuals have collaborated with police on the arrest/prosecution 
of criminals and it appears that they are in danger due to their 
collaboration. 
 
E) Duties Arising from Occupation of the land 
In some areas details of a landowners duty depends on whether the plaintiff is a 
trespasser, social guest or business guest. In some places, that has been abandoned for a 
general standard of care.  
 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
38 
1) Trespassers 
Landowners owe no duty to trespassers other than not to inflict harm/be 
wantonly reckless. HOWEVER, once a trespasser is known, the landowner has 
a duty to warn of hazardous conditions. Or, if a trespasser enters and becomes 
part of a known group (i.e. an audience), a duty is known to him.  
 
Ordinarily, when a trespasser enters the land, hes in the best position to 
protect against harm. But, when a landowner knows of trespasser the equation 
shifts.  
 
Hoskins v. Grybka 
No L for D when he shot at P, whom he thought was a woodchuck on his 
property.  P could not prove that he was not a trespasser. 
 
Herrick v. Wixom 
L for D when P injured during circus performance.  P was a trespasser, but still 
L for D because Ds negligence could have injured anyone at the performance. 
 
2) Licensees 
A licensee is a person who is privileged to enter or remain on land only by 
virtue of the possessors consent. A licensee takes the premises as he finds 
them, landowner has a duty to refrain from committing acts of negligence and 
to warn about known dangers (pitfalls, dangers, booby traps, that a licensee 
would not discover w/o hosts warning. A volunteer is generally considered a 
licensee. (unless landowner had specifically asked for help). 
 
3) Invitees 
A business guest, a customer in a store, a person invited to enter or remain on 
land for public purpose (i.e. lecture), a person invited inside the home. A 
landowner is responsible for using reasonable care, and protecting invitees 
from conditions, that could be reasonably discovered, that would involve risk 
of harm to such invitees.  
 
4) Reasonable Care 
In some states, California and New York, the level of care by a landowner 
does not depend on classification, but it is a standard of reasonable care where 
foreseeability of the plaintiff is a factor of consideration.  
 
F) Privity Limitation 
Sometimes, when two parties enter into a contract, the defendant will owe an injured 
third party a duty when a contract is breached and the third party is injured as a result. 
 
 
1) H.R. Moch Co. v. Rensselaer Water Co/Glanzer v. Shephard 
In Moch the Water Co. had a contract with the city to provide water through 
sewers, hydrants, etc. A building caught fire (owned by P) and the pressure in 
the hydrant wasnt strong enough to extinguish it. P sues, ct. finds NL b/c 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
39 
benefit of contract between city and water co. was incidental and secondary to 
residents.  Duty was to the city, not to specific Ps. 
 
In Glanzer, bean counting firm misweighed beans for a company, company 
sold them to another firm, which realized they weighed less than the certificate 
stated. Court found L for firm that weighed beans because their actions were 
the end and aim of the 2
nd
 transaction.  Only reason the beans were weighed 
was for sale to a 3
rd
 party.  3
rd
 party was easily identifiable. 
 
Conboy v. Mogeloff 
No L for Doctor who told P she could drive w/her medication and she gets in 
accident and kids are injured.  No duty to Ps kids here.  No evidence of kids 
reliance on doctors statement. 
 
Biakanja v. Irving 
D was held L for not having witnesses present at will signing.  3
rd
 party P was 
directly injured by Ds negligence. 
 
Food Pageant v. Con Ed. 
L for D when electricity outage caused food in Ps store to spoil.  Duty was 
specific to P in this case. 
 
Lilpan Food Corp. v. Con Ed. 
No L for D when power outage led to looting of Ps store.  Duty to city, not to 
Ps to keep electricity in city to prevent looting (i.e. street lights and traffic 
lights, etc.) 
 
RULE: For C (a third party) to benefit from a duty between A and B, the 
benefit must be primary and immediate to such a degree as to bespeak the 
assumption of a duty to make reparation directly to the individual 
members of the public if the benefit is lost. Also, having an ascertained 
party as the third party is an important role. 
 
G) Pure economic loss 
Pure economic loss is the general notion that a plaintiff who suffers no physical injury 
can recover from pure economic loss caused by defendants negligence. Generally, a 
tort to a person or property of one person doesnt make the tort feasor liable to another 
person merely because the injured person was under a contract with a third party, its a 
means of limiting liability. 
 
1) Robins Dry Dock & Repair Co. v. Flint/Carbone v. Ursich 
In Robins Dry Dock, P (Flint) uses boat to lead tours. Its owned by someone 
else and being cleaned for 2 weeks when the propeller is broken by employee 
of RDD. P sues b/c of money lost by having to wait for boat to come back. Ct. 
finds NL b/c a tort to the person/property of one man does not make the tort 
feasor liable to another merely b/c injured was under contract with another.  
Injury to the propeller was to the owner of it, not to the 3
rd
 party.  
 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
40 
In Carbone, when a fishing boat was damaged, L was found for the company 
after the unemployed fishermen sued. Ct. found L perhaps b/c fishermen/their 
jobs were so intertwined with the boat.  Special rule  fishermen invest so 
much in a voyage and are typically paid in percentage of the profits.  Loss was 
reasonably forseeable. 
 
Henderson v. Arandel Corp. 
No L for D that accidentally sank Ps dredge.  Ct. disagreed with Carbone.  
Dredge workers are different than fishermen. 
 
Yarmouth Sea Products ltd. v. Scully 
L for D  ct. distinguished between dredge workers and fishermen.  Fishermen 
are a special class. 
 
Newlin v. NE Telegraph 
L for D where telephone pole fell and caused power outage at Ps mushroom 
factory. 
 
532 Madison Avenue Gourmet Foods v. Finlandia 
No L for D where Ds building collapses and causes Ps business to close for 
several weeks.  Landowner cannot owe duty to protect an entire neighborhood.  
There was an indeterminable class of Ps. 
 
RULE: A tort to a person/property of one person does not make the tort 
feasor liable to a third party that suffered losses, or was in contract, with 
injured party. 
 
H) Negligent Infliction of Emotional Distress 
Sometimes negligence causes a P no physical harm, but grief or fear. Generally courts 
find L for IIED and if Ds acts caused physical harm, but when negligence results in 
only emotional reactions there are different takes. 
 
1) P is direct victim of Ds negligence 
Near miss cases where D acts negligently and narrowly avoids causing harm 
to D, but result is emotional harm. 
 
a) Robb v. Pennsylvania RR/Lawson v. Management Activities 
In Robb, train bears down on Ps car, which is stuck on tracks. She 
narrowly escapes death. Court rejects the impact rule (i.e. P must suffer 
physical impact) and offers that P could collect if she was in the 
immediate zone of physical risk caused by Ds negligence and if her 
emotional distress caused her physical problems. 
 
In Lawson, employees of a car dealership watched as a nearby plane 
crashed. The court used a 7 prong test and found NL. In part, b/c opening 
liability up would be opening a can of worms.  
 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
41 
The question to consider, too, is what is the incentive to a company for 
change/improvement by allowing/not allowing L in NIED? 
 
RULE: In considering NIED, look at the impact rule, zone of action 
rule and overall, if P suffered ANY physical harm after incident. 
 
2) P is family member of one injured by Ds negligence 
General rule is that for a bystander to recover for NIED they must observe the 
actual disaster/come across family member still in distress. And, it also looks 
at the relationship between P and the injured party.  
 
V. Cause in Fact 
The demonstration that the injuries would not have occurred if D had used due care, or, but for the 
defendants negligence, the plaintiff would not have been hurt.  
 
A. But for 
But for Ds negligence would this have occurred? Did Ds negligence cause the injury.  
 
1) Stacy v. Knickerbocker Ice Co./Haft v. Lone Palm Hotel 
In both cases, D did not comply with the law, but the question is was that lack 
of compliance a but for cause. 
 
In Stacy, P brought action when his horses crashed through Ds ice. D had 
failed to erect a fence and failed to notify employees about thin ice. Ct. found 
NL b/c even if precautions taken, not clear those would protect the horses. 
 
In Haft, the hotel failed to have a lifeguard or sign warning of dangers of pool. 
Father and son both drowned in pool. The court found that b/c the hotel had 
violated law (i.e. no lifeguard) it was up to them to prove that violation was 
not proximate cause of death.  
 
RULE: While a defendant may violate laws that include precautions, the 
question to ask is: would the untaken precaution have prevented the 
accident?  
 
NY Central RR v. Grimstad 
No L for D (owner of barge) where decedent fell overboard after barge was hit 
by tugboat while in port. 
 
Gardner v. National Bulk Carriers, Inc. 
L for D where decedent fell overboard and did not turn around and perform a 
search when it was discovered that the decedent was missing. 
 
2) Informed Consent 
Think of Bernard v. Char, man who goes in for root canal, cant afford it, opts 
for tooth to be pulled and jaw is yanked out.  L for D. 
 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
42 
RULE:  When a patient sues for medical malpractice after giving consent 
and the operation goes awry, they are often evaluated by an objective 
standard, which is: Would a reasonable person in the plaintiffs position 
have consented to the treatment that led to the injuries had the patient 
been properly informed of the risk of injury that befell him or her. 
 
A subjective standard of evaluation looks at would *this* plaintiff go through 
with the operation knowing the risks since they were informed? 
 
Zalazar v. Vercimak 
L for D (doctor) where P suffers from ill effects of cosmetic face lift. 
 
 
3) Loss of Chance 
Involves cases when the defendants negligence may have caused the injuries, 
or decreased Ps chance for life.  
 
a) Herskovitz v. Group Health Care Cooperative of Puget Sound 
Ps decedant brings a wrongful death suit after D failed to make an early 
diagnosis of Ps lung cancer. If Ps cancer had been identified when he 
first saw doctor he would have a 39% chance of survival. Instead, when 
it was diagnosed, he had a 25% chance of survival, his chance of 
survival was lowered by 36%.  Ct. finds L for D.  
 
