Textes
Code
civil art. 230 et s.,246, 345 et s,390, 1109, 1146 et s., 1690, 1257, 1261,
1690, 1985 .
autorizzazione
/ assenso
consenso
dato da un terzo ad un accordo intervenuto fra due o più altre parti
(Dott
Coppola,Cons Min Lavoro e Previdenza Sociale,Roma)
EuroDicAutom
Consent:
Informed | aufgeklärte Einwilligung nach
Aufklärung | consentement éclairé | assenso informato:
Informed
consent is that consent obtained only after
full disclosure, i.e. after informing the defendant of the medical risks
and benefits and alternatives of a medical procedure proposed by a physician. It is a heightened form of
consent applied in the field of medical practice to protect lay persons. See,
e.g.
Tenuto
v. Lederle Laboratories,
1997
N.Y. LEXIS 3219, *; 90 N.Y.2d 606;
687
N.E.2d 1300; 665 N.Y.S.2d 17
Consequential
damages | Folgeschäden
Damages
which arise not immediately after the initial injury but thereafter yet as a
result of the tort. E.g. as a result of a libel the plaintiff cannot marry and
so will not be an heir of their spouses parents. The lost inheritance could be
seen as a consequential damage.
See:
Richmond Redevelopment and Housing Authority v. Richmond Redevelopment and
Housing Authority v. Laburnum Const. 195 Va. 827, 80 S.E.2d 574, 580.
Consortium,
Loss of | Verlust des Liebespartners | privation de compagnie conjugale:
The
loss of the ability to have normal sexual relations with one’s spouse, but also
the loss of their services and companionship. It is a damage with both
economic, though possibly unremunerated, and non-economic elements - and one more example of damage inflation in
the common law of torts.
See:
Deems v. Westem Maryland Ry. Co., 247 Md. 95, 231 A.2d 514, 517.
Constitutional
Torts | Verletzung verfassungsrechtlicher Freiheiten
While
Germany and France have specialized courts for hearing constitutional cases
this is not the case in the U.S. See Bivens Claim.
Constitution
| Grundgesetz/Verfassung | Loi Fondamentale / Constitution:
Latin.
constituere, to make to stand together, to establish. Originally, an important
decree or edict. Later, the laws and usages which gave a government its
characteristic features.
The
fundamental law of the state (e.g., Grundgesetz)
The
constitution of the state may refer literally to the legal arrangements which
characterise the state or metaphorically to the institutions and relations of
the organs of the state across time. We concern ourselves here with the former,
that is the literal legal definition.
In
the common law constitutions are termed either written or unwritten. The United
Kingdom has an unwritten or customary constitution, whereas that of the United
States is written. A written constitution can be the basis of judicial review,
and under British rulings since Coke, an unwritten constitution cannot be the
basis of judicial review.
Verfassung
die
Gesamtheit der geschriebenen oder ungeschriebenen Rechtsnormen,welche die
Grundordnung eines Staates festlegen
loi
constitutionnelle / loi fondamentale / constitution
loi
ou ensemble de lois fondamentales qui règle le mode de délégation ou d'exercice
de la souveraineté nationale, la forme du
gouvernement, les attributions et le fonctionnement des pouvoirs de
l'Etat ..
Contra
bonos Mores / Against Good Morals | Sittenwidrig
No
contract may be made which is against good morals. Such contracts are void as
against public policy.
Contributory
negligence | Part de responsabilité de la victime dans un accident / Négligence
concurrente / Faute de la victime / Imprudence concurrente / négligence
concurrente | Mitgefährdung :
Contributory
negligence is that situation where the plaintiff’s own negligence helped bring
about the tort. In most American jurisdictions it has been replaced with the
doctrine of comparative fault. But in those jurisdictions where it survives, a
finding of contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff will operate as
a complete bar to he plaintiff’s claim. Contributory negligence is an
affirmative defense which the defendant must plead and prove to prevail.
See
also: proportional liability
Honaker
v. Crutchfield, 247 Ky. 495, 57 S.W.2d 502.
Li
v. Yellow Cab Co. of California,
13
Cal.3d 804, 119 Cal.Rptr. 858, 532 P.2d 1226.
