Intentional Torts Battery Intent Vosburg v. Putney - Boy Kicks Another Boy in The Leg During Classroom Time
Intentional Torts Battery Intent Vosburg v. Putney - Boy Kicks Another Boy in The Leg During Classroom Time
Ellis
Fall 2003
INTENTIONAL TORTS
BATTERY
Intent
o Vosburg v. Putney boy kicks another boy in the leg during classroom time
Intent to harm is not necessary (though that works), only intent to do the act
DD desired to cause harmful or offensive contact even if intent to do harm is not present, intent to
do the tortuous act is still present
If the intent of DD is unlawful (act of kicking is unlawful), then the intention to commit the
act must be unlawful.
Conduct was unlawful bc it is a violation of order and decorum and thus it is a battery
As long as intent is present, the consequences need not be foreseeable by the actor (thin skull rule
take them as you get them)
Garret v. Daily five year old pulls chair out from under old woman
Knowledge that harm might result would be negligent, while knowledge that harm would result
(substantially certainty) goes to intent for battery
Constructive intent DD knew with substantial certainty that such contact would occur as a result of
his actions enough for establishment of a prima facie tort.
Intent element of battery is fulfilled if one knew with substantial certainty that the contact
would occur
o Doesnt have to desire contact/harm, just know contact it will occur
Battery: Contact
Fisher v. Carrousel Motor Hotel plate snatched out of mans hand by manager, who shouted that no Negro
could be served
Touching a person or anything connected with that person in an offensive/insulting manner is an
offense to ones dignity (humiliating) and constitutes battery
Dont need physical injury
Case of vicarious liabilityemployer is liable for tort committed by employee acting in the course of
his or her employment (need 4 ways they are held liable in Texas???)
Leichtman v. WLW Jacor Communications, Inc. PP was an anti-smoking advocate appearing on the
radio when a D.J. there blew smoke in his face repeatedly.
Battery results from indirect physical contact which is offensive to a reasonable sense of personal
dignity
Since tobacco smoke has the physical properties of making physical contact, intentionally directing it
at someone constitutes battery
However, one cannot erect a glass cage around himself and announce that all contact comes at the
expense of liability (must have substantial certainty that the contact will occur).
A harmful or offensive contact with the person of the other directly or indirectly results
When one unintentionally strikes a third person, he is still liable for battery because the DDs intention was to strike
an unlawful blow, to injure some person by his act, and it is not essential that injury be to the one intended.
OBrien v. Cunard Steamship Co. women got vaccine shot even though she claimed to have already had
one
If it reasonably seemed to the DD that the PP consented, consent will be held to exist regardless of the
PPs subjective state of mind. Only the objective manifestations of the PP are taken into account.
If the PPs behavior was such as to indicate consent on her part, he was justified in his act, whatever
her unexpressed feeling may have been. In determining whether she consented, he could be guided
only by her overt acts and the manifestations of her feelings.
Barton v. Bee Line, Inc. 15 year old was raped or consented to sex with the chauffeur of the DD
One does not have a civil cause of action/cant bring charges of battery, even if under 18, if she
consents/willingly has sex and knows the nature and quality of her act.
Consent to a criminal act prevents a PP from recovering tort damages for injuries resulting thereof
Violation of a criminal act does not equal a tort
Bang v. Charles T. Miller Hospital PP had spermatic cords severed without knowingly giving that consent
If a physician or surgeon can ascertain in advance of an operation alternative situations and no
immediate emergency exists, a patient should be informed/explained of the alternative possibilities
and given a chance to consent before a doctor proceeds with what he believes is in the best interest of
the patient.
Kennedy v. Parrott doctor punctured cyst in her ovary and cut a blood vessel
A surgeon may lawfully perform, and its his duty to perform, such operation as good surgery
demands, even when it means an extension of the operation further than was originally contemplated,
and for so doing he isnt liable for damages as for an unauthorized operation.
Consent was implied since PP would have consented if awake (objective testwhat would a
reasonable patient have consented to)?
Hackbart v. Cincinnati Bengals, Inc. player was intentionally struck during the game
Participating in a usually violent professional sport does not constitute consent to all injures which
may be inflicted by an adversary and thus one who intentionally attacks or injures his opponent may
be liable in tort.
Defense to Battery: Self Defense (privilege)
Courvoisier v. Raymond PP shot police officer thinking he was one of the rioters who tried to break into
his house/business
An action of force is justified by self-defense wherever the circumstances are such to cause a
reasonable man to believe his life is in danger or that he is in danger of receiving great bodily harm
and that its necessary to use such force for protection
The privilege state in Subsection (1) does not exist if the actor correctly or reasonably believes that he
can with complete safety avoid the necessity of so defending himself by
Retreating if attacked in any place other than his dwelling place, or in a place which is also the
dwelling of the other, or
Relinquishing the exercise of any right or privilege other than his privilege to prevent intrusion upon
or dispossession of his dwelling place or to effect a lawful arrest.
Katko v. Briney couple rigged a spring-gun to go off in their uninhabitated farmhouse if someone
trespassed
One is not allowed to utilize deadly force (a spring gun or similar dangerous devices) which will
likely take a life or inflict great bodily injury for the purpose defending property (but can to protect
life).