Ct. rejected idea that P must show he had a 51% chance of survival if P 
had not been negligent.  Ct. stated the reduction of chance of survival 
was enough for jury to consider the proximate cause issue. 
 
b) Wendland v. Sparks 
P is cancer patient in hospital. Has heart attack and doctor/hospital does 
not administer CPR/shock. Ps family sues relying on lost chance theory, 
lost chance that resuscitation would have allowed her to live. And, lost 
chance that while alive, she could have beaten cancer. 
 
Under lost chance theory theyd look at Ps percentage of surviving 
CPR. And, then, the likelihood shed survive cancer if she gets CPR.  Ct. 
finds L for D based on both probabilities. 
 
c) Daugert v. Pappas 
P sued his attorney who failed to file an appeal on time. He used the 
loss chance argument and that it was a substantial factor in causing 
damage to P.  Ct found L for D.  D appealed. 
 
Problem with suit is that the 20% chance of winning was pulled out of 
thin air, youre telling judges what they would do/decide. Ct. instead 
decides to remand case, telling the TC what they would have decided.  
 
Dillan v. Twin Sister Gas & Electric Co. 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
43 
Ct. found L for D based on the fact that P was electrocuted while trying 
to save himself from falling off a bridge.  Damage was calculated based 
on whether or not decedent would have died from fall anyways or if he 
would have lived if he was not shocked and only fell. 
 
4) Alternative Liability 
Determining causation, and damages, when only one defendant is negligent, but 
its unclear who caused the damages. The 2 defendants have the burden of prove 
to show who is at fault. If they cant then both are at fault. 
 
a) Summers v. Tice 
3 men are hunting, each with a 12-gague shotgun. P is struck in face by 
birdshot that came from one of the other 2 men, but its not clear which 
one. Its clear someone was negligent, but who? Court finds both 
defendants liable. 
 
Often, cases meet criteria of RIL: 1) Evidence set out doesnt occur w/o 
negligence; 2) Accident occurred from instrument in exclusive control of 
D; 3) Ps actions did not cause accident. (Think of kid picking up 
firework at circus, both firms found not liable  exception  ct said they 
did not want to hold both liable when one was not negligent) 
 
Liteman v. Humbolt County 
P may have been contributorily negligent  lit the firework.  ^^ 
 
RULE: When an injured party is placed in the position of pointing 
to which defendant is liable (and both could escape) it is up to the 
defendants to explain the cause of the injury otherwise they share 
joint liability. 
 
b) Market Share Liability 
When its clear defendants product cause the harm, but one cant 
conclusively show it was a particular brand used/bought was the cause, 
then the companies in the relevant market area share the blame 
dependant on their relevant market share. Relevant market can be 
national or local. 
 
This can only really be used when its clear that every single D was 
negligent (i.e. in production of product) but its unclear exactly WHICH 
product caused the harm. 
 
i) Sindell v. Abbott Laboratories (full case)  
P brings class action suit against drug manufacturers for 
production of DES. DES taken by expectant mothers and later 
caused cancer in daughters. The FDA had initially allowed Ds to 
market and produce DES as a means of preventing miscarriages. 
Later on, it changed policy, prohibiting such advertising, but 
manufacturers continued anyways. 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
44 
 
RULE: Each defendant is held liable for the proportion for the 
judgment represented by its share of that market unless it 
demonstrates that it could not have made the product which 
caused the plaintiffs injuries. P must be injured by a fungible 
product made by many different manufacturers. D must also 
represent a substantial share of the market. 
 
A fungible product is one that could be interchanged with other 
property of same kind (i.e. asbestos containing insulation). 
 
Sanderson v. International Flavors & Fragrances, Inc. 
No L for D (fragrance manufacturer) as Ps were not injured by a 
fungible product made by many different companies.  Market 
share doesnt apply. 
 
Smith v. Cutter Biological, Inc. 
No L for D as only one company negligent, but cant tell which 
one.  Analogous to kid picking up the firework while at the fair.  
 
VI. Proximate Causation 
One thing to recall is that duty is a question of law for a court, while proximate cause, an evaluative 
matter, is a question of fact for the fact finder. 
 
A) Remoteness and Foreseeability 
 
1) To determine whether an act is negligent, it is relevant to determine whether 
the injury/outcome was reasonably foreseeable from the negligence. Example, 
tin of rat pointing left next to box of flour on stove. Is it negligent if stove left 
on, heats rat poison up and RP explodes? (usually, yes b/c foreseeable since its 
near heat bad things could happen)- Direct cause 
 
a) Wagon Mound 1 
Oil spilled in harbor where ship was harbored. After 2 days of suspended 
operations, to allow oil to disperse, and then while doing work, a spark 
falls onto oil, it burns and sets ship on fire that are docked there. 
CT. rejects Polemis theory (if act is negligent then any damage as a 
result is directly connected) and argues that the consequence must be 
reasonably foreseeable.  No L for D. 
 
RULE: If a negligent act is conducted, the damage must be 
reasonably foreseeable from that act.  Must forsee the exact result. 
 
In re Polemis 
L for D because the falling board into the hull of the ship was the direct 
cause or the explosion was the direct result of the falling board.  It was 
immaterial that the board causing a spark was not reasonably forseeable. 
 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
45 
Wagon Mound 2 
Ct. found L for D where a reasonable man would/might have realized or 
prevented the risk. 
 
b) Petition of Kinsman Transit Co. 
A ship is moored to a dock in Buffalo. A thaw causes large chunks of ice 
to come loose, some of the ice piled up between the boat and the shore, 
the resulting pressure cause the ship to break loose, float down the river 
and crash into another barge and then a bridge, causing flooding. Ct. 
found L for dock owner (the post was negligently grounded) and said 
accident was foreseeable.  Negligence directly caused damage and was 
somewhat forseeable (although not necessarily to the extent that actually 
occurred). 
 
RULE: Foreseeability of danger is necessary to render conduct 
negligent.  
 
c) Di Ponzio v. Riordan 
P was customer at gas station, filling car when another car rolled into 
him and broke his leg. The car had been left on in park and somehow 
slipped into gear. 
The gas station had a regulation that drivers were not to leave engines 
running while gassing up car. Ct. found NL because this particular type 
of injury was not foreseeable. 
 
RULE: A negligent act can have a limited class of hazards and the 
injuries must be proximate to that hazard. 
 
d) Other examples:  
Steinhauser v. Hertza woman in an auto accident started acting odd 
after crash. Soon after diagnosed with schizophrenia and Ps parents 
argued that crash, caused by D, precipitated illness. Ct. agreed and found 
illness was precipitated by the crash. 
         
        Doughty v. Turner 
No L for D whose workers hit a cement lid into boiling cyanide and 
caused an explosion which injured P.  Explosion not necessarily caused 
by the dropping of the lid into the cyanide.  Ds did not know explosion 
might occur. 
 
Colonial Inn Motor Lodge v. Gay 
L for D who backed his car into a building and hit a heater which 
exploded.  Ct. said that it was reasonably forseeable that collision with a 
building might cause some substantial harm. 
 
B) Intervening Causes 
When a defendant commits an act of negligence that produces harm when combined 
with subsequent acct of wrongdoing by some third party. 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
46 
 
1) Brauer v. N.Y. Central HRR Co. 
Ds train collided with Ps wagon at a grade crossing. Ps horse killed and the 
contents of the wagon stolen. D had 2 detectives on the train to protect train 
property from thieves, but they did nothing to protect Ps property. Ct. found L 
for train company b/c accident immediately resulted in P being unable to protect 
his property from thieves, something the RR company foresaw (i.e. detectives). 
 
RULE: When an event occurs concurrently with the negligent act of 
another, then that actor is liable for the harm of a third party to the 
plaintiff.  
 
2) Village of Caterville v. Cook/Alexander v. Town of New Castle 
In Village of Caterville, D maintains a sidewalk 6 feet off ground, it has no 
railings. One day P walking home, another person passes by and jostles him. 
This causes P to fall off sidewalk. Ct. finds L. 3
rd
 party did not deliberately 
knock P off the sidewalk.  
 
In Alexander, P asks to become special deputy so he can arrest a gambler. P 
chases down/arrests the gambler and takes him to jail. Theyre walking along 
the sidewalk, which has a 6-foot hole, when the gambler throws P into it. P sues 
city, but ct. finds NL, saying the gambler was an intervening/independent human 
agency in the infliction of injuries.   3
rd
 party deliberately threw P in pit.  
 
RULE: When the intervening act is an intentional tort, the chain of causation is 
broken and L transfers to intentional actor. 
 
3) Baby Jose 
Article from NY times about prescription for infant incorrectly written by 
resident. The prescription is passed along and at 2 other occasions (pharmacist 
and nurse) they notice errors/think its incorrect, yet dont fix problem. 
 
Ewing sees pharmacist as most egregious actor, he clearly failed to do his duty.  
 
4) Exercise cases 
Courts have found liability for an actors negligent even with intervening causes 
such as lightening (Johnson v. Kosmos, when gas built up in barge), reasonable 
scares/fright (when a gas attendant working on a gas leak thought he saw a fire, 
ran and hit a lamppost) and mischevious children/drunks (keys left in bulldozer 
at work site, men drove it to edge of mesa, abandoned it and it went over the 
edge, crashing into a house).  Mosquito fogger  concurrent cause. 
 
Ct. also found L when a pail of glycerin was left in a yard, it was moved, hidden 
and then played with by boys. Ct. said it was foreseeable that mischief could 
happen with glycerin. 
 
C) Limitation of DutyForeseeable plaintiffs 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
47 
Dont forget, while an injury, or plaintiff, may or may not be foreseeable, one must 
always consider the super sensitive plaintiff and that the tort feasor takes his victim as 
he finds him. 
 
