consequences are
too remote if a
reasonable man
would not have
forseen them.
foresight of a reasonable man
only a low degree of
likelihood of loss
must be foreseeable
THE HERON CASE
the type of physical damage must be
reasonably
foreseeable
at the time
of the act
it does not matter
the acutal manner it occur
nor the actual extent
no defence that the pecuniary
cost of damagesd is far greater
then reasonable forseen
discahrge of oil in
wharf, weilding work
sparks came in contact
with cotton waste cause
the wharf to be lit on
fire
not foreseeable that the wharf would
ne damage by fire b/c of the discharge
of oill
type of physical damage
TREMAIN V PIKE
C was a heardsm man on a farm and
came into contact with rat urine
held the rare disease was
nt foreseeable
food pisoning
anf rat bite was
foreseeable
local circumstance would have seen a
disease from rat urine as foreseeable
EGG SHELL PRINCIPLE
take the victim asyou find him
injury has to be foreseable
nt the extent
SMITH V LEECH BRAIN
burn on the lip
he was suffering from cancer before
burn caused it to developed, it was foreseeable
rempte possibility
WAGON MOUND NO 2
minor damage to a ship in the wharf
the D saw the fire as a low probability, which
could result in certain circumstance, it was deem
forreseeable
BASED ON
NUISANCE &
NEGLIGENCE
IMPROVE THE WAGON MOUND NO 1 TO DAMAGE WHICH
ARE POSSIBLE THAN PROBABLE
APPLICABLE TO ALL
UNITENTIONAL TORTS
DOES NOT APPLY TO DECIET OR STRICT LIABILITY
REMOTENESS FOR BREACH OF CONTRACT
HADLEY V BAXENDALE
TEST
1)damages which natural accord from the usual
course of the breach of contract itself
2) reasonable contemplated by
the parties at the time of the
contract
the mix broken its crank -shif, P sought
damages for lossd of profits for the delay, even
those the article being carried was known to the
carrier
loss of profits were too remote
b/c it was excepted that P would have
an extra crank,
VICTORIA LAUNDRY LTD V
NEWMAN INDUSTRIES
P's bought a boiler from D, D knew it was for
immediate use, but took months before
delivering it
damages for exceptional loss of profits from a
contract made with the
held normal loss could be recovered as it is natural and
foreseeable but not exceptional loss b/c the D did not know of the
contract with the Minstry
THE HERON II
the D was carrying sugar and when it
arrived the price of sugar fallen
he did not know the P
intented to sell it as soon as
it reached, but he knew
there was a market for
suggar
ltoo remote
a higher dgree of foreseeability is
require under contract
INTERVENING ACT
IF THE ACT IS MORE RESPONSIBLE FOR THE LOSS THEN THE D'S
BREACH THE CHAIN OF CAUSATION IS BROKEN BTW THE BREACH
AND THE LOSS
NATURAL EVENTS
Carslogie Steamship Co v Royal Norwegian Government
the Defendant collided with the P's ship. It was
repaired and sea-worthy. it was famage by a
storm. P sued for loss of profit during the storm
due repairs
D was not liable for the damage
caused by the storm, because it was
uncontrollable, unpredictable and
unrelated to D's act.
THIRD PARTY
if there is a duty to guard against third
party conduct, where this is breach the
D's will be liable
even where the crime was necessary
to bring about the loss, if it is the
natural consequnece of the
carelessness
STANSBIE V TROMAN
where a decorator left the door unlock and he told to
lock it. he did not and the house was robbered.
the chain of causation was not broken, the negligence
consist of the failure to take reasonable care to guard against
the very which happent
a duty other than to guard
against it
Rouse v Squires
the D committed larncey of a car,
and D1 drove the car and collided
with D's car killing the C's huband.
D1 brought action against D
the chain was not broken, D1 negligent
collided with the vehicle with could have
been avoided
conduct
comprised
intentional
wrongdoing
CONDUCT OF THE PLAINTIFF
LAMBERT V LEWIS
the dealer supplied a defected
trailer and the P's used it even
though it was obviously broken
Held the P used it knowing it was
damaged broke the cahin of
causation
reasonable
acts will not
break the
chain
if because of the injury you can't
see to use your glass , and fell . D
would be liable
DUTY TO MITIGATE
UNREASONABLE ACTION will bar him for claiming
any party of the damage which was due to his neglect
to take this step
the P must take reasonable steps
to minimize his loss,
YETTON V WASTWODS : wrongful dismissal, he need
not accpet an offer for reemployment
if he has a reduction in staus
employment else where is more likely
to be permanent
e'ee lacks confidence in the
employer b/c of past treatment
the plaintiff can consider his commercial
reputation and not sue
not taking complicated litigation
contract for sale he refused alternative
performance and accepting would have put
him in a better position
the plaintiff unreasonable refused an operation
contrary to medical adivice
Selvanayagam v Uwi
a plaintiff in an action for personal injuries who rejected a
medical recommendation in favour of surgery must prove
he acted reasonably in al circumstances of the case.
where the surgery s recommended but there was
some risk, it was reasonable to refuse it.
refuse an offer for help which
would prevent further breach
the Flying Fish Case
ship was damages when D collided with it . C's refused
help and as a consquential the ship was destroyed
recover the damage of the
collision and not any additional
losss
unreasonable action subsequent to
the wrong is nornaly viewed as an
aspect of intervening cause
unreasonable incurring expenses subsequent to the
wrong is generally viewed as an aspect of the duty
to mitigate
CONTRACT
ANTICIPATORY BREACH
no duty to
mitigate
unless the
claimant
accepts the
breach
White & Carter (Council) Ltd v McGregor
if one part repudiated the contract, theo ther can perform it without the
co operation of the other party. he who performs can request the
repudiating party to pay the full amount due under contract.
CONTRIBUTORY NEGLIGENCE
the P must have been at
fault or negligence towards
himself
Jones v Livox Quarries Ltd
contributory negligence is where the person ought to have reasonable
forseen, that if he does not act reasonable , prudent man, he might hurt
himself
and he should have considered
thers being careless
the person being negligence ust take his share of the
consequence, which is based on causation ant not
foreseeability.
the P's
negligence must
have been a
factual cause
of his loss
Froom v Butcher
ot wearing a seatbeat, is not factual cause of the
collision, but the factual cause of the loss suffered
by each. Damage could have been prevented
altogether
The P's negligence must have
exposed him to the particular risk of
the type of damage suffered.
Jones v Livox Quarries
the claimant had neglifence drove a towbar exposing
himself to the risk of falling and being crushed
the court in determining the extent which damages are to be reduced by
considering both the causal potency and the comparative blameworthiness
of the parties conduct
CONTRACT
damages will be reduced by taking
in account contributory negligence
only where the breach of contract amounts to a tort
Lambert v Lewis
held he could not be
indemnified because his
neglgience in continuing
use in spite of the condition
of the trailer
no defence for contributory negligence
IMPECUNIOSITY
CAN RECOVeRED
BECAUSE OF THE P'S
WEAK FINANCAIL POSITION
Lagden v O'Connor
the wrongdoer must take his victim as he finds him,
economic wise as well physical and mental vulnerability