1. Jack had taken his girlfriend Jenny on a long drive

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Q UINCY COLLEGE Paralegal Studies Program Paralegal Studies Program Litigation and Procedure Negligence and Strict Liability Litigation and Procedure Negligence.
Advertisements

{ Chapter 10 TORTS: Negligence and Strict Liability.
Chapter 18: Torts A Civil Wrong
Tort Law Part 2 Negligence and Liability. Negligence Most common tort Accidental or Unintentional Tort Failure to show a degree of care that a “reasonable”
© 2012 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license.
Negligence. Negligence (unintentional tort)---- the unintentional causing of harm that could have been prevented if________. (the defendant had acted.
Copyright © 2004 by Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved. © 2007 Prentice Hall, Business Law, sixth edition, Henry R. Cheeseman Chapter 5 Negligence Chapter.
Tort Law – Unintentional torts
Tort Law – Unintentional Torts. Negligence Action was unintentional Action was unintentional It is planned It is planned Injury occurs Injury occurs anyone.
By Monika, Max, Vanja, Nicole KEY PRINCIPLES OF NEGLIGENCE.
CIVIL LAW 3.2 TYPES OF TORTS. Types of Torts  There are three categories of torts:  Intentional Wrong  Negligence  Strict Liability.
© 2004 West Legal Studies in Business A Division of Thomson Learning 1 Chapter 6 Strict Liability and Product Liability Chapter 6 Strict Liability and.
 1. Duty-The accused wrongdoer owed a duty of care to the injured person  2. Breach of Duty- the defendant’s conduct breached that duty  3. Causation-defendant’s.
Business Law I Negligence and Strict Liability.
Unit 6 – Civil Law.
Products Liability “Liability for Defective Products”
CHAPTER 7 Negligence And Strict Liability.
Strict Liability Chapter 6.
Law of torts. The tort of negligence says that you should take reasonable care to ensure that your actions do not cause harm to others. For a plaintiff.
7-1 Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
1. 2 NEGLIGENCE CONDUCT THAT INVOLVES AN UNREASONABLY GREAT RISK OF HARM THAT FALLS BELOW THE STANDARD OF CARE THE LAW ESTABLISHES FOR THE PROTECTION.
Chapter 7: Negligence and Strict Liability Copyright © 2009 South-Western Legal Studies in Business, a part of South-Western Cengage Learning. Jentz Miller.
Negligence and Strict Liability. Products Liability The liability of manufacturers, sellers, and others for the injuries caused by defective products.
Negligence. Homework 20.1 and 20.2 – read Chapter and 20.2 – read Chapter 20.
Chapter 20 Negligence. The failure to exercise a reasonable amount of care in either doing or not doing something resulting in harm or injury.
By Elaine M. Deering. Personal injury cases often involve items or products that the plaintiff had no reason to fear—a vacuum cleaner, a lawnmower, or.
Contract Law for Paralegals: Traditional and E-Contracts © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle River, NJ All rights reserved Relationship of Tort.
Tort Law Negligence. Civil Actions What is a civil action? Definition of a civil action: “A noncriminal lawsuit, brought to enforce a right or redress.
Chapter 6 Torts and Strict Liability. Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall.6-2 Three Kinds of Torts A tort is a wrong.
Chapter 09 Negligence and Strict Liability Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Chapter 5 Negligence and Intentional Torts
 I punch Joe in the face?  I start class by telling everyone that Joe drowns puppies?  I leave all of my teaching stuff in the doorway to the classroom,
By Richard A. Mann & Barry S. Roberts
Prentice Hall © PowerPoint Slides to accompany The Legal Environment of Business and Online Commerce 4E, by Henry R. Cheeseman Chapter 6 Product.
Defences for Negligence. The best defence is Negligence did not exist, or the defendant didn’t owe the plaintiff a duty of care. The best defence is Negligence.
Prentice Hall © PowerPoint Slides to accompany The Legal Environment of Business and Online Commerce 5E, by Henry R. Cheeseman Chapter 6 Torts.
CIVIL LAW 3.4 NEGLIGENCE. Elements of Negligence  Duty: a legal obligation  Breach of Duty: violation of a duty, either by engaging in an action or.
Chapter 20. Conduct that falls below the standard established by law for protecting others against unreasonable risks of harm Surgeon forgets to remove.
Copyright © 2010 South-Western Legal Studies in Business, a part of South-Western Cengage Learning. and the Legal Environment, 10 th edition by Richard.
Negligence. Definition Negligence in an unintentional Tort This occurs when a person fails to use reasonable care and it causes harm to another person.
Chapter 5 Torts and Strict Liability Part II Unintentional Torts (Negligence)
Understanding Business and Personal Law Negligence and Strict Liability Section 4.2 The Law of Torts A person can commit an unintentional tort, when he.
Legal Liability Issues
Chapter 5 Torts and Strict Liability
Law-Related Ch Notes I. Torts: 1. A tort is a civil wrong.
STRICT LIABILITY AND PRODUCT LIABILITY
Chapter 6-1 Lesson Objectives
Neglect Torts Chapter 20.
For Professor Ludlum UCO September 12, 2016
Bell-work 1/27/17 Read one of the two quotes under World Government and give a brief meaning.
Negligence Mr. Lugo.
CHAPTER 7 Negligence And Strict Liability
Strict Liability Chapter 21.
STRICT LIABILITY AND PRODUCT LIABILITY
Chapter 13: Strict Liability and Prduct liability
Defenses to Negligence
Defences for Negligence
Chapter 7 Strict Liability and Product Liability
Tort Law Negligence.
Chapter 9 Strict Liability and Product Liability.
Chapter 6-1 Lesson Objectives
Negligence.
Section Outline Unintentional Torts Negligence Strict Liability
Negligence Ms. Weigl.
Lesson 6-1 Civil Law (Tort Law).
Tort Law Summary.
Civil Law 3.4 negligence.
CIVIL LAW Unintentional Torts.
STRICT LIABILITY AND PRODUCT LIABILITY
Civil Law 3.2 Types of Torts
Presentation transcript:

1. Jack had taken his girlfriend Jenny on a long drive 1. Jack had taken his girlfriend Jenny on a long drive. While driving on the highway, he suddenly had a severe headache and lost control of the car. They got hit by a passing car. The doctor had earlier warned Jack that he has a brain tumor, due to which he will suffer occasional pains. Jenny sued Jack for negligence. Will she succeed?  A. Yes, because Jack could reasonably foresee that he could have severe pain any time and may cause an accident. B. No, because Jack never knew he was going to have that pain and cause an accident. C. Yes, because Jack caused the accident. D. No, because she should have sued the driver of the passing car which hit them.

2.  State X has a "Sunday Closing Law" making it a crime to operate a retail business on Sundays. The law's legislative history reveals that it was enacted to promote respect for the Sabbath by all the people of the state, and thus to promote public decency and morality. One Sunday, Judy Smith slips on a puddle of spilled soft drink at Joe's Hamburger joint (which is operating in violation of the statute), and suffers an injury to her spine. The soft drink would not have been spilled if the store had not been open on Sunday. Judy sues Joe in negligence. One part of her complaint relies on the doctrine of negligence per se. Under the doctrine of negligence per se:  A. Judy will recover because the spilled drink posed a reasonably foreseeable risk of harm, and Joe failed to eliminate that risk. B. Judy will recover because Joe violated the Sunday Closing Law. C. Judy will not recover because she was not within the class of persons intended to be protected by the statute. D. Judy will not recover because she did not suffer harm of a sort that the statute was intended to protect against.

 3. Negligence "per se" is a legal rule that established a defendant's negligence when:  A. a statute that was intended to protect persons like the plaintiff has been violated. B. the defendant intended to harm the plaintiff. C. the plaintiff intended to harm the defendant. D. both the defendant and the plaintiff intended to harm each other.

4. Catherine decided to have lunch at Heathcliff's, one of the most popular restaurants in town. She ordered for soup before her main course as usual. The soup served to Catherine contained a maggot floating about in it. Fortunately, she noticed this before she ate the soup. She sued Heathcliff's for negligence. The most likely result will be:  A. Catherine will not win since she did not sustain any damages. B. Catherine will not win, as bones in clam chowder are foreseeable. C. Catherine will win if she proves that it is possible to prevent the maggot from being in the soup. D. Catherine will win because the restaurant failed to use due care.

5. A defendant who is negligent is not liable for the unlikely or unforeseeable harm that results. This rule is called:  A. the proximate cause. B. the distal cause. C. the just cause. D. the "causation in fact", also known as the "but for" rule.

6. The owner of a theatre negligently failed to install the requisite number of emergency exit. During the show of Shakespeare's Macbeth, one of the intoxicated viewers got carried away and burned himself. The entire hall was ablaze. There was only one emergency exit. Thus many people were killed in the stampede. Will the theatre owner be liable for negligence? A. No, because the intervening cause of an intoxicated viewer burning himself absolves the theatre owner's liability. B. No, because the viewer's reaction was completely unforeseeable by any reasonable man of ordinary prudence. C. Yes, because the harm was foreseeable and the owner cannot escape his liability. D. Yes, because though the harm was unforeseeable, the owner still cannot escape his breach of duty.

7.  P sues D in negligence. At the trial, it is determined that P's negligence was 40% responsible for P's injury, and D's negligence was 60% responsible. P's losses total $10,000. Under a pure comparative negligence system, P will recover:  A. nothing. B. $4000. C. $6000. D. $10,000.

8. A legal theory that imposes liability even if the defendant acts with all reasonable care and caution is called:  A. assumption of risk. B. strict liability. C. superseding event. D. contributory negligence.