1) Palsgraf v. Long Island RR 
(FULL CASE) 
P standing on platform of Ds railroad after buying a ticket. A man rushes up 
with a package under his arm, trying to catch a train. He goes to jump on train 
and one conduct pushes him in, the other pulls him on train. The package falls, 
explosion ensues and causes scales to fall, at other end of platform. P is injured 
and sues.  
 
Ct. finds NL, (CARDOZO DECISION) because nothing in the situation gave 
notice that the falling package had in it the potency of peril to those removed 
from the situation. Harm was foreseeable, but not to this plaintiff. The plaintiff 
must show a wrong to herself, a violation of her own right, and not merely a 
wrong to someone else, nor conduct wrongful. The dissent thought one had a 
duty of reasonable care to the world at large. 
 
RULE: If the harm was not willfull, one must show that the act as to him 
had possibilities of danger so many and apparent as to entitle him to be 
protected. So, one is only liable to foreseeable plaintiffs injuries. 
 
 
 
2) Edwards v. Honeywell 
Alarm goes off at home and Honeywell calls fire company. Gives wrong 
location of fire and then wrong directions, Delays firefighters arrival to home by 
3 min. When FF arrive, they rush in and one crashes through floor that was 
weakened by fire. Ct. finds NL b/c of unforeseeable plaintiff, and, holding 
Honeywell liable would be a crushing financial burden.  
 
RULE: As a matter of law, no duty is owed by homeowners/alarm companies to 
FF/cops doing their jobs, they have assumed the risk.  
 
3) Wagner v. International Ry. Co. 
(FULL CASE) 
P and his cousin riding on Ds train one night. Cousin thrown from the train as it 
turned onto the bridge b/c trains doors had negligently been left open. Train 
stopped and P left train w/conductor to search for cousin. P slips and falls off 
bridge (while looking for cousin) and is hurt. P brings suit claiming his injuries 
were attributable to same act that injured cousin.  
 
Ct. finds L because danger invites rescue, and its all part of a chain of events. 
In part, decision may be because of social reasoning, want to encourage others 
to rescue. 
 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
48 
RULE: The wrongdoer may not have foreseen the coming of a 
deliverer/rescuer, but he is accountable as though he had. 
 
Widlowski v. Durkee Foods 
Ct. found no L for D as liability must stop somewhere short of freakish and 
fantastic.  No L for D where employee is exposed to nitrogen at work and bites 
nurses finger off when he is brought to the hospital in a delirious state.  P tried to 
say D was liable for negligently failing to protect employee from nitrogen 
exposure. 
 
VII. Strict Liability 
Negligence provides the default rule governing liability for unintentional harm. But, strict liability 
imposes harm without fault.  
 
A) Liability for animals 
Owners of ferocious beasts are strictly liable for damages their animals cause to others, 
regardless of what precautions were taken. With wild animals, the court may examine 
the animals social purpose. And, if it is a domesticated animal, if the owner had 
knowledge of past attacks/viciousness. 
 
SL for wild animals may cause owners to re-think whether or not they want to own such 
animals. The law is saying, listen if you own this fine, but youll be SL. 
 
1) Candler v. Smith 
While P trying to start car, shes attacked by baboon who escaped from Ds zoo. 
Animal wrecks her purse and frightens her and she has to run away. P sues and 
D found SL for Ps injury. 
 
RULE: With a wild animal, it is not necessary to allege the other was negligent 
in allowing the animal to be at large because the owner is bound to keep the 
animal secure. 
 
Behrens v. Bertram Mills Circus 
L for D (circus) when elephant gets spooked and tramples over P, causing 
injury.  Fact that elephant was tame is irrelevant and is to be treated as a wild 
animal.  Absolute duty to confine. 
 
2) Earl v. Van Alstine 
Bees kept in beehive that bordered the highway. P driving horse past when 
attacked by bees, which had never attacked before. In considering whether wild 
or domesticated, court found NL because the bees were found to have a social 
purpose/usefulness. 
However, outcome could have changed if bees regularly attacked people, or, if 
bees were brought into a classroom. 
 
Smith v. Pelah 
Ct. finds L for D for his dogs bite.  Second bite rule  owner knows of dogs 
vicious propensities = strict liability. 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
49 
 
B. Rylands 
 
1) Rylands v. Fletcher 
(FULL CASE) 
  
D (Rylands) hires contractors to build a reservoir for him. Contracts discovered 
some old mining tunnels underground, but did not investigate them. Turns out 
tunnels were connected to a coal mine owned by P, Fletcher. D fills reservoir, 
which breaks through bottom and floods Ps land. D sues. 
 
Ct. finds L b/c a person who for his own purposes brings on his lands and 
collects and keeps there anything likely to do mischief if it escapes, must keep it 
in at his peril, and if he does not do so, hes answerable for all the damages of 
its escape. 
 
RULE: When one brings things on their land that can cause mischief if it 
escapes, theyre strictly liable for any disastrous results that impact 
others/neighboring land. 
 
Crowhurst v. The Burial Board of the Parish of Amersham 
Ct. finds L for D where Ps horse eats poisonous tree that extends onto Ps 
property.  Uses reasoning from Rylands to find SL. 
 
2) Lubin v. Iowa City 
(One of first American cases in book to adopt Rylands holding)  
D (Iowa City) in practice of leaving underground pipes in place until they break, 
even as a pipe approached end of estimated life. Ct. found city SL b/c it wasnt 
reasonable for city to intentionally leave a water main w/o inspection. Water 
mains arent inherently dangerous, but when such practice is followed, they do 
become dangerous. 
 
In part, this is a look at the best way to spread costs.  Cts examine the economic 
benefit or necessity (Turner v. Big Lake Oil Co.) in rejecting SL in many cases 
 
Losee v. Buchanon 
Ct. finds no L for D where a steam boiler explodes and flies off causing damage 
on Ps property.  Ds had right to place steam boiler on property and it was not a 
nuisance, nor was there any negligence on Ds part.  No one can be held liable 
for injuries to the person or property of another without some fault or negligence 
on his part. (against Rylands)  
 
C. Abnormally Dangerous Activities 
2
nd
 Restatement of Torts 
One who carries on an abnormally dangerous activity is subject to liability for harm to 
the person, land or chattels of another resulting from the activity, although he has 
exercised care in preventing harm. And, the SL is limited to the kind of harm, the 
possibility of which makes the activity abnormally dangerous. 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
50 
 
 
In determining whether an activity is abnormally dangerous, the following facts are 
considered: 
  a) Existence of a high degree of risk to some harm to the person, land or chattels 
of others 
b)  likelihood that the harm that results from it will be great. 
c) inability to eliminate the risk by the exercise of reasonable care. 
d) extent to which the activity is not a matter of common usage 
e) inappropriateness of activity to the place where its carried on 
f) extent to which its value to the community is outweighed by its dangerous 
attributes. 
 
1) Indiana Harbor Belt Ry. Co. v. American Cyanamid Co. 
FULL CASE 
 
D transporting 20,000 gallons of acrylonitrile. While at switching station 
in a rail yard near homes, employees notice the liquid gushing from 
bottom of car. P sues for SL and ct. finds N SL. In part, court looks at if 
risks could be eliminated using reasonable care, yes, they could have. 
And, it considered what the alternatives were for transporting it. Ct. finds 
that reasonable alternatives dont really exist, the roads were seen as 
more dangerous than railways.  
 
The court also saw the relevant activity as transportation, not the 
manufacturing and shipping of the dangerous chemical.  
 
RULE: The feasibility of avoiding accidents simply by being careful is 
an argument against strict liability. 
 
2) Siegler v. Kuhlman 
Ds driver transporting gasoline in tanker truck across highways. Stops, 
performs safety checks and then pulls onto highway where trailer jerks 
loose and crashes. Gasoline spills out and Ps daughter drives through 
puddle, it ignites and she dies. 
 
Ct. found the principles supporting the Fletcher doctrine applied here. 
Gasoline itself was not dangerous, but transporting it was what made it 
dangerous, because the risks could not be eliminated by reasonable care.  
 
Another reason for SL here is b/c without it, P couldnt prove negligence 
(evidence disappeared, hard to prove explosion of case), proving RIL 
here is impossible. Note the difference here is that Siegler is the 
TRANSPORTER where as in Indiana Harbor, they sued the 
manufacturer/shipper, not the transporter. 
 
3) Klein v. Pyrodyne Corp/Miller v. Civil Constructors, Inc. 
 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
51 
In Klein, a fireworks display went awry and a rocket was shot into the 
crowd 500 feet away and exploded. TC did found L for SL for fireworks 
firm, reasoning no amount of reasonable care could entirely eliminate the 
high risk in setting off powerful explosives near a crowd. 
 
In Miller, Ds truck/person hit by a stray bullet. D was driving past a 
firing range in a rural area where police officers went to practice. TC 
finds NL for Ps SL count, and would not classify discharging firearms 
as an ultra hazardous dangerous activity. 
 
RULE: In considering strict liability, look at the social utility of the 
activity weighed against the possibility of harm. And, consider the 
location and appropriateness of the location of the activity. 
 
D) Respondeat Superior  
Generally, employers are strictly liable for torts committed by their employees in the 
course of their workits an example of vicarious liability, liability for one party based 
on the wrongs of another.  
 
2
nd
 Restatement of Torts 
1) Conduct of a servant is within the scope of employment if, but only if: 
  a) It is of the kind he is employed to perform 
  b) It occurs substantially within the authorized time and space limits 
  c) It is actuated, in part, by a purpose to serve the master 
  d) If force is intentionally used by the servant against another, the use of force is 
not unacceptable by the master 
2) Conduct of a servant is not within the scope of employment if it is different in kind 
from that authorized, far beyond the authorized time or space limits, or too little 
actuated by a purpose to serve the master.  
 