The use of force must not be in excess of that force reasonably necessary and which persons are
entitled to use in the protection of their propertynever cause serious bodily injury (different if they
had lived there)
Prosser - the law has always placed more importance on human safety than property rights
Vincent v. Lake Erie Transportation Co. ship is kept docked and causes damage to dock during storm
While private necessity permits the invasion of anothers property (trespass) even if it is not done in
negligence, the invader is liable for resulting damages for protecting his own property at the cost of
another
Placing liability on the privileged trespasser places the incentive on him to analyze the risks involved
in his trespass, and not to err in his favorboth sides will balance interests/costs and the right
decision will be made
Act of god/nonintentional pay for trespass????????
Notes
Public necessity always a defensebenefits many people
Private necessity benefits limited number of people always a defense, but liable for damages
caused
Necessity wins over defense of property rights
Summary:
- Contact person, object associated with the person, floor
- No = no battery
Yes
Intentional (substantial certainty that he knew the consequences or that the act was intentional and
unlawful)?
No no battery
Yes
Harmful or offensive (to a reasonable person)
o No no battery
o Yes
Privilege or consent
Yes no battery
No - BATTERY
ASSAULT
-
Prima Facie Case present/apparent ability to cause harm, intent to cause harm or apprehension of harm, and
suffering of apprehension
o
Read v. Coker workmen threatened to break PPs neck if he did not leave premises
Assault exists where there is an intent to assault coupled with a present ability to do personal violence
Dont need to prove the DDs state of mind/intention
A reasonable person would be put in fear
Beach v. Hancock gun aimed at man, who didnt know it was empty
An assault is an unlawful attempt, coupled with an apparent ability (even if theres no present ability),
to commit a violent injury to the person of another
If a reasonable person wouldve perceived a present ability, thats enough
Whittaker v. Sanford PP tried to leave boat of religious sect; wasnt provided with boat
One doesnt need to exert physical force to be liable for false imprisonment; actual physical
restraint/impediment to escape is sufficient
Her lack of personal liberty and freedom is her injury
Rougeau v. Firestone Tire and Rubber Co. PP kept in guardhouse while employer looked for stolen
property
If PP does not express a will to leave, then he does not have a cause of action (implied consent)
Sindle v. New York Transit Authority boy jumped out of bus and was run over
Restraint which is reasonable under the circumstances, imposed to prevent another from inflicting
personal injuries or damaging property in ones lawful possession or custody, is not unlawful
(justification defense)
if one acts negligently in escaping (doesnt exercises due care) from a false imprisonment, then those
that falsely imprison him cannot be held liable for bodily injuries
Damages will be greater if there is humiliation or actual physical harm. Otherwise, it is usually nominal damages.
INTENTIONAL INFLICTION OF EMOTIONAL DISTRESS
o
State Rubbish Collectors Association v. Siliznoff Association threatened physical violence and put him
out of business if PP did not join the association
If one suffers extreme and outrageous threats threatening physical violence (but the threat is not
imminent and never occurs) and suffers physical illness or other injury occurs, then the PP has a cause
of action for the intentional infliction of emotional distress
Court looks beyond assaultno imminent fear or ability to do harm
One who by extreme and outrageous conduct (outside all possible bounds of decency)
intentionally or recklessly causes severe emotional distress to another is subject to liability for
such emotional distress and for bodily harm to the other results from it, for such bodily harm.
Where such conduct is directed at a third person, the actor is subject to liability if he intentionally or
recklessly causes severe emotional distress
To a member of such persons immediate family who is present at the time, whether or not
such distress results in bodily harm, or
To any person who is present at the time, if such distress results in bodily harm
Brown v. Kendall man accidentally hit another in the eye with stick while trying to break up dog fight
PP must show the injury was avoidable and conduct of DD was not free from blame (want to due
care)
PP cannot recover if both DD and PP are using ordinary care or both are not using ordinary care or if
DD is using ordinary care and PP is notonly time can recover is if DD is not using ordinary when
PP is.
Ordinary care...kind and degree of care which prudent and cautious men would use to guard
against probable danger.depends on circumstances and forseeability
Question: was it lawful and was DD exercising due care? If so, no negligence
General Standard
** Standard of care**
- need in each and every lawsuit
- reasonable person std.
o exceptions below
o
United States v. Carroll Towing Co. barge sank, bargee was away from barge
Risk that the mooring lines would come undone and the danger to the barge and to other ships if it
did, was sufficiently great that PP should have borne the burden of supplying as watchman, unless he
had some excuse for his absence
The owners duty to provide against resulting injuries is a function of three variables:
The probability that she will break away/of the harm (P)
The gravity of the resulting injury, if she does (L)
The burden of adequate precautions (B)
B < PL
Basically one should take all precautions such that the burden of taking on those precautions
is less than the probability of the event occurring times the liability incurred if the even does
occur.balance cost and risk
Marginal cost
When the marginal cost of each accident begins to exceed the marginal cost of each
precaution, at that point the actor has demonstrated reasonable care and is no longer
negligent.