Cowan
v. Dean,
81
S.D. 486, 137 N.W.2d 337, 341
Corporation
| Kapitalgesellschaft | Société Anonyme (à responsabilité limité)
A
legally recognized person having a legal existence independent of its
shareholders, officers, and employees. While the employees and officers may be
liable for negligence the shareholders of the corporation are limited in
liability for the torts of the corporation to the extent of their investment in
the corporation.
Corrective
Justice | Gerechtigkeit | La Justice Corrective:
Justice
has been defined as giving each man his due. Justice may be distributive or
commutative. Distributive justice distributes rewards and punishments to each
one according to his merits, observing a just proportion by comparing one
person or fact with another, so that neither equal persons have unequal things,
nor unequal persons things equal. It is also known as geometric justice.
Commutative
justice renders to every one what belongs to him, as nearly as may be, or that
which governs contracts. It is also known as arithmetic justice.
Internal
justice is the conformity of our will,
and external justice the conformity of our actions to the law, at least where
the law is just.
Creation
of Risk | Gefährdung ???
Custom
/ Customary Law | Gewohnheitsrecht | Droit Coutumièr :
A
usage which has acquired the force of law.
When the usage is public, peaceable, uniform, general, continued,
reasonable and certain, and has lasted since time immemorial it acquires the
force of law and is known as a custom. While statute can and does replace prior
custom, statutes must be interpreted in light of custom when there is doubt as
to their meaning: optima est legum interpres consuetudo. A custom derives its
force from the tacit consent of the legislature and the people,
Customs
can be general or particular customs. Particular customs are lex loci
Particular customs are those which affect the inhabitants of some particular
districts only. The common law is an example
of general custom, as is public international law.
Consuetudo.
Latin.
Custom; usgage; practice.
Consuetudo
est altera lex.
Custom
is another law.
Consuetudo
interpres legum.
Custom
is the expounder of laws.
Consuetudo
loci observanda.
The
custom of the place is to be conformed to.
-D-
Damages
Damages
| Schadensersatz (in Geld) / Schäden
Pecuniary
compensation or indemity which may be recovered in the courts by any person who
has suffered loss detriment or injury.
A
general term for the remedy of a tort. Normally limited to monetary damages on
a theory of compensation for the injured interest (either as valued by tort
feasor or victim), but may also rely on a theory of retribution,
deterrence/prevention or emotional satisfaction. In its broadest sense damages
can imply remedies other than monetary.
There
are a variety of types of damages. The various terms and their meanings are
discussed below:
Damages,
Actual | Konkreter Schaden | Indemnisation effective
Damages
awarded for calculable material injury; Damages deemed to compensate the
injured party for losses sustained as a direct result of the injury suffered
Damages,
Civil / Constitutional tort
Injuries
sustained either to one's rights as a citizen of a State and of the United States,
or else to his rights as a member of a family. See: Bivens Claim
Damages,
compensation for | Schadensersatz | dommages et intérêts | risarcimento dei danni
The
compensation which the law will award for an injury done and thus a synonym for
damages
Damages,
Constructive
Those
damages imputed in law from an act of wrong to another person. Such damages are
imputed, i.e. they may or may not be related to the actual damages.
Damage,
Compensatory (opp. To punitive damages) | Ersatz eines eingetretenen
(materillen oder immateriellen) Schadens Ausgleichsentschädigung ? | dommages-intérêts compensatoires / indemnité
compensatrice | premio di compensazione
Compensatory
damages are intended to remedy the actual damages caused by the party against
whom they awarded. Thus compensatory damages are an award of money intended to
be exactly equal to the injury of the victim and nothing more. Yet they may
include the abstract compensation for pain and suffering. Nevertheless
compensatory damages do not include punitive damages (q.v.) .
Damages,
Consequential | Folgeschaden (aus Primärschaden)/ Indirekter Schaden | dommage
consécutif / dommages secondaires / dommage indirect
Those
damages which do not arise immadiately out of the plaintiff’s tort but which
nevertheless are caused by the tort.
See:
mitigation of damages, pure economic loss
Damages,
Direct | dommage direct
Those
damages which arise initially or primarily as a result of plaintiff’s tort.
See:
Roanoke Hospital Ass'n v. Doyle & Russell, lnc., 215 Va. 796, 214 S.E.2d
155, 160.