1) Ira s. Bushey & Sons (FULL CASE)/Miller v. Reiman-Weurth 
In Bushey, a sailor goes out drinking comes back to the dock area where they 
are staying (and only employees can enter/go) and opens valves that flood the 
place and cause injury to the dry dock and boats. The court found L under theory 
of RS b/c while his exact act may not have been foreseeable, his act of 
negligence (or the general act of negligence) may have been foreseen by 
employer.  Crewmen didnt just work on the ship, they lived there. 
 
In Miller, employee at construction site gets paycheck, asks for break to go to 
bank and drives off. On the way back he gets into an auto accident. P sues 
employer under theory that trip contributed to employees happiness and thus, 
made him a better worker. Court found NL b/c that idea of 
happiness/productivity would extend to all breaks, vacation, etc. Clearly, NL 
under RS because the man was off the clock/doing his own business.  Drawing a 
line. 
 
RULE: Scope of employment includes act done for employer/job and while on 
the job. 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
52 
 
2) Konradi v. United States 
A mailman is driving to work when he collides with Ps car and kills him. P 
sues, but Indiana law normally does not hold employer L when employee 
driving to work, unless it was in a company car. But, the postal service required 
rural carriers to furnish their own vehicle when making rounds and REQUIRES 
them to make the most direct route in driving to and from work. Postal delivery 
guy wasnt allowed to pick up passengers and was required to wear a seatbelt.  
 
Ct. found L for USPS b/c of the control it exerted over its employees.  
 
RULE: Respondeat Superior may apply, despite an employee not being at the 
work site, if the employee is acting in the interest of the employer, or the 
employer has direct control over the employees behavior. 
 
3) Roth v. 1
st
 National State Bank of NJ 
P runs a check cashing business and comes into bank to get cash. A teller 
informs her boyfriend of this, who tips off thieves who rob P. P sues the bank to 
recover for his losses. Ct. finds NL for RS because she had not been acting 
within the scope of her employment. 
 
Its not within her job to give out information about customers, bank argues. 
And, ct. agrees that the act was criminal and not in any sense in the service of 
the employers interest. 
 
RULE: Usually, if the employee deviates from the business/interests of his 
employer and while in pursuit of his own ends, commits a tort, the employer is 
not liable.  
 
4) Reina v. Metro-Dade/Forster v. Red Top Sedan 
In both cases bus drivers attacked people who had ticked them off. However, in 
Reina v. Metro-Dade it was clear that the beef was between the bus driver and 
customer was personal. In Metro Dade/NL for RS of employer, in Red Top 
Sedan L for employer.  
 
RULE: Because one is on the job does not mean their employer is always liable 
for their conduct. 
 
4) Independent Contractors 
RESTATEMENT of TORTS 
A servant is a person employed to perform services in the affairs of another and 
who, with respect to the physical conduct in the performance of the services is 
subject to the others control or right to control.  
 
In determining if one is a servant or an independent contractor, the following is 
considered: a) extent of control which by agreement master exercises over the 
details of work; b) whether or not one employed is engaged in a distinct 
occupation or business; c) skill of occupation, d) whether the employer or 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
53 
workman supplies the instrumentalities, tools, and the place of work for the 
person doing the work; f) length of time for which the person is employed; g) 
whether or not the parties believe they are creating relation of master and 
servant. 
 
a) Miami Herald v. Kendall 
Paper deliverer ran over plaintiff while delivering papers one morning.  
Ct. finds NL because paper carrier is an independent contractor. 
 
Note, the paper doesnt control how he delivers paper, or the route he 
takes.  
 
RULE: If the duties of a job are left up to the contractor (i.e. method 
of delivery, work hours, route) then the person hired is most likely 
an independent contractor. 
 
Note, Ewing asks questions about Fed Ex, or pizza delivery guy. 
Generally Fed Ex seen as IC (same with urban valet service that you 
order food and then they pick it up and deliver). 
   Symbols of control over worker include uniform, mandatory routes,  
 
b) Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad Co. 
A carload of cattle being shipped by rail. D hires an agent to unload the 
animals at their destination , a steer escapes, gores the P and he sues. The 
court finds L because it views that delegating the duty of delivering the 
steer was not something D could do. 
 
RULE: There are duties (i.e. handling of dangerous animals) and 
responsibilities that can delegated to independent contractors, but will 
still have L for firm/employer. 
 
Also, in Yazoo, the injury that happened was the one that was foreseen, 
where as in Wilton v. City of Spokane (dynamite exploded after left 
underground) that was not the type of injury foreseen. 
 
VII. Products Liability 
One who sells any product in a defective condition unreasonably dangerous to the user or consumer or 
to his property is subject to liability for physical harm thereby caused to the ultimate user or consumer, 
or to his property if 
  a) the seller is engaged in the business of selling such a product and, b) it is expected to and 
does reach the user or consumer without substantial change in the condition in which it is sold. 
 
One engaged in the business of selling or otherwise distributing products who sells or distributes a 
defective produce is subject to liability for harm to persons or property caused by the defect. 
 
A) MacPherson v. Buick Motor Co. 
(FULL CASE) 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
54 
D manufactures cars and it sold a car to a retail dealer who sold it to P. While P was in 
car, it collapsed suddenly, P was thrown out of car and injured because of a defective 
wheel that was not made by D, but was made by another manufacturer and put into car. 
Defects in wheel could have been noticed by reasonable inspection.  
 
Ct. found that if the nature of a thing is such that it is reasonably certain to place life 
and limb in peril when negligently made, it is then a thing of danger.  General liability 
is implied when a product is a thing of danger. 
 
RULE: SL is applied to a manufacturer of a product b/c they can see a product would 
fall into the hands of a consumer.  
 
*Eliminates privity as a requirement in a negligence claim against a manufacturer of a 
thing of danger. 
 
*Establishes a general duty of manufacturer to users of their product. 
 
 
B) Escola v. Coca-Cola Bottling Co. 
(READ TRAYNORS OPINION) 
P is a waitress at a restaurant and injured when a bottle broke in her hand. 
The court rejected the idea that P could collect under RIL because instrument must be in 
exclusive control of P, which it was not. 
 
However, the court finds SL for products based on 4 ideals: 1) Loss minimization. 
Manufacturer is in the best place to minimize loss from a product. 2) Spreading costs of 
accidents. 3) Problems with Proof, its difficult for one injured by a product to prove 
negligence even if manufacturer had been negligent. 4) Avoiding a series of claims that 
would waste judicial resources. (i.e. buyer sue seller, seller sue distributor, dist. sue 
manufacturer). 
 
Even if no negligence, public policy demands that responsibility be fixed wherever it 
will most effectively reduce the hazards to life and health inherent in defective products 
that will reach the market. 
 
RULE: A manufacturer incurs an absolute liability when an article he has placed on the 
market, knowing that it is to be used without inspection, proves to have a defect that 
causes injury to human beings. 
 
RULE 2: The retailer, even though not equipped to test a product, is under an absolute 
liability to his customer for the implied warranties of fitness for proposed use and 
merchantable quality include a warrant of safety of the product. 
 
C) Manufacturing Defects 
Rule for manufacturing defects imposes liability whether or not the manufacturers 
quality control efforts satisfy standards of reasonableness. Strict liability without fault 
fosters safety incentives, encourages greater investment in product safety and by 
eliminating issue of fault, SL reduces transaction costs of litigation. 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
55 
 
1) Welge v. Planters Lifesavers Co. 
FULL DECISION 
P is injured when placing lid on jar of peanuts his roommate bought at K-Mart. 
The roommate, once she got jar home, had used Xacto knife to cut off label, but 
no other noticeable change. P injures hand from shattered glass. P sues K-Mart, 
Planters (bottled peanuts) and Brockway, bottle manufacturer.  Ct. finds SL for 
all Ds. 
 
Note for SL to hold, it has to be shown that the product contained a defect at 
least when it left the hands of the last defendant. Note that its not clear when 
defect arrived therefore, assumed to be there from start. RIL doesnt apply 
because D has parted from the object (i.e. doesnt have strict control over it). 
 
Ct. finds the information about handling of the jar by K-Mart is only relevant if 
defect introduced after the bottling/sale/delivery.  
 
RULE: Invited misuse of a product is no defense for SL. 
 
RULE 2: For SL, anyone who handled the product after a defect was 
introduced is liable without fault.  
 
A seller who is subject to strict products liability is responsible for the 
consequences of selling a defective product even if the defect was 
introduced without any fault on his party by his supplier or his suppliers 
supplier. 
 
2) Winter v. GP Putnam/Saloomey v. Jeppesen 
NL in case where one uses mushroom encyclopedia to identify mushrooms, eats 
them and then is poisoned. L is case where a pilot uses maps (from D who made 
the map) with airport markings and crashes when airport doesnt have 
appropriate landing gear as marked on maps. 
 
The court in Winter distinguished it from the mushroom one saying aeronautical 
tools were highly factual and precise and the map was like a compass. The book 
was more like how to use a compass and was pure thought or expression. 
 
The other point is to look at each things purpose. The purpose of a map is for 
directions and to get people places. The books purpose was not for people to 
identify mushrooms to eat, and it wasnt foreseeable that one would use book to 
find mushrooms to eat. However, it was foreseeable that people would use map 
to get around.  
 
VIII. Damages 
One takes their plaintiff, and their plaintiffs property as they find it on the day of the tort. 
 
Proximate cause  Damages stem from the tortious act directly 
 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
56 
--Compensatory Damages (loss of use, value of objects);  
--Punitive Damages; generally not OK to exceed the ones net worth (OJ civil case) 
--General rule, there is no damage for sentimental value 
 
Kemezy v. Peters 
Compensatory damages do not do not always compensate fully  need for punitive damages 
 
Murphy v. Hobbs 
Punitive damages may make an example and also deter others. 
 
*Lost Earnings 
 
Landers v. Gosh 
Wife of carpenter gets $ 400 K in lost earnings and loss of consortium. 
 