No difference in amt of precautions an actor would take btwn negligence and strict liability
Washington v. Louisiana Power and Light Co. decedent was electrocuted when he accidentally allowed
his band radio antenna to come into contact with a electrical wire in his backyard
B < PL
Great harm, low probability.does not equal or exceed burden or costs of precautions of relocating
or insulating the power lines
Weirum v. RKO General, Inc. teenagers cause car accident in race to get radios cash prize
If defendant should have known of a risk that others would have behaved negligently due to the DDs
actions, then the DD may be liable for those foreseeable risks.need to act with reasonable care
Here it is foreseen that a DD will react negligently in response to another partys negligence
Duty extends to those who could be foreseeably injured by your conduct
B<PLinstrumentalist perspectiverational decision making
Some argue for moral perspective and best efforts std.
Restatement Second of Torts
o 291. Unreasonableness: How determined: Magnitude of risk and utility of conduct
Where an Act is one which a reasonable man would recognize as involving a risk of harm to
another, the risk is unreasonable and the act is negligent if the risk is of such magnitude as to
outweigh what the law regards as the utility of the act or of the particular manner in which it is
done
o
In determining what the law regards as the utility of the actors conduct for the purpose of
determining whether the actor is negligent, the following factors are important:
The social value which the law attaches to the interest which is to be advanced or protected
by the conduct;
The extent of the chance that this interest will be advanced or protected by the particular
course of conduct
The extent of the chance that such interest can be adequately advanced or protected by
another and less dangerous course of conduct.
Martin v. Herzog PP was driving a buggy without lights when he was hit by DD
The unexcused omission of statutory signals set out to safeguard society is more than some evidence
of negligence. It is negligence in itself.negligence per se
If the disregard of the statue is a contributing factor to the harm, then and only then, does the PP
forfeit the right to damages
Contributory negligence is a full defense
Tedla v. Ellman PP and her brother were hit by a car when walking on the wrong side of the road because
they perceive that it is safer
A violation of a statute will be excused where it would have been more dangerous to comply
The general duty is established by the statute and deviation from it without good cause is a wrong and
the wrongdoer is responsible for the damages resulting for its wrong
Brown v. Shyne DD gave chiropractic treatment to PP even though he had no license to practice. The PP
because paralyzed due to the treatment
Violation of the statute itself does not constitute negligence, which would make the DD liable.
The requirement of a license was intended to protect the public against incompetent practictioners.
Therefore, PP must prove that DD was in fact incompetent by showing that the treatment given to PP
wasnt in accordance with the stds. of skill and care which prevail among those treating disease.
If violation of the statute has no bearing on the injury (not the proximate cause), proof of the violation
becomes irrelevant
DD failed to get license, not proof that he failed to exercise due care
Gorris v. Scott PP was carrying sheep when they were washed overboard. To protect sheep from
contagious diseases, they were to be divided into pens with footholds
The statutory violation cannot be relied upon because the purpose/object of the act was not to protect
against this type of harm/danger
Trimarco v. Klein PP was severely injured when a glass shower door shattered as he stepped out of the
shower
When proof of an accepted practice is accompanied by evidence that the dd conformed to it, this may
establish due care
However, when proof of a customary practice is coupled with a showing that it was ignored and this
departure was the proximate cause of the accident, it may serve to establish liability
What usually is done may be evidence of what ought to be done, but what ought to be done is fixed
by a std. of reasonable prudence, whether it usually is complied with or not
The T.J. Hopper tugboats were lost at sea, but may have been saved if boat had a radio receiver (which is
inexpensive, but no general custom to have oneonly one did)
In most cases reasonable prudence is in fact common prudence, but strictly it is never the measurea
whole calling may have lagged
Courts must in the end say what is required; there are precautions so imperative that even their
universal disregard will not excuse their omission.
When some have though a device necessary, the court may say they were right and others too slack
Opposite of Carroll Towing? Customboat men would have not been off
Helling v. Carey ophthalmologist did not test for glaucoma on a 32 year old patient and she went partially
blind. However, only 1 in 25,000 get glaucoma in that age group
If a test is so imperative that irrespective of the stds. of the profession, it is the duty of the courts to
say what is required to protect patients.
B<PL
Here custom does not set the std. for reasonable care
Reasonable prudence requires the giving of the test
Special Rules Governing Proof of Negligence: Res Ipsa Loquitur
It may be inferred that the defendant has been negligent when the accident causing the plaintiffs physical
harm is a type of accident that ordinarily happens because of the negligence of the class of actors of which the
defendent is the relevant member.
Boyer v. Iowa High School Athletic Assn. pp was injured when the bleachers in which she sat for a
basketball game collapsed
The bleachers were in the exclusive control of the DD of the bleachers at the time of the negligent act,
as failure to inspect AND
The occurrence is such as in the ordinary course of things would not happen if reasonable care had
been utilizedbleachers dont ordinarily collapse
The burden is on DD to determine that something else caused the injury if PP doesnt have the ability
to inspect
No evidence to support that the spectators movement caused the bleachers to collapseit is purely
speculative
Shutt v. Kaufmans, Inc. PP sat down on a chair which bumped a table and caused a metal shoe stand to
topple and strike PP on the head
The shopkeeper must exercise reasonable care for the business visitor, but is not an insurer of the
safety of such visitor.
