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1 Law & Ethics Chapter 1 – Law, Ethics, Business: An Introduction Copyright © 2005 by Jeffrey Pittman
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2 An Introduction How does the study of law vary from the study of ethics? Does the size and power of modern corporations change the relationship between the people and the government?
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3 Freedom vs. Responsibility Hypothetical Problem #1 While at work, you receive a call from a distraught customer The customer is significantly behind in his payments to your company and tells you that he is financially ruined and he “has nothing to live for”
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4 Freedom vs. Responsibility Do you have legal or ethical problems if you respond as follows: You tell the customer that, if he is serious, his car exhaust in a closed garage (carbon monoxide poisoning) is easy and pain free You immediately call the police to notify them of the situation You do nothing
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5 Yania v. Bigan How do you respond to the four questions following the case, page 4 of the textbook? Relate Yania to hypothetical problem #1
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6 Hurley v. Eddingfield Compare Hurley to Yania How do the cases differ? Does Hurley change your assessment of the opening hypothetical?
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7 Professional Oaths/Codes of Conduct How has the Hippocratic Oath changed over time? See http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/doctors/oath.h tml http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/doctors/oath.h tml Is an oath binding? Are professional codes of conduct binding?
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8 The Duty to Rescue Should we have a broad “duty to rescue” law? How does the Kitty Genovese murder affect your view of rescue laws? What are the parameters of existing duty to rescue situations? See pages 9-10 in the textbook (e.g., contractual obligations, “special relationships”, endangering another, etc.)
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9 Good Samaritans How do state “Good Samaritan” statues impact the duty to rescue question? For Arkansas law, see A.C.A. § 17-95-101 (2005)
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10 The Duty to Rescue What components would be contained in a duty to rescue statute? Consider the following issues: When would a “rescue” be required? What is a rescue? What if the attempted rescue worsens the situation? Who is required to rescue? Compensation for an injured rescuer? Compensation from whom?
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11 Business Liability for Protection Hypothetical Problem #2 Your marketing firm does a significant amount of work for the Anti-Defamation League, an organization committed to stopping defamation of the Jewish people A car bomb exploded in your company parking lot kills a firm employee and a customer Is the firm liable for damages?
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12 Business Liability for Protection McClung v. Delta Square What did the McClung court state about protection of customers? How would you address the case questions, pages 12-13 in the textbook?
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13 Negligence The McClung decision is based on the tort of negligence The plaintiff must prove the following elements in a negligence case: The defendant breached a duty of due care owing to the plaintiff The plaintiff was injured The defendant’s breach “caused” the injury
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14 Negligence Elements – Breach of a Duty of Due Care A breach of due care involves failing to use the same care a reasonable person would have used under similar circumstances The law does not require perfection, just reasonable care
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15 Negligence Elements – Causation In proving causation, the plaintiff must establish two causation components: Causation in fact – did the injury occur because of the defendant’s actions (failure to use due care)? Proximate causation – was the injury foreseeable (was the injury likely enough to happen that a reasonably prudent defendant would have behaved differently)?
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16 Defenses to Negligence Assumption of risk Comparative or contributory negligence
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