Pescatore v. Pan Am World Airways 
Wife of oil exec gets $ 9 mil in lost earnings and $ 5 mil in loss of consortium. 
 
Olin Corp v. Smith 
16 yo gets $ 5 mil from bullet malfunction that results in lost leg 
Williams v. U.S. 
Prisoner gets $500 K for lost leg after negligent hospital misdiagnoses 
 
IX. Defenses to Negligence 
 
A) Contributory v. Comparative Negligence 
Under a contributory negligence scheme if P is found to have any negligence, then there can be 
no recovery. 
 
Pure Comparative Negligence: A plaintiffs damages are reduced in proportion to the 
percentage of negligence attributed to him. For P found 90% negligent, he only gets 10% 
damages. 
 
Modified Comparative Negligence: P can collect if his negligence does not exceed 50 percent, 
or if less than 49 percent. 
 
Neither comparative nor contributory negligence are defenses to an intentional tort claim. 
 
1) Manning v. Brown 
Manning and her friend stole an unattended car. Theyre joy riding, each took turns at 
driving, but friend, Amidon is behind the wheel when the car crashes and both are 
injured. P sues friend and owners of the car for negligence. Ct. gives summary 
judgment to Ds because courts will not entertain suit if the Ps conduct constitutes a 
serious violation of the law and the injuries for which the P seeks recovery are the direct 
result of that violation. 
 
RULE: When committing a serious criminal act, recovery for negligence is not 
allowed. 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
57 
 
2) Fritts v. McKinne 
P is drunk and crashes his truck into a tree. Goes to hospital for reconstructive surgery 
of his face and dies after he suffered a ruptured artery when a tracheostomy goes awry. 
P sues and Ds defense is that Fritts was responsible for his own death b/c he had been 
driving drunk.  
 
Bt. Court rejected that saying under a guise of contributory negligence, a physician 
may not avoid liability for negligent treatment by asserting that Ps injuries were 
originally caused by his own negligence. 
 
In Fritts, the harm that killed him is not a direct result of the accident/wrong doing, 
whereas in Manning, the harm was a direct result of the wrongdoing/crime. 
 
RULE:  Physicians may not hold up the defense of the patients actions (i.e. crime/bad 
health) as a defense for medical negligence. 
 
3) Oulette v. Card 
Neighbor comes over to help man crushed by car and as he helps neighbor escape. The 
two leave through the garage, P opens the door with a garage door opener and gasoline 
spilled on floor (from earlier car falling) ignites setting fire to the place. P (the rescuer) 
sues Card alleging Card negligence and he counters claiming P was negligent.   No L 
for D. 
 
The idea is that we want others to help, so to encourage it, generally, rescuers are 
protected. 
 
RULE: Only if a rescue attempt is rash or reckless should a rescuer be held liable for 
negligence/comparative negligence. 
 
4) Alami v. Volkswagon 
Ps husband drives his car into a pole while drunk. His wife sues alleging that the 
injuries from the crash were increased by a defect in the cars design that caused the 
floorboard to buckle up during the crash. D not given SJ and case allowed to go to trial. 
 
Ct. found P had a right to a crash proof vehicle regardless of how he crashed. Ct. didnt 
dispute that alcohol caused crash, but injuries sustained were due to poor design, 
injuries werent linked to violation of public policy (i.e. drunk driving) 
 
4) Van Vecter v. Hierholzer 
Patient smokes and is overweight. Told by doctor to loose weight, quit smoking and go 
on medication. He doesnt do anything. Several years alter, he goes back to hospital 
complaining of chest pains. Doctor tells him hes stabilized and sends him home. He 
then dies. 
 
Ct. finds for patient. In part, if we allow judgments against physicians to be reduced by 
poor decision making of patient, were reducing the incentive of physicians to supply 
adequate care. 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
58 
 
RULE: A patient is entitled to medical care no matter how she or he got there. 
 
B) Express Assumption of Risk 
A claim that the plaintiff assumed the risk of the harm that occurred and therefore be barred 
from recovery.  
 
When evaluating exculpatory clauses consider the bargaining power of each party and the 
amount of free choice that one party had in seeking alternative services. 
 
1) Van Tuyn v. Zurich American Ins. Co. 
P was a patron at a club and wants to ride mechanical bull. Signs a general release of 
waiver, claim, assumption of risk. She also tells operator not to go too fast and he tells 
her that hell take care of it. P gets on the bull, it speeds up and shes thrown to floor 
and inured. 
 
Ct. finds L because for an exculpatory clause to be effective, it must include absolving a 
defendant from liability arising out of negligence.  If club had operated machine with 
all due care the release may have protected the club. Also with Van Tuyn, can we 
expect her to understand what she signed if shes been drinking? 
 
RULE: For an exculpatory clause to be effective, it must clearly state that it 
releases the party from liability for its own negligence. 
 
2) Manning v. Brannon 
Man goes skydiving, signs release that mentions negligence and also watches video that 
outlines dangers. When P jumps his chute wont open, the back up one doesnt work 
very well either, P falls into a pond and is injured.  
 
Ct. finds for D that the release was enforceable and said one must ascertain the equality 
of bargaining. Here P was free to not skydive, go to another company, etc.  
 
3) Anderson v. Erie Ry. Co. 
A priest buys a special clerical ticket thats half-priced. On the back is written that 
because he had a reduced fare he had accepted all risks and accidents, whether caused 
by negligence or not. Theres a train accident, he dies and then his estate sues. 
 
Ct. finds for D saying the release barred recovery because it waived its right as a 
common carrier to exact compensation. The RR had offered him the privilege of riding 
in its coaches without charge it he would assume the risk of liability. Neither party was 
forced to enter the contract and each party was at liberty to make the deal. 
 
4) Tunkle v. Regents of UC 
P admitted to UCLA hospital and upon entering he signed a document setting forth 
certain conditions of admission which included releasing the hospital from all liability 
for negligence or wrongful acts. P brings a lawsuit alleging injury from the hospital.  
 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
59 
CA SC holds the release is unenforceable and that exculpatory provisions of the sort 
may be held unenforceable if they involved the public interest 
 
The court said waivers may be invalid if the exemption involves a transaction with a 
business that performs a service for the public, that holds himself out as willing to 
perform this service for any member of the public who seeks it, or for those who come 
within a certain standard. 
 
RULE: An exculpatory waiver may be held void if as a result of the essential 
nature of the service, the party invoking the waiver has an advantage of 
bargaining strength against any member of the public who seeks his service.  
 
Also, if the business type is suitable for public regulation and if the party seeking 
exculpation is engaged in performing a service of great importance to the public 
or, great necessity, then the waiver may be held invalid. 
 
5) Shorter v. Drury 
P is a Jehovahs Witness who was in hospital for a D&C procedure to remove fetus. She 
understood that procedure involved a possible loss of blood. She signed a waiver that 
said for religious reasons she didnt want any blood transfusions and released hospital 
from responsibility for unfavorable reactions/results from her refusal to permit blood or 
its derivatives. 
 
Procedure goes awry, she needs a transfusion, and she refuses and died. Her husband 
sues, claiming doctors performed the D&C negligently and therefore the release had no 
use. 
 
The court found that the release was not against public policy (i.e. she could sign 
it) and that it did not protect the doctor from negligence suits. The ct. thought this 
form was enforceable b/c otherwise, without it, JW would not be able to get 
medical care b/c no one would treat them w/o the form. 
 
C) Primary Assumption of the Risk 
A doctrine that prevents plaintiffs from recovering for injuries suffered when they freely 
undertake dangerous activities.  
 
Unless you can point to negligence in an activity, then assumption of risk is not a concern. 
 
1) Murphy v. Steeplechase 
P sees ride called the Flopper at an amusement park and gets on. While on the ride 
its jerked to a stop (which is part of its normal course) and he falls onto an unpadded 
portion of the ride and breaks his kneecap. He alleges negligence. 
 
The court finds that one who takes part in such a sport accepts the dangers that inhere in 
it so far as they are obvious and necessary. The ride was underway and it was apparent 
to P what it entailed, he could see what he was getting into. Also, there were a small 
number of people injured yearly on the flopper. 
 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
60 
With assumption of risk its similar to SJ, P looses everything. No worrying about how 
much hell collect from comparative negligence. Once assumption of risk is proven, 
then case is dismissed. 
 
RULE: With assumption of risk, one doesnt have to ask if a defendant was negligent in 
operating a ride/activity, all one has to show is that the plaintiff understood he was 
assuming a risk. 
 
2) Woodall v. Wayne Steffner Productions 
P is known as the human kite and does stunts flying, which is highly dependent on car 
going certain speeds. D hires him to work in LA and P offers to bring his driver, D says 
no, offers to hire a stunt driver. D tells P the driver is the best in the area. When P meets 
driver he instructs him to drive slowly. Instead, driver is reckless and fast causing P to 
be injured.  
 
D argued that P had assumed the risk, but court found that P surrendered his judgment 
on assurances of safety. 
 
RULE: Assumption of risk must be free and voluntary. If it clearly appears from 
Ps word or conduct that he does not consent to the risk, the risk will not be 
assumed. And, if he surrenders his better judgment upon an assurance of safety or 
a promise of protection, he does not assume the risk, unless the dangers is so 
obvious and so extreme that there can be no reasonable reliance upon the 
assurance. 
 
3)Cohen v. McIntyre 
D brings dog to vet to be neutered b/c he is vicious. Dog snaps at vet when he first 
reaches toward dog. P puts muzzle on dog, inspects dog and then when done, removes 
muzzle and dog bites P. P sued saying D never put P on notice that dog was a biter and 
vicious. D raises assumption of risk defense. 
 
Ct. finds for D who owed P no duty of care. In this case its an occupational hazard that 
youll get bit.  
 