No gap in evidence.negligent for putting them too close??
PP could have checked to see if the display table was unstablehad the means available to her to
establish negligence on the part of the DD.
City of Louisville v. Humphrey drunk died in drunk tank due to subdural hemotoma
The instrumentality wasnt in control of the police at all times (he could have hurt himself before he
was in police custody)
Court says that the prison keeper is not the insurer of the safety and well-being of the prisoner n
Escola v. Coca Cola Bottling Co. glass coke bottle breaks in waitresss hand
As long as DD had control at the time of the alleged negligent act, although not at the time of the
accident, and PP proves that the condition of the instrumentality has not been changed after it left the
DDs possession, the DD can be held liable
Res ipsa loquitur doesnt apply as long as PPs and any third parties can account for their own conduct
Must find that theres no other reasonable explanation
Dissent
Want absolute liabilitydont have to prove res ipsa to recover
Impose strict libility when the manufacturer placed the product in the mkt and knows it wont
be inspected and has a defect which causes injury to a person
Discourage making defective productdeterrence
Manufacturer in best position to absorb costs
o Can anticipate hazards and guard against them
o Can insure
Spread it across the publicinternalize the externality
Were paying to protect ourselves against the risk
Declining value of the dollar
The more you have the less another one helps
A large loss hurts more than a trivial loss
Thus put large loss on many people
change in marketing
o people cant check product for themselvesold relationship doesnt exist
o trademarksallows people to rely on it.a statement/warranty of quality
o lulls people to rely on it
Restatement of Torts
o 6 Liability for negligent conduct
An actor ordinarily has a duty to exercise reasonable care when the actors conduct poses a risk of
physical harm
Unless the court determines under S7 that the duty of reasonable care is inapplicable, an actor whose
failure to exercise reasonable care is a factual cause of physical harm is subject to liability for any
such harm within the scope of liability.
o
7. Duty
A court may determine that an actor has no duty other than the ordinary duty of reasonable care.
Determinations of no duty and modifications of the duty of reasonable care are unusual and are based
on special problems of principle or policy that warrant denying liability or limiting the ordinary duty
of care in a particular class of cases. A defendant is not liable for any harm caused if the court
determines the defendant owes no duty to the plaintiff, either in general or in relation to the particular
negligence claim. If the court determines a defendant is subject to a modified duty, the defendant is
subject to liability only for breach of the modified duty.
o
o
The possessor fails to exercise reasonable care to eliminate the danger or otherwise to protect
the children.
Some courts have kept distinctions, some have abolished them, and some have kept distinction just btwn
licensee/invitee and trespasser
Business can bear the burden better
Special Relationship Between the Parties
o
Erie R. Co. v. Stewart - car passenger hit by train when watchman was missing
Where one has established a higher std. of due care for itself and through past custom has led PP to
rely upon the std., it is negligent to discontinue the use of extra care without adequately warning of
the discontuance.theres a duty to act
If one can conclude a lack of due care and there is no reason for that lack, then negligence appears as
a matter of law
Tubbs v. Argus PP was guest in DDs car when it struck a tree and PP abandoned car and did not help
injured DD
At common law, theres no general duty to aid a person whos in peril, BUT
The DD may be held liable for injuries if a special relationship exists or its an instrumentality
under control of the DD
o Tippecanoe Loan
There may be a legal obligation to take positive steps to effect the rescue of a
person who is helpless and in a situation of peril, when the one proceeded
against is an invitor or when the injury resulted from use of an
instrumentality under the control of the defendant.
o 322 Restatement Second of Torts
If the actor knows or has reason to know that by his conduct, whether
tortuous or innocent, he has caused such bodily harm to another as to
make him helpless and in danger of future harm, the actor is under a
duty to exercise reasonable care to prevent such further harm
Tarasoff v. Regents of University of California PP was killed by man who told therapist that he would kill
Once a DD determines or should have determined from his professional stds, that one that he has a
special relationship with poses a serious threat to another, DD bears a duty to exercise reasonable
care to protect the foreseeable victim (should warn victim or her family)
One need only exercise the reasonable skill, knowledge, and care ordinarily possessed and
exercised by member of that professional specialty under similar circumstances
Actual Causation (without this, theres no proximate causation)
Hoyt v. Jeffers sparks from mill chimney possibly/probably set fire to the hotel
General causation due to history of starting fires, it is capable and probable that the mill started
the fire
Evidence of past causation can prove specific present causation if the instrumentality is in
the same condition
Pattern of negligencereasonable person would infer such
Smith v. Rapid Transit Inc. bus coming toward PP, she was forced to hit parked carnot known
which bus, but believes it can be inferred from route schedules
It is not enough that mathematically the chances somewhat favor a proposition to be proved.it
remains a matter of conjecture
