Zusammenfassung der Ressource
TORT DUTY
Anmerkungen:
- Duty is a legal obligation to act in a reasonable manner. The π should treat the ∆ with a duty to care.
- General Duty of
Reasonable Care
Anmerkungen:
- “[A]n actor owes a duty of reasonable care under the circumstances to those persons who are foreseeably (at risk) exposed to physical risks arising from the actor’s conduct.”
- RE 3d §7 - Pubic Policy
Influencing Duty
Decisions
- Allocation of Loss
- Fairness
- Deterrence or Accident Avoidance
- Economic Considerations
- Administrative Concerns
Related to the Legal Process
- Legislative Considerations
- Limited Duties
Anmerkungen:
- No affirmative duty to rescue;
Limited duty:
for land occupiers;
to control the conduct of others;
to avoid emotional harms; and
to avoid economic damages.
- Prevent Harm
- Duty to
Rescue
Anmerkungen:
- Restatement 2d 314
“The fact that the actor realizes or should realize that action on his part is necessary for another’s aide or protection does not of itself impose upon him a duty to take such action.”
- EXCEPTIONS
- Special Relationship
Anmerkungen:
- ◦ parent-child
◦ employer-employee)
◦ land possessor-user
◦ someone who takes
someone else into custody
◦ chattel possessor-user
◦ doctor-patient
- Creating the Peril
Anmerkungen:
- If the ∆ creates the peril. a duty to rescue π is created.
- Undertaking to Act & Reliance
Anmerkungen:
- ∆ has an affirmative duty to rescue if the actor begins the rescue or promises to aid and that promise causes or prevents others from assisting.
- Contract
Anmerkungen:
- A rescue obligation arises from a contract.
(e.g. lifeguard, baby-sitter, teacher, fireman, police, etc.)
- Duty to
Control / Warn
Anmerkungen:
- Generally a person has no obligation to control another's personal actions in order to prevent harm to a 3d person.
- EXCEPTIONS
- Special
Relationship
Anmerkungen:
- ◦ parent-child
◦ employer-employee)
◦ land possessor-user
◦ someone who takes
someone else into custody
◦ liquor seller-user
◦ doctor-patient
- Special
Knowledge
Anmerkungen:
- Knowledge (actual or constructive) of the need to control. (e.g. mental patient, prisoner, parolee, child/minor, employee).
- Negligent
Entrustment
Anmerkungen:
- MISFEASANCE
Suppying a potentially dangerous instrumentality (e.g. money, car or gun) to a person the ∆ knows is not fit to handle it.
- Duty to Protect
Anmerkungen:
- As a general principle, there is no duty to protect another from harm.
- EXCEPTIONS
- Special
Relationship
Anmerkungen:
- ◦ parent-child
◦ employer-employee)
◦ land possessor-user
◦ jailor-prisoner
◦ chattel possessor-user
◦ hospital-patient
• common carrier - passenger
- Specific Harm Test
Anmerkungen:
- A land owner owes no duty unless the owner knew or should have known that the specific harm was occurring or was about to occur.
- Prior Specific
Incidents Test
Anmerkungen:
- A land owner may owe a duty of responsible care if evidence of prior similar incidents of crime on or near the landowner's property shows that the crime in question was foreseeable.
- Totality of
Circumstances
Test
Anmerkungen:
- A court considers all of the circumstances surrounding an event, including the nature, condition, and location of the land, as well as prior similar incidents, to determine whether a criminal act was foreseeable.
- Balancing
Test
Anmerkungen:
- The court balances “the degree of foreseeability of harm against the burden of the duty to be imposed.”
- Police Duty
Anmerkungen:
- 1. A municipality may not be held liable for simple failure to provide police protection;
2. The protection is ordinarily one owed to the public at large and not any particular individual or class of individuals; and
3. The allocation of Police to protect its citizens is regarded as a resource-allocating function that is better related to the discretion of policy makers.
- Land Owners
- Status Trichotomy
- Invitee
- Licensees
- Trespassers
- Emotional Distress
- Zone 1
Anmerkungen:
- Fear for One’s Own Physical Well-Being (Direct Action)
- Zone 2
Anmerkungen:
- Fear for the Physical Well-Being of Another (Bystander)
- Novel/Complex Duty
Anmerkungen:
- In the novel situation, i.e. when one overrules a limited duty limitation or creates a new duty, a judge will use the "Rowland Factors" to determine duty.
- Rowland Factors
- Forseeabilty
- Burden
- Proximity
- Blame
- Prevention
- Injury
- Insurance
- Misfesance
Anmerkungen:
- ACTIVE misconduct working to positive injury to others. The victim is positively worse off as a result of the wrongful act.
- Active Misconduct
- Negligent Omission
Anmerkungen:
- A type of misfeasance where one fails to to do something that a reasonable person would do while engaging in another activity (Eg. Not paying attention while driving, texting or talking on a phone)
- Nonfesance
Anmerkungen:
- π’s harm is caused by the ∆’s failure to intervene.
- Passive Inaction
Anmerkungen:
- Passive inaction - a failure to take positive steps to benefit others or to protect them from harm not created by any wrongful act by the ∆. <No Duty>
- Failure to Intervene
Anmerkungen:
- The law requires no affirmative duty to intervene.
- Innocent Accidental Conduct
- Reckless Conduct
Anmerkungen:
- ∆ acts with a deliberate disregard of the high degree probability that harm (e.g. emotional distress) will ensue.
- Negligence
Anmerkungen:
- The ∆ was negligent.
The π was harmed.
That ∆’s negligence was a substantial factor in causing π’s harm.
- Intentional Conduct