4) Neighbarger v. Irwin 
P were safety supervisors at a refinery where maintenance contractors were brought in 
to do work. The contractors release a stream of petroleum into the work area, which 
catches on fire. Ps get injured battling fire. They sue contracting firm for employees 
negligence. 
 
D raises assumption of risk defense, however, court says that 3
rd
 party (D) owed a duty 
to fire fighters because it has no relationship with the firefighters, they have not paid 
them nor do they have a relationship. Therefore, they can be L for negligence. 
 
RULE: When a job involves risks, but an injury is caused by a third party 
action/negligence, one can sue the third party for negligence despite risks inherent in 
job. 
 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
61 
 
5) Lowe v. California League of Professional Baseball 
P is hit in fact by foul ball while sitting in stands. He was watching game, but became 
distracted when the tail of the teams mascot hit him in the face. 
 
RULE: Sports teams/arenas have the duty not to increase risks that spectators are 
exposed to, or initially assume by watching a sporting event.  Ct. finds L for D. 
 
RULE 2: The more an actor can show that a risk is part of a game (i.e. rules against 
balls to the head, pucks flying into stands) the more likely that the player/spectator will 
have assumed the risk. 
 
  6) Hackbart v. Cincinnati Bengals 
P was player on football team who, after play, is kneeling on ground. Player for D, 
angry from past play, comes up behind P and elbows him in the neck, causing a neck 
fracture. P sues D to recover for injuries. 
 
Appeals court finds that striking a player in the head from the rear is not an acceptable 
conduct of professional game. And, if its prohibited in the rules, then its L. 
 
RULE: While risk is assumed when playing sports, if the rules prohibit a certain act, 
then its most likely L if performed. 
 
D) Secondary Assumption of Risk 
D does have a duty to P and may have breached it, and as an affirmative defense, D argues that 
P recognized whatever danger resulted from Ds negligence and P voluntarily chose to 
encounter it.  
 
SECOND RESTATEMENT 
1) A plaintiff does not assume a risk of harm unless he voluntarily accepts the risk. 
2) The plaintiffs acceptance of a risk is not voluntary if the defendants tortious conduct has 
left him no reasonable alternative course of conduct in order to: a) avert harm to himself or 
another, or b) exercise or protect a right or privilege of which the defendant has no right to 
deprive him. 
  EXAMPLE: A is injured and bleeding badly and needs to go to hospital. A asks B to 
drive, knowing that Bs car has defective breaks. A assumes risk of injury caused by breaks.  
 
1) Kennedy v. Providence Hockey Club//Hennessey v. Pyne 
In Kennedy, P is regular at area hockey games and usually sits away from the ice in an 
area where pucks dont travel. At one game, those seats are sold out so she buys the 
more expensive seats and sits in an area and gets hit by a puck. 
 
Ct. finds NL b/c contributory negligence and assumption of the risk do not overlap, the 
difference if ones free will in encountering the risk. When one acts knowingly, its 
immaterial whether he acted reasonably. Plus, with Kennedy she had other choices such 
as not going to the game. 
 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
62 
In Hennessey her home is on a golf course. It gets hit with balls several times a day. 
One Sunday while shes outside shes hit with a golf ball. She sues, but D argues 
assumption of risk. Ct. finds L, no assumption of risk. 
 
In part, look at her choices, she didnt have alternatives. 
 
2) Fagan v. Atnalta/Marshall v. Ranne 
In Fagan customer is drinking when staff approaches a rowdy dispute. Those in the 
dispute grab the female bartender and try to drag her outside. P jumps in and comes to 
her defense, gets injured in the process and sues the bar for negligence. Bar claims he 
assumed the risk.  
 
Ct. finds NL, P had a clear choice of alternative actions and he deliberately entered into 
the fight. 
 
In Marshall, P was Ds neighbor and both raised hogs. One of Ds boars escapes and 
comes onto Ps land and attempts to attack P several times. P warns D of this, D does 
nothing. P was going to car when boar charged him, P puts out hand defensively and 
boar bites it.  
 
P sues D for damages and D raises assumption of risk. Ct. holds that D was SL for 
damage done by boar and that assumption of risk did not apply.  
 
RULE: Assumption of risk will not apply if P has no other alternative to the course of 
action. 
 
X. Defamation 
Libel consists of publication of defamatory matter by written or printed words, by its embodiment in 
physical form or by another other form of communication that has the potentially harmful qualities 
characteristic of written or printed words. 
 
Slander consists of the publication of defamatory matter by spoken words, transitory gestures or by any 
form of communication other than whats mentioned in libel.  
 
The area of dissemination, the deliberate and premeditated character of its publication and the 
persistence of the defamation are factors to be considered in determining whether a publication is a 
libel rather than a slander.  
 
A) Defining Defamatory 
1) Grant v. Readers Digest/Stevens v. Tillman 
In Grant, D wrote that P was the legislative representative of the Communist Party. Ct. 
finds L. 
 
In Stevens, the adversary of a elementary school principle (P, Stevens) calls her a racist. 
But court finds this to be mere name calling because it is not libel unless it implies the 
existence of undisclosed, defamatory facts. 
 
RULE: Truth is an absolute defense in defamation 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
63 
 
RULE 2: When a name is hurled/called unless backed up by facts, does not carry a lot 
of weight with a defamation case (i.e. calling someone a crank  Dilworth v. Dudley, 
what facts used to prove that versus calling one a Community party). 
 
2) Wildstein v. New York Post Co. 
P is mentioned in an article about a slain executive. In the article it says P was 
associated with deceased who had a number of girlfriends. P sues for defamation and 
ct. denies motion to dismiss saying there was no need to impart such emphasis or imply 
such connotation. 
 
RULE:  Libel can be implied by motion or by emphasis/connotation of words. 
 
3) Saunders v. Board of Directors, WHYY-TV 
P is an inmate at a prison. Show on Ds station claims he is an informant to the FBI. 
Show airs and P claims statement is a slanderous and willful lie and his life had been 
placed in danger because of it. 
 
RULE: For liability for defamation, the impact must be in eyes of respectable 
people. Or, the scorn and ridicule must be in a respectable population.  Significant 
element of the community. 
 
Defamation of a group or class: As a general rule, no action lies for the publication of 
defamatory words concerning a large group or class of persons. The words are not 
reasonably understood to have any personal application toros any individual unless 
there are circumstances to give them such an application. The exception is if the 
comment is made to a specific/finite group, or if its about a group and only 1 
representative is in the room. 
 
C) Publication 
Publication is a necessary part of every defamation suit. The SECOND RESTATEMENT says 
that publication of a defamatory is its communication intentionally or by a negligent act to one 
other than the person defamed. Or, one who intentionally or unreasonably fails to remove 
defamatory matter that he knows to be exhibited on land or chattels in his possession or under 
his control is subject to liability for its continued publication. 
 
Exceptions to the rule are bookshops or libraries, unless there are facts or circumstances that 
would make librarian/shop keeper aware of circumstances.  
 
Also, one who, whether gratuitously or for hire, carries or transmits a message for another is 
not liable for the defamatory character unless he knows it is liableous.  
 
1) Gambrill v. Schooly/Chalkley v. Atlantic Coast 
In Gambrill, D dictated a letter to Gambrill to his secretary. P finds it offensive and the 
ct. agrees that the dictation to the secretary was publication. 
 
Ct. argues that secretary had her own thoughts and could process the meaning of the 
letter. Plus, the argument exists that the author could have typed it himself.  
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
64 
 
In Chalkley, P receives notice that he was fired for drinking. D had dictated letter to 
stenographer. Ct. finds NL, in part, b/c in this case the communication had to do with 
the discharge of ordinary business.  
 
RULE: Most courts find statements are published when made to stenographers 
and secretaries, but treat the privileged nature of the statements as a separate 
question. 
 
2) Sullivan v. Baptist Memorial 
Nurse is fired for stealing equipment When she goes to subsequent job interviews she 
has to inform employers when they ask why she was fired. Sues for defamation b/c of 
publication to 3
rd
 party. 
 
NL for D b/c information was true. And, another reason is that youd be encouraging 
employers not to give a reason for firings, which is unfair and unreasonable. 
 
3) Overcast v. Billings Mutual Insurance Co. 
P files for insurance benefits when his house burns down. D sends letter saying benefits 
are denied because the loss occurred due to Ps act (i.e. arson). When P goes to other 
insurance firms hes denied coverage b/c of letter. 
 
Sues D b/c of forced publication. Ct. finds L b/c there was evidence to show that D 
knew the allegation of P being an arsonist would need to be published and be published 
to third parties.  
 
RULE: If one published to an actor, knowing that matter will come to the 
knowledge/hands of a third party, it may be considered defamation. 
 
4) Coffey v. Midland Broadcasting Co. 
Radio show is CBS affiliate and broadcasts a show that was aired in NY. Story 
mentions P as an ex-con. P sues D for defamation. Ct. finds L for D because he 
broadcasted the defamation. He could take actions to guard against risks and insure 
himself against losses. 
 
And, D has bargaining power. He could talk to CBS about problems and threaten to 
change affiliations. 
 
Emmens v Pottle 
Ct. finds no L for D who sells newspaper that contained libelous statement.  
Newsvendor does not and should not know what statements might be made in all of the 
publications he sells. 
 
D) Defenses to Defamation--Truth 
 
1) Common Interest privilege 
Communications may exist when one has a duty to convey the information (i.e. 
employee/employer) and it applies only when it is not abused. 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
65 
 
Bad faith is the most common form of abusethe speaker believed he was speaking the 
truth. Actual malice is when someone knows a statement is false or is reckless to its 
truth/falsity. Express malice is when they dont know, but it is false.  
 
a) Watt v. Longsdon 
Employee received letter from co-worker about 3
rd
 party co-worker who is 
abroad. Letter claims 3
rd
 party is cavorting with a whore. D conveys information 
to chairman of company and to Ps wife. D doesnt bother to verify information. 
 