Needs to be a direct link btwn DD and cause of accidentat least reasonably certain
When One of Several Defendants Did It, But We Cant Tell Which One: Alternative Liability
o
Summers v. Tice PP shot in eye and mouth while quail huntingdont know which of two friends did it
Notion of contingent liability.When two or more persons by their acts are possibly the sole cause of
a harm, and the plaintiff has introduced evidence that the one of the two persons, then the defendant
has the burden of proving that the other person was the sole cause of harm
The joint tortfeasor is responsible for the whole damage unless he can prove he wasnt
responsiblejointly and severally liable
Both failed to exercise reasonable care and thus both will be held liable even though only one caused
the harm
Ybarra v. Spangard During an appendectomy, mans shoulder was injured. He doesnt know specifically
who injured him, but brings a negligence suit against all doctors and nurses who worked on him
The control at one time or another of the various instrumentalities, which might have harmed the PP,
was in the hands of every DD of his employees and thus places on them the burden of initial
explanation
Each had a duty to see no harm befall PP
Shift burden of proofhelps avoid conspiracy of silence
Masters (employers) can be held liable for their servants (employees) wrongful conduct as long as he
was acting in the scope of employment and its not intentionalspreads loss on the one who can bear
it and cause them to exercise care in hiring
Jointly liable
o DDs can be joined in a single suit; right of any party who is sued to insist that others be sued jointly with him
because of their shared liability
Severally liable
o Each is liable in full for the PPs damages, although the PP is entitled to only one total recovery
Jointly and severally liable
o Two or more DDs acted in concert to cause the harm and where DDs acted independently but caused
indivisible harm
o Liability is in the form of vicarious liabilityall DDs will be responsible for the harm actually caused by only
one of them
o Can bring them under the same action or can choose to sue one and recover everything from one
Joint Tortfeasors: When Two or More Causal Agents Would, Independent of Each Other, Have Caused PPs Harm:
Concurrent and Successive Causation
-
Concurrent Causes
o When two parties are negligent and their actions combine to cause an indivisible harm, they are both jointly
and severally liable for the entire harm; each of these concurring events is a cause of the injury, insofar as it
would have been sufficient to bring that injury about
Successive causes
o If a negligent act causes an injury, and a successive occurrence comes to pass which would have caused the
same injury later, recovery is not limited to just the difference between the two, but the full damages that
wouldve resulted.(if apprortionment isnt feasible)
o
Dillon v. Twin State Gas & Electric Co. boy grabbed electric wire to stop from falling off bridge, was
electrocuted
PP can recover only the difference btwn his life prospects were had he not grabbed the
wire.nothing bc he died or limited life from harm caused by fallingliable for an extra
harm/damages
Apportionment is feasible
Kingston v. Chicago & N.W. Ry. Two similar fires that contributed to destroying PPs property. Only one
fires source is identifiable, though the second wasnt caused by an act of nature
Where two causes attributable to the neg of a responsible person concur in producing an injury to
another, either of which causes would produce it regardless of the other, each is liable for the enterity
of the fire
If harm is indivisible, then once the DD is liable at all, he is liable for all the harm (joint tortfeasor)
Substantial factor in producing the result
Actual Causation??
o
Ford v. Trident Fisheries Co. mate fell overboard, not seen in water, PP sues because life preserving
boat was wasnt suspended from the davits, and there was only one oar
Even if the boat and oar were available, he couldnt have been rescuedDDs negligence wasnt
the cause of injury
Lyons v. Midnight Sun Transportation Services, Inc. PP was killed when her car was hit as she was
turning out of parking land
Whether DD was speeding or not, she would have diedhis negligence was not the cause of
injury/deathwould have happened regardless
If negligence isnt legal/proximate cause of accident, hes not liable
Cahoon v. Cummings doctors negligently failed to diagnose and treat decedents esophageal cancer
One who undertakes, gratuitously or for consideration, to render services to another which he
should recognize as necessary for the protection of the others person or things, he is subject to
liability to the other for physical harm resulting from his failure to exercise reasonable care to
perform his undertaking, if
His failure to exercise reasonable care increases the risk or such harm, or
The harm is suffered because of the others reliance upon the undertaking
Even if ones conduct was not the cause of the resultant damages, damages are proportional to the
increased risk attributable to the DDs negligent act or omission.
Causation = loss of chance of survival
Proximate Cause
Was Any Harm to the Plaintiff Foreseeable When the Defendant Acted:
A negligent DD who caused the injury can get off based on foreseeability
o If the result was unforeseeable, let the DD go
Indirect, intervening cause that was unforeeseeable
o If the result was foreseeable, hold the DD liable
allows a defendant to escape liability even if all other elements of the prima facie case negligence, cause-in-fact,
and harm have been established
DD is liable for foreseeable (both foreseeable results and foreseeable PPs), but not the unforeseeable,
consequences of negligent conduct
Was the wrongful quality of DDs conduct a necessary condition?
