Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Causation and Remoteness Tort
- Causation
- Factual Causation- But For Test. Breach of
Duty must have caused the damage
Anmerkungen:
- The Breach of duty must be the factual cause of the damage. The general test used is the BUT FOR TEST
- -Cork v Kirby MacLean Ltd
-Barnett v Chelsea and Kensington Hospital Management Committee
- Problems
- Multiple Causes
- Lost Chances
Anmerkungen:
- Chance has some value in itself. Courts reluctant to impose liability where the negligence of the defendant caused the claimant to lose a chance of avoiding physical injury.
- Hotson v East Berkshire Area HA
Anlagen:
- Multiple Consecutive Causes
Anmerkungen:
- -Performance Cars Ltd v Abraham
- Defendant's breach must
be the substantial cause of
the damage
- Following Barker,where
defendantsare being held liable on
Fairchild basis, each defendant is
only liable to the extent to which
they increased risk to the
claimant- Proportionate liability
Anmerkungen:
- Reversed by S3
Compensation Act 2006.
Provides that all
defendants are jointly and
severaly liable. In Asbestos cases
- Claimant establish liability by
demonstrating that the
defendant had been in breach of
duty by exposing hhim to
asbestos fibres and had
thereby materially increased the
risk of developing asbestos
cancer
Anmerkungen:
- Material Increase of
Risk-McGhee Test
Anmerkungen:
- McGhee v National Coal Board - Test was used in favour of the claimant in Fairchild Case. Further Discussed in Barker
- Multiple causes
Anmerkungen:
- Where there is more than one possible cause of harm to the claimant, the claimant does not have to show that the defendants breach of duty was the only cause of damage or even the main cause of damage.
- Bonnington castings v Wardlaw
- Wilsher v Essex
-McGhee v National Coal Board
- But for test is applied
to the Original
defendant.
- Novus Actus Interviens
Anmerkungen:
- A new act intervenes. An intervening act may break the chain of causation between the defendant's breach of duty and the loss or damage suffered by the claimant.
- If the NIA is sufficient to break the chain, then the defendant may not be laible despite being breach of the Duty of Care.
- For the courts to decide whether an event will break the chain of causation
-jobling v associated dairies
- Third Party acts
Anmerkungen:
- Original Defendant will be liable where the intervening act does not
cause the loss. The original defendant will be responsible for 'injury
and damage which are the natural and probable results of the initial
wrongful acts- Knightley v Johns
- original defendant will be liable where the
intervening act is one that should have been
foreseen- Lamb v Camden LBC
- Act of the Claimant
Anmerkungen:
- C responsible for his own damage.
-in order for a NIA to succeed by act of claimant, it must be entirely unreasonable in all the cirucmstances.
- May be considered as a defence, of contributory negligence, leading to a reduction in the claimant's damage.
- Corr v IBC vehicles. - McKew v Holland & Hannen
- Acts of nature
Anmerkungen:
- Intervening acts of nature will generally not break the chain of causation, However, the defendant will not normally be liable where the intervening act of nature is unforeseeable and seperate from the initial negligent act or omission.
- Carslogie Steamship v Royal Norwegian Govt
- Remoteness- Legal causation
Anmerkungen:
- For how much of the Claimant's loss should the defendant be responsible
- Test of Remoteness - the correct test for
remoteness is reasonable foreseeability of
the kind or type of damage in fact suffered
by the claimant - Wagon Mound No1
Anmerkungen:
- Test in Re Polemis and Furness, Withy & Co. and in Wagon Mound 1 - The tests cannot be reconciled. Re Polemis test has never been overruled, thus BOTH TESTS remain good law.
Does not limit liability for the direct consequences of a negligent act, however severe or unforeseeable those consequences may be. It has been criticised for unfairness in that respect - Re Polemis.
- Impecunious Claimant
Anmerkungen:
- Egg shell skull rule may not apply when the claimant's losses result from the claimant's lack of means.
Discussed in Liesbosch Dredger v SS edison
. Distinguished by CA in cases relating to mitigation of loss ( Perry v Sidney Phillips & Son ). Subsequently only considered to apply in exceptional circumstances - (Mattocks v Mann).
- PUT TO REST IN Lagden v O Conner .
- Egg-shell skull rule
Anmerkungen:
- Take victim as they are - liable for all of the losses.
Also relates to psychiatric injury. - Brice v Brown . Smith v Leech Brain
- Remoteness in psychiatric injury cases
Anmerkungen:
- Degree of foreseeability needed depends on whether victim is primary or secondary.
- Primary Victim
Anmerkungen:
- Defendant must or should have foreseen some physical injury to claimant
Even if no physical injury occurs, but psychiatric injury does, defendant is still liable.
- Secondary victims
Anmerkungen:
- Psychiatric injury must be foreseeable in a person of reasonable fortitude in the circumstances