Ct. finds there are good faith issue that warrant the telling of the company, but D 
had no duty to warn the wife, especially when wife did not ask and D did not 
verify information. 
 
RULE: It is permissible to warn a present or prospective employer of the 
misconduct or bad character of an employee. 
 
A conditional privilege is recognized where the publisher and the recipient have 
a common interest, and the communication is of a kind reasonably calculated to 
protect or further it. 
 
b) Flowers v. Smith 
Employee of electric company came to home and moved electrical meter to top 
of 30-foot pole. Ps wife asks employee why he did that and he responds that 
husband has been wiring around the meter. P sues D for defamation, saying he 
had accused him of stealing electricity.  
 
Ct. finds words were privileged. In part b/c Ps wife was a customer, too and had 
a right to know what was going on with electricity. Also, she asked the 
employee, requested information. And, the information was proven, good faith 
aspect. 
 
RULE:  There is a conditional privilege for defamation with those who have 
entered upon, or are considering business dealings with one another, or where 
the parties are members of a group with a common pecuniary interest.  
 
c) Yoder v. Workman 
D was a justice on the W.Va SC. P was involved in a custody dispute that found 
its way to Ds court. P argued that D should recuse herself from case (she was 
acquainted with Ps wife) and filed lawsuit against D for civil rights violation. D 
posts a press release on the court Web site. P sues for comments, D claims 
privilege. 
 
RULE: Judges have no absolute privileges when it comes to non-judicial 
statements. 
 
2) Truth 
a) Guccione v. Hustler/Buckler v. Sparuldin 
TORTS (Ewing) 
 
66 
Both deal with truth and extent. In Buckler, D claimed P was a whore and slept 
with Mr. X when in fact it was Mr. Y.  Ct. finds L for D.  Wrong guy  no truth. 
 
In Guccione, Hustler Magazine claimed Guccione was an adulterer, when more 
accurate statement would have been former adulterer.  Ct. finds no L for D - 
Substantial truth. 
 
RULE: If facts are incorrect, statement is not true. For a statement to be true, it 
must be factually accurate. 
 
 
 
E. Constitutional Issues 
 
1) NY Times v. Sullivan 
SCOTUS finds that Ps complaints about defamation in newspaper ads laced the 
convincing clarity about actual malice that the constitution demands. The court holds 
that with a public official, or figure, the evidence of actual malice must be clear and 
convincing.  Ct.  finds no L for D. 
 
And, its not clear that the ad specifically pertained to P. Theres reasonable doubt as to 
whether the ad could reasonably be taken to refer to the respondent at all. 
 
RULE: With public officials/figures, one must prove actual malice, knowledge that a 
statement was false. 
 
Matters of opinion are proteceted  no L for Ds. 
 
RULE 2: For defamation to hold, it must be clear who the statement/action is about. 
 
XI. Invasion of Privacy 
2
nd
 Restatement 
One who gives publicity to a matter concerning the private life of another is subject to liability to the 
other for invasion of his privacy if the matter publicized is of a kind that: 
 
A) Would be highly offensive to a reasonable person 
B) Is not of legitimate concern to the public. 
 
Publicity means that the matter is made public by communicating it to the public at large, or to so 
many person that the matter must be regarded as substantially certain to become one of public 
knowledge. 
 
A) Disclosure of Embarrassing Private Facts 
 
1) Briscoe v. Readers Digest 
(FULL DECISION) 
Court finds that the magazines mention of P as a criminal, was invasion of privacy 
despite the fact that this was a public record.  L for D. 
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Ct. found that a truthful publication was constitutionally protected if: 1) It is 
newsworthy, 2) It does not reveal facts so offensive as to shock the communitys 
notions of decency.  Ct. looked at the fact that Ps family and friends saw this info 
and he may have been rehabilitated by that point.  Not everyone knew about his 
past. 
 
To determine newsworthiness the court looked at: 1)The social value of the facts 
published, 2) The depth of the articles intrusion into ostensibly private affairs, 3) 
The extent to which the party voluntarily acceded to a position of public notoriety. 
 
Cts. holding would most likely NO LONGER BE GOOD LAW b/c in Cox, court found 
NL b/c material in question was from a public record. 
 
Sidis v. F-R Publishing Co. 
Ct. finds no L for D (newsmagazine) that publishes story about former child prodigy.  
Ct. says that he was a public figure and there was legitimate public interest in his 
whereabouts. 
 
2) Doe v. Mills 
Ds are anti-abortion protestors who retrieve the names of women (from a dumpster) 
about to undergo abortions. Ds protest outside the clinic the next day with signs naming 
the individuals and urging them not to have abortions. 
 
Ct. allowed case to go to trial saying it was a factual matter for a jury to decide whether 
or not embarrassing facts were revealed. And, that Ps identity were not matters of 
legitimate public concern or public matter. 
 
Ct. saw that there was enough of a prima facia case to show that information disclosed 
concerned a private matter. 
 
3) Neff v. Time/Daily Times Democrat v. Graham 
In Neff, P is part of a crowd at a sporting event thats drunk and rowdy. Photographer 
shot thousands of photos from game, but the one used is one of P with his fly down. 
 
Ct. finds NL, saying they doubted Time deliberately showed Neff in an embarrassing 
manner. Note, that with Neff perhaps theres an assumption of risk, and he had control 
over the misfortune, he could have zipped his fly up, or not have gotten drunk.  P also 
invited the picture taking. 
 
In Graham, photo of mother with her skirt being blown up at fun house is taken and put 
on front page of paper. L found for newspaper. In part, she has no control over the 
misfortune.  Picture taking was involuntary. 
 
RULE: One who is part of a public scene may be legally photographed as an 
incidental part of that scene in his ordinary statues. However, if the scene is 
embarrassing to an ordinary person of reasonable sensibility, the actor has not 
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forfeited his right to be protected from an invasion of privacy merely b/c the 
embarrassment/misfortune happened in a public place. 
 
4) Cox Broadcasting v. Cohn 
Ps daughter is raped and murdered. P sues the TV owner/station when daughters name 
is revealed, it was gotten off an indictment available in a courtroom. 
 
SCOTUS said that the suit was foreclosed by the 1
st
 Amendment b/c the information 
appeared on a public record. Finding L would lead to censorship. 
 
In a later case, the court extended the Cox rule to include publication of a rape victims 
name even if not gotten from a public record. 
 
5) Haynes v. Alfred Knopf 
FULL DECISION 
P sues after details of his life 30 years earlier is revealed in a book. P says facts are 
embarrassing and reveal a life he no longer lives. 
 
Ct. finds NL because the loss of privacy tort requires that private facts publicized be 
such as a reasonable person would be deeply offended by such publicity and that the 
facts have no legitimate public interest. 
 
Ct. finds that the facts disclosed have a legitimate public interest b/c the thrust of the 
book. And, that the information Lemann disclosed were not offensive or beyond the 
legitimate scope of interest. 
 
Its a balancing of offensiveness vs. newsworthiness. 
RULE: For a loss of privacy tort the private facts publicized have to deeply offend 
a reasonable person and be such that there is no legitimate public interest in the 
matter. 
 
B) Intrusion Upon Seclusion 
 
  1. From 2
nd
 Restatement of Torts 
a) one who intentionally intrudes, physically or otherwise, upon the solitude or 
seclusion of another or his private affairs or concerns, is subject to liability to the other 
for  invasion of privacy, if the intrusion would be highly offensive to a reasonable 
person 
   
    2. Nader v. General Motors 
    (FULL CASE) 
P, author of book on auto safety is suing D, GM, who hired a PI company to 
investigate the P. In complaint P alleges 6 offenses  court finds some actionable, 
others not.  
 
The wire-tapping and eavesdropping creates L for the Def.   
Court ruled the regular gathering of known information was not an invasion of privacy. 
As long as complaint has some actionable claims  cause of action = viable 
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RULE: Liability for the person who unreasonably or seriously interferes with the 
interests of another in not having his affairs known to other. Gathering 
information about a person does not preclude invasion of privacy. 
 
3. Figured v. Paralegal Tech Services 
P in auto accident w/ another party. Def = company hired to investigate the injuries 
claimed by the plaintiff from the auto accident. Defs agents follow P very closely, but 
remain always in the public arena. P alleges invasion of privacy. 
 
Ct finds NL for the Def. All the actions were done in the public arena. Def never delved 
into the private matters of the P. Def always had right to be in public area. 
RULE: Whatever the public may see from a public place cannot be private 
 
 
4. Johnson v. K-Mart 
K-Mart suspects thievery and drug use in one of its plants. K-Mart hires 2 PIs to act as 
employees to case the workers and report back. The reports of the agents include 
information both personal and privileged about numerous employees. 
 
Summary Judgment Denied for K-Mart. Issues of fact exist whether this was an 
unauthorized invasion of privacy. Ct sees K-Marts actions as intentionally deceptive. 
RULE: No SJ when issues of fact exist. This case, issue of fact exist regarding 
whether a reasonable person would find K-Marts actions to be offensive or 
objectionable intrusion. 
 
5. Dietemann v. Time Inc. 
P was a journeyman plumber, also claimed to be a healer. Life magazine sends two 
employees pretending to seek help. Dialogue was transmitted via concealed microphone 
& also took pictures with hidden camera. 
 
P was arrested for practicing medicine w/o a license. Life runs the story some weeks 
later, with pictures and photos from the undercover visit. 
 
P sues for invasion of privacy  Ct finds L. 
Ct. strongly disagrees with Def use of hidden devices to gather news info.   
Although the transmission of things heard and seen by visitors invited in is allowed; 
should not expect that info would be broadcasted to the world or public at large. 
RULE: 1
st
 amendment does not give license to steal, trespass, or intrude by 
electronic means into the home of another. It does not become a license simply 
because the person is reasonably suspected of a crime. 
 