However liable even if extent of PPs injuries is unforeseeable (thin skull rule)
Courts agree that DDs liability must stop short of the most far-reaching and bizarre consequences, the difficulty is
defining exactly where this dividing line should be
- Direct causation
o Liability for any harm that may have directly resulted from the DDs negligence, no matter how unforeseeable
or unlikely
o Exception
An intervening harm
Tested by hindsight
- Foreseeabilityseems used more
o Limit DDs liability to those results that are of the same general sort that made the DDs conduct negligent in
the first place.results of a generally foreseeable nature at the time one acted, both as to kind of injury and as
to person injured
o
Palsgraf v. Long Island R.R. guards helped/pushed man aboard a train, his package/fireworks fell and
exploded causing scales to fall many feet away and hit PP
Risk reasonably perceived (foreseeable) = duty
Although possibly negligent to man (in pushing him), his conduct didnt involve any foreseeable risk
of harm or negligence to the PP, who was far away.theres no duty to her
Since the DDs conduct didnt involve an unreasonable risk of harm to the PP, the damage to her
wasnt foreseeablethe fact that the conduct was unjustifiably risky to someone else is irrelevant
proof of negligence is in the air
Theres no duty or care due the PP
Dissentduty is to everyoneonly liable where there is proximate cause (direct causation)
DD bears a burden of due care to protect SOCIETY from unnecessary danger, not to protect
A, B or C alone.
o It doesnt have to be foreseeable, but must be proximate
o What actually happened.foreseeable after the action
o There must be a natural and continuous sequence btwn cause and effect
o The result must not be too remote in time and space from the cause
Solomon v. Shuell decedent came out of house with gun pointing to the ground to help robbery suspects
being arrested by police not in uniformhe was shot by an officer
Rescue Rule
a person who goes to the rescue of another whether ly in or one thinks is in imminent and
serious peril caused by the negligence of someone else, is not contributory negligent, as long
as the rescue attempt is not recklessly or rashly made
Applies as long as a reasonable person wouldve acted similarly and the rescue attempt was
done in a reasonable manner
Were the Nature and Circumstances of the Plaintiffs Harm Foreseeable?
Marshall v. Nugent PP was walking uphill to warn oncoming traffic of DDs car in the wrong road when he
was hit by a car
The DD is liable for the full consequences of his negligent act when the intervening force is one
which a reasonable man wouldve foreseen as likely to occur under the circumstances
DDs basic act of negligence was endangering PP during the initial-near collision
Injury was within the scope of riskpart of ongoing chain of events caused by negligent act
(foreseeable)
Watson v. Kentucky & Indiana Bridge & R. Co. gas escaped from rail car, man threw a match into pool
of gas causing an explosion which harmed PP
DD was responsible where the intervening causes, acts, conditions were set in motion by his earlier
negligence, if the intervening acts should be reasonably anticipated
If match was thrown purposefullythats not reasonably anticipated
Other Approaches to the Proximate Cause Issue
Whether the actors conduct has created a force or a series of forces which are in continuous
and active operation up to the time of the harm, or has created a situation harmless unless
acted upon by other forces for which the actor is not responsible
Lapse of time
Intervening Causes
o A force which takes effect after DDs negligence which contributes to that negligence in producing PPs injury
Superseeding Cause
o intervening cause that breaks the chain of causation and is sufficient to prevent DD form being negligent
Foreseeability rules
o If DD shouldve foreseen the possibility that the intervening cause might occur or if the kind of harm suffered
by PP was foreseeable, DDs conduct will nonetheless be the proximate cause. But if neither the intervening
cause, nor the kind of harm was foreseeable, the intervening cause will be a superseding one relieving DD of
liability.
o
Kinsman Transit Co. (note) barge broke from moorings, knocked a vessel loose and the two barges created a
dam in the river
If some harm was foreseeable, DD is liable even if actual harm resulting was of a different kind
In re Polemis & Furness (note) DDs servant knocked a plank into the hold of a ship containing benzene
which caused a spark and thus a firedirect cuasation
DD was negligent in dropping the plank and some damage to the ship couldve been foreseen, but not
that the dropped plank would cause a spark
If the act would cause damage and it does cause damage, but not the exact kind it would expect, that
is immaterial, as long as the damage is in fact directly (no intervening cause) traceable to the
negligent act
Wagon Mound #1 spilled oil into the harbor which ignited after coming into contact with acetylene torches
and the fire destroyed the wharf
Overruled Polemis
As a general rule, DD is only liable for those consequences of his negligence which are reasonably
foreseeable at the time he acted
A slight act of negligence which results in some trivial foreseeable damage, should not mean the actor
is liable for all consequences however grave
Wagon Mound #2 same casePP was owner of two ships damaged by the fire
If harm was remotely foreseeable, liability is imposed even if consequences as highly unlikely