6. Desnick v. American Broadcasting 
(See Same Case in Intentional Torts  Trespass) 
P owner of ophthalmic clinic, Def were producers of documentary tv show. Def agents 
were sent into clinic with hidden cameras & posing as patients. 
 
P sued for trespass & invasion of privacy  both claims dismissed. 
Ct of Appeals distinguished from DietemannAgree? 
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Distinction between Desnick & Johnson v. K-Mart 
 
7. Irivine v. Akron Beacon Journal 
P receiving numerous hang-up calls at all hours. Obtained a trap on their phone line, 
calls coming from Def telemarketing firm. Def used automatic dialing devices, 
programmed to dial new & recently disconnected numbers.  The devices were left to 
run all night by Def employees.  
 
P sued for invasion of privacy  Ct finds Def L 
Awards P $250  CD & $100g punitive, Affirmed by Ct. of Appeals 
 
P received upwards of 300 phone calls, mostly hang-ups. Ct sees the Def as acting with 
a blatant disregard to rights of others & causing substantial harm.  
 
    8. Estate of Berthiaume v. Pratt 
P patient at hospital. During surgery, Def, doc, took numerous photographs for his own 
use, not shown to others. As death neared, Doc came in to take more photos of patient, 
this time apparent refusal, pictures taken anyway. 
 
Ct rules for the P, unwanted photos of face seen as invasion. 
There was no consent in this case; but even in case where consent to take photo for 
private files only, Def would have no right to exhibit to others w/o permission. 
RULE: Face cannot be reproduced w/o consent of individual.  The scope of 
authorization defines the extent of the acts necessary for consent. 
 
9. Froelich v. Werbin 
P suing Def for invasion of privacy.  P learned that the Def paid orderly to take a strand 
of his hair by taking it from an old band-aid. 
 
Ct rules in favor of Def  NL for invasion of privacy. 
No evidence presented how the hair was procured; may have been taken from garbage. 
P failed to establish physical intrusion, disturbed state of mind 
 
10. Harkey v. Abate 
P = patrons at Def skating rink. Def had set up two way mirrors in girls bathroom.  Def 
denies specifically looking at P; P cannot prove he watched them. 
 
Ct rules for P, Def  L for invasion of privacy 
Absence of specific proof, not fatal to P case 
RULE: Hidden viewing devices alone constitute an interference with privacy that 
the reasonable person would find highly offensive. 
 
11. Elmore v. Atlantic Zarye Inc. 
Customer at Def dept. store complains of homosexual activity in restroom. Store owner 
goes into storage room above restroom and looks into stalls. Observed P taking part in 
homosexual sex. Call police. 
 
Ct rules for Def  NL, no invasion of privacy 
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Ct sees Def had overall duty to patrons to ensure facilities were being used in the 
normal, safe fashion. P was abusing that use. 
RULE: Right to privacy is not absolute, behavior must be kept within proper 
limits. 
 
Appropriation of Name and Likeness 
 
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*One who appropriates to his own use or benefit the name or likeness of another is subject to 
liability to the other for invasion of his privacy. 
 
  White v. Samsung Electronics America, Inc. 
Ct. finds L for D who used a robot figure intended to imitate Vanna White in a 
commercial without paying for the use of her likeness (even though her name was not 
used).  It was clear that D was attempting to use her popularity to their advantage.  P has 
the right to use her likeness/name where she sees fit and not use it where she does not. 
 
Anderson v. Fisher Broadcasting Co. 
Ct. finds no L for D who used photos of P after accident to promo a story they were 
running on the news.  When a person who does not have nor want a marketable public 
identity they cannot claim economic injury.  Freedom of information, ideas, 
entertainment.  His picture was not used in a commercial context. 
 
*Public value 
 
Zacchini v. Fisher Broadcasting Co. 
Ct. finds L for D who broadcasts video of Ps human cannonball act on tv after P had 
asked him not to.  Ct. says a person has the right to have his name and likeness used as 
he sees fit.  Allowing all to see his act for free on tv would potentially lessen the value 
and possibility that others will be willing to pay to see it. 
 
Eastwood v. National Enquirer 
Ct. finds L for D who published article about Clint Eastwood being in a love triangle.  
The story was untrue and was clearly using his name and celebrity to their advantage.  
The freedom of speech does not extend to the magazine in this case because the 
information was false. 
 
Estate of Presley v. Russen 
Ct. finds L for D who was putting on a concert called the Big El Show featuring an 
Elvis impersonator performing Elvis songs.  Ct. says the show was clearly a commercial 
endeavor exploiting the likeness and celebrity of Elvis without contribution anything of 
substantial value to society. 
 
False Light 
 
    *Must be highly offensive to a reasonable person 
 
    Time, Inc. v. Hill 
  Ct. finds no L for D where they publish a story that indicated they were abused while 
taken hostage when this was not the case.  Ct. says that the public interest and value of 
this story were enough to restrict L.  Ct. says imposing L on D would discourage the 
press from exercising free speech in reporting. 
 
  Douglass v. Hustler Magazine  
  Ct. finds L for D who publishes nude photos of P that were intended to be published in 
Playboy.  Ct. says that the nature of the two magazines is such that one is 
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73 
distinguishable for the other and her posing in Hustler would be showing her in a false 
light when she intended to Playboy.  Respectability of a playboy model is much higher 
than that of a Hustler model and it would be wrong to imply that P was consenting to 
pose for Hustler. 
 
Nuisance 
     
    Interfering with the right of a property owner to enjoy his or her property. 
 
    Must look at: time, place, reasonableness, duration, benefit/harm ratio 
 
    Bamford v. Turnley 
  Ct. finds no L for D who made bricks on land and disturbed P, neighbor.  Ct. says we 
must examine all circumstances surrounding the alleged nuisance and reasonableness of 
the use.  Ct. said it was reasonable use of land and was beneficial to the public good. 
 
  Hypo: P owns a house that he operates a bed & breakfast out of on the allure of a 
country setting/farm life. Neighbor, D, decides to get rid of his farm and set up a small 
airport.  Ps bed and breakfast is no longer useful as a country/farm location.  P sues for 
nuisance.  D wins  No L here because the public benefit of the airport outweighs the 
private benefit of Ps bed and breakfast. 
 
  Rockenbach v. Apostle 
  Ct. finds L for D where they tried to start a funeral home in the middle of a mainly 
residential area.  Ct. says that the reminder of death has a depressing influence on the 
normal person.  This would deprive the homeowners of the comfort and repose to which 
its owner is entitled. 
 
  Adkins v. Thomas Solvent Co. 
  Ct. finds no L for D who negligently allowed toxic chemicals to spill and contaminate 
an area surrounding the factory.  Ps property was not affected by the spill or 
contaminated, but they claimed their property value went down because of the fear of 
contamination.  Ct. says that diminished property values based on unfounded fear of 
contamination was not sufficient enough to constitute a nuisance. 
 
Coming to Nuisance    
    
Where A is first in possession of the air and B fixes his habitation near A later on, the 
nuisance is of Bs own seeking, and may continue.  Generally, courts have rejected this 
way of thinking in favor of a case by case analysis. 
 
Oehler v. Levy 
Ct. finds L for D who operated a newspaper delivery business and keeps horses on his 
property for that purpose.  Ps complained that horses were smelly and noisy.  P had just 
moved in to the growing neighborhood and D had been there for quite some time.  Ct. 
says that the nature of the neighborhood and land was changing and as a matter of 
public health and policy it should demand that the business be removed even though it 
was operated for many years and in good faith. 
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Sensitivity and Spite 
 
    Rogers v. Elliott 
  Ct. finds no L for D where he rings church bell and P is disturbed by it in house across 
the street.  Ct. said the ringing of the bell was for legitimate church purposes and there 
was no evidence that anyone else in the neighborhood was adversely effected by the 
bells. 
 
  Christie v. Davey 
  Ct. finds L for D as noises made were not of a legitimate kind according to the ct. 
Noises made to combat the noise from music lessons going on in Ps house. 
 
  Mayor of Bradford v. Pickles 
  Ct. finds no L for D because no malice was shown when D dug holes to mine stone on 
his property which had a flow of groundwater running under it to Ps property.  Mining 
caused discoloration and diminishing of groundwater that reached Ps spring.  Ct. said 
even though there may have been a diminishing effect on Ps springs, it was Ds right to 
mine the stone on his property at his own will and to make money.  There was no 
showing of malice. 
 
  Fontainebleau Hotel Corp. v. Forty Five Twenty Five, Inc. 
  Ct. found no L for D where they planned to build a large addition to their hotel that 
would cast a shadow on Ps neighboring hotel.  Ct. said a landowner does not have a 
legal right to the free flow of air and sunlight across the adjoining land of his neighbor.  
The Ds proposal serves a useful and beneficial purpose and it does not matter if it was 
to be built partly for spite of Ps. 
 
  Barger v. Barringer 
  Ct. finds L for D who builds a spite fence along the line of Ps property that blocks 
sunlight and air from going on to Ps property.  Ct. says that the fence was built for no 
useful purpose other than spite towards Ps.  
 
Remedies 
 
o  Injunctions can be used to order a D to desist. 
 
Madison v. Ducktown Sulpher 
The Ct. denied an injunction of a D business that gave  of the taxes to the town, and 
employed most of the towns residents. They werent going to ruin everything over a 
few peoples land. 
 
Whalen v. Union Bag and Paper Co. 
Ds mills cost over $1 mill to build and employed 300 ppl. It left water downstream 
unusable. Ct. hold that you cant just screw people  they should have known the effects 
 the rich are getting richer.  
 
Boomer v. Atlantic Cement Co 
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75 
Ds cement plant is one of largest in world. Residents near the plant were awarded 
permanent damages 
 
Spur Industries v. Del E. Webb Development Co. 
Ds feedlot was coming towards Ps city and becoming a nuisance. Ct granted the 
injunction, but said that P should be required to pay Ds costs in relocating.