Should be foreseeable that theres a small risk of fire
If theres a risk that reasonable person in the position of the DD (chief engineer) wouldnt brush aside
as far-fetched, liability can be imposed
B<PL
Special Instances of Nonliability for Foreseeable Consequences
Mental and Emotional Upset
Waube v. Warrington PP was looking out the window watching her child cross the highway and witnessed
him killed
Duty cant be extended to one out of the range of physical peril
Bystanders
Dillon v. Legg PPs (mom and sister) were at the scene and saw young boy injured by car. Sued for
emotional harm
Whether DD should reasonably foresee the injury to PP.whether DD owes PP a duty of due care,
the courts consider
Whether the PP was located near the scene of the accident as contrasted with one who was a
distance away from it (zone of dangerand thus suffered fear for her own safety)
Whether the shock resulted from a direct emotional impact upon PP from the sensory and
contemporaneous observance of the accident, as opposed to learning of the accident from
others after its occurrence
Whether PP and victim were closely related, as contrasted with an absence of any relationship
or the presence of only a distant relationship
A negligent driver who causes the death of a young child may reasonably expect that the mother
wont be far distant and upon witnessing the accident suffer emotional trauma
Thing v. La Chusa PPs son was injured in a car accident that PP didnt witness, but she rushed to the scene
where she saw her bloody and unconscious child, whom she thought dead
Tries to rigidify the Dillion guidelines by only allowing PP to recover if the PP is
o Closely related to the injury victim
o Is present at the scene of the injury producing event at the time it occurs and is then
aware that its causing injury to the victim
o Suffers emotional distressreaction beyond that which would be anticipated in a
disinterested witness and which is not an abnormal response to the circumstances
Whether PP suffers emotional distress beyond that which would be anticipated in a
disinterested witness
Since PP was not at the scene, she cannot establish a right to recover for the emotional distress she
suffered when she subsequently learned of the accident and observed its consequences
Direct Victim
Burgess v. Superior Court child injured during deliverymom wants damages for negligently inflicted
emotional distress against doctor
She doesnt meet requirements of Thing, but the court creates another category
Creates a direct victim category
o Direct victim when the DD owed a duty to the victim
o But when is there a duty (what we wrestled with in Dillion, thing)
Here theres a professional relationship btwn PP and doctor
They entered into a contract and DD didnt exercise due care
According to Molien, damages for negligently inflicted emotional distress may be recovered in the
absence of physical injury or impact AND
In cases where a duty arising from a preexisting relationship is negligently breach
Feliciano v. Rosemar Silver Co. PP and gf lived together as husband and wife for 20 years before PP was
injured
PP was not allowed to recover for loss of consortium because marriage is a social institution of the
highest importance and the courts dont want to jeopardize that integrity
Relationship is important like NIED casesgood place to draw the line
Borer v. American Airlines, Inc PP was hit by the cover on a lighting fixture and was injured as a result.
Her 9 kids sued bc they had been deprived of her services, affection, tutelage, etc.
They have suffered a loss for which they cannot be compensated and thus should not obtain a future
benefit (money) essentially unrelated to that loss
Damages are difficult to measure
Since every serious injury to a parent would engender a claim, the expense of litigating such claims
would be sizable
No destruction of a sexual life
Prenatal Harm
Werling v. Sandy PPs child was stillborn allegedly due to negligence of DDs
R.C. 2125.01
When the death of a person is caused by wrongful act, neglect, or default which would have
entitled the party injured to maintain an action and recover damages if death had not ensured,
the person who wouldve been liable if death had not ensued, or the administrator or executor
of the estate of such person shall be liable to an action for damages
A duty of care is owed to the fetus, which was viable at the time of injury
Wrongful death statutedecedents family takes for harm caused by the DDs conduct
Fassoulas v. Ramey PPs had two kids born with severe abnormalities. Thus PP had a vasectomy, but had
two kids later, one normal, one with sever abnormalities
A parent cant be said to have been damaged by the birth and rearing of a normal, healthy child
The child is the child of the parent and its their legal obligation to support the child
Benefits to the parents outweigh their economic loss in rearing and education a healthy,
normal child
However, a exception exists in the case of special upbringing expenses associated with a deformed
child
No valid policy arguments against parents being recompensated for these costs of
extraordinary care in raising a deformed child.
Tupin
Contributory Fault
Contributory Negligence
A PP who is negligent (not taking reasonable care to protect his own safety) and who negligence
contributes proximately to his injuries, is totally barred from recovery.
Its a complete defense
Butterfield v. Forrester DD put a pole across his side of road, which would have been observed by a PP
riding at normal speed.
One must use common and ordinary caution and care for himself, otherwise he will be partly at fault
and will not recover
Restatement
PPs negligence is conduct that falls below the std. to which the PP should conform (std. of
reasonableness)
Davies v. Mann PP tied ass off the side of the road, when DDs wagon (going at a smart pace) ran over the
ass and killed it
Since the PP lost the opportunity to prevent the accident by the time it occurred and the DD couldve
avoided the accident at any time, the DD was liable
Even though the animal may have been improperly there, the DD could have avoided injuring the
animal through proper care
Although there might have been negligence on the part of the PP, unless he might, by exercise of
ordinary care, have avoided the consequences of the DDs negligence, he is entitled to recover; if by
ordinary care he might have avoided them, he is the author of his own wrong
Meistrich v. Casino Arena Attractions, Inc. PP was injured ice skating. The ice was too hard and slippery
due to DDs negligence, but PP knew his skates were slipping on turns
Restatement
One who fully understands the risk of harm to himself caused by DDs conduct and
nevertheless voluntarily chooses to enter or remain within the area of risk, under
circumstances that manifest his willingness to accept it, is not entitled to recover for harm
within that risk
Assumption of the risk
Primary DD wasnt negligentowed no duty or did not breach the duty owedvosburg on
playground
Secondary whether a prudent person in the exercise of due care would have incurred the
known risk and is so, would that person have conducted himself in a manner in which PP
acted.pps contributory negligence
Thus, PPs conduct is to be gauged by the rules of contributory negligence
Comparative Negligence
o
o
o
o
Recovery is reduced, but not necessarily eliminated, by the PPs own fault
Try to divide liability between PP and DD, in proportion to their relative degrees of fault
Pure comparative fault
PPs recovery is reduced, but not eliminated because of the PPs negligence
Modified comparative fault
Knight v. Jewett PP caught a pass playing touch football, when she was hit by DD, fell down, and he ran
over her hand
Court said she assumed the risk by participating in the game
Legal duty is only breached if the conduct was intentional or so reckless to be outside of the range of
ordinary activity involved in the sport
Immunities
o Government
o Charities
o Family btwn husband and wife and parent and child
Strict Liability
Fletcher v. Rylands reservoir was constructed on DDs land and water escaped and flooded PPs property
The person who for his own purpose brings on his land and collects and keeps there anything likely to
do mischief if it escapes, must keep it in at his own peril, and if he doesnt, is answerable for all the
damage which is the natural consequences of its escape
PP did not take upon himself any risk arising from the uses to which the DDS chose to apply their
land
For any nonnatural/unforeseeable use of land, DDs must do at their own perilstrict liability
Turner v. Big Lake Oil Co. salt water escaped from ponds constructed and used by DDs in the operation of
oil wells and caused property destruction
Negligence is a prerequisite to recovery
Storage of water is a natural/necessary and common use of the land, within the contemplation of the
State and its grantees
Siegler v. Kuhlman PP hit an overturned gasoline truck, which then exploded and killed her
Transport of gas is an activity with a high degree of risk which cannot be eliminated with reasonable
care
B <>PL.all are high
Restatement:
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 the
utmost care to prevent such harm
Such strict liability is limited to the kind of harm, the risk of which makes the activity
abnormally dangerous
Factors of an abnormal activity
o Whether the activity involves a high degree of risk of some harm to the person, land
or chattels of others;
o Whether the gravity of the harm which may result from it is likely to be great
o Whether the risk cannot be eliminated by the exercise of reasonable care
o Whether the activity is not a matter of common usage
o Whether the activity is inappropriate to the place where it is carried on
o The value of the activity to the community
Hauling gasoline is dangerous and meets all the factorsthus strict liabilitysuch a great risk of
harm to innocents
Foster v. Preston Mill Co. blasting operations by the DD frightened PPs mother mink and caused the mink
to kill their kittens
One who carries on an ultra-hazardous activity is liable to another whose person, land or chattels the
actor should recognize as likely to be harmed by the unpreventable miscarriage of the activity for
harm resulting thereto from that which makes the activity ultra-hazardous, although the utmost care is
exercised to prevent the harm
Here, its the exceedingly nervous disposition of the mink, rather than the normal risks inherent in
blasting operations, which therefore must, as a matter of sound policy bear the responsibility for the
loss here sustainedstrict liability is not to protect against harms incident to the PPs extraordinary
and unusual use of the land
The risk here is not the kind which makes the activity ultra hazardous
Extra reading:
Vicarious liability
- hold employer responsible if employee is acting in the scope of employment
- if it is non intentional (though some are now holding them responsible for these)
- Independent contractors are usually not liable
o Exceptions
Employer is negligent in selecting the independent contractor
Held liable for negligence not vicariously liable
The duty to public or particular PP is nondelegable
Work is inherently dangerous
- Master can full indemnification from servant
Damages
-
Compensatory
o Amt of money necessary to restore PP to the preinjury condition
o Medical expenses
Necessary and reasonable
May reduce recovery if you dont get treatment (Williams v. Brightjevovahs witness)
o collateral source rule can recover medical expenses from insurance and DD
Coyne v. Campbellphysican cant recover medical expenses he didnt pay for
Lost earnings and Impairment of Earning Capacity
o Base it on life expectancy
o Wont give damages for a possible future injury unless it is over 50% that you will get it
Can bring a claim in the future when you have it
o Account for inflation, but subtract interest
Pain and suffering
Settlements
- it is the uncertainty of cases that leads to settlement
- often done with insurance companies
- Negiotating Strategies
o Competivie Strategy
o Cooperative Strategy
o Integrative Strategy
Damages
- Nominal
o Small in amount
o Only available in intentional tort cases
- Compensatory Damages
o Reflect the harm actually suffered
o Includes doctors bills, pain and suffering, lost wages
- Punitive Damages
o Are to punish the DD for wrongdoing
o Are often substantial in amount
o Ordinarily available if the DD is found to have acted with malice or reckless indifference
Owens-Illinois, Inc. V. Zenobia writ of certiorari to consider principles governing awards of punitive
damages in tort cases
Shifted burden of proof???
Heightened std of proof (from preponderance to clear and convincing) required of PP seeking an
award of punitive damages in a nonintentional tort case
Need to show actual malice, not just implied malice (used to have to just show it was grossly
negligent)
o Need clear and convincing evidence
o
o
o
Show that DDs conduct was characterized by evil motive, intent to injure, fraud or
actual knowledge of the defective nature of the products coupled with a deliberate
disregard of the consequences.
Excludes nonintentinonal torts
Ellis punitive damages arent applied fairlythere is high uncertainty