Damage,
Divisible | teilbarer Schaden (bei Nebentäterschaft)
At
common law where two or more tortfeasors are together the wrongful cause of
plaintiffs injury, the plaintiff would have a cause of action against either
for the entire amount of his or her damages. A possible reform which has not
yet been broadly adopted would be to divide the damage award against each
defendant in proportion to their fault.
See,
Gaves v. Cabi, 96-T-5506, 96-T-5537 and 97-T-0026, Court of Appeals, Ohio 1997
Ohio App. Lexis 5570.
Damage,
Emotional | Gefühlsschaden
See
damages for pain and suffering
Damages,
exemplary | Exemplarischer Schadensersatz |
dommages-intérêts exemplaires |
risarcimento danni
A
synonym for punitive damages. Exemplary damages are those damages arising out
of the defendant's willful acts where such acts are ere malicious, violent,
oppressive, fraudulent, wanton or grossly reckless. The justification of
examplary damages is primarily punishment of the individual and deterrence of
other individuals but secondarily as a form of compensation. In some cases of
outrageous conduct, e.g. fraud, sexual abuse, or other intentional torts, the
exemplary damages can be much greater than the actual damages.
See,
e.g.: Wilkes v. Wood (1763), 98 Eng. Rep. 489;
Molzof
v. United States, 502 O.S. 301
BMW
of North America v. Gore, 646 So.2d 619 (Ala 94) Reversed
1996
U.S. LEXIS 3390, *; 517 U.S. 559; 116 S. Ct. 1589; 134 L. Ed. 2d 809
Grimshaw
v. Ford Motor Co., 119 Cal.App.3d 757; 1981 Cal.App. Lexis 1859; 174 Cal.Reptr.
348
Damages,
General | Ersatz eines immateriallen Schadens | Courants danni generici
Those
damages which ordinarily flow from the tortious conduct and thus need not be
specifically pleaded as they are implicit in the plaintiffs complaint. Having
proven the underlying act, the ordinary damages flowing therefrom are presumed,
though such proof may be refuted at least in the case of libel. Though there is
no necessary correspondance between general damages and primary injury and
special damages and consequential damages that correspondance often occurs in
fact. In fact prudence dictates that plaintiff’s plead all damages as special
damages to avoid losing their substantive rights due to the procedural
distinction between general and special damages.
See:
Myers v. Stephens, 43 Cal.Rptr. 420, 433, 233 C.A.2d 104.
Damages,
Hedonic
Damages
intended to compensate plaintiffs for the lost pleasure resulting from the
injury. As hedonic damages inflate compensation and compensate an abstraction
they are not recognized in all jurisdictions.
Damages,
Monetary | Vermögensschaden
Monetary
or pecuniary damages are those damages to the fortune of the victim. As such
damages are concrete and material they are more easily measured than abstract
rights (e.g. future contingent streams of income such as from a patent) or
subjective emotions (pain and suffering).
Damages,
Measure of | base d'évaluation des dommages-intérêts
The
method used to calculate the damages sustained by the injured party.
Damages,
Mitigation of | Obligation de limiter les dommages
The
victim of a tort-feasor, though a victim, nonethless has an affirmative duty to
do their best to reduce the damages consequent to the tortious misconduct. That
duty is known as the duty to mitigate damages. The victim must take advantage
of any reasonable opportunity he may have had under the circumstances to reduce
or minimize the loss or damage.
The
culpability of the defendant is irrelevant to the plaintiff’s duty to mitigate
the damages. Defendants may thus raise the failure of the plaintiff to mitigate
the damages as an affirmative defense not to the finding of liability but to
the determination of the extent of damages.
For
example, plaintiff who due to injury loses her job must nonetheless seek a new
one but will be compensated for any lost wages and probably also (depending on
the facts of the case) for their reduced income if the new employment pays less
than the old.
See,
e.g.: Spier v. Barker, 323 N.E.2d 164 (1974);
Damages,
Nominal | dommages-intérêts symboliques
A
trivial sum awarded where only a breach of duty was shown with however no
showing of damages or where the damages are minute. Such damages, generally of
a small amount (e.g. one dollar) are a symbolic form of satisfaction and
recognition of the abstract right of the plaintiff where no measurable loss
arising from the injury is averred or proven.
Damages,
Non-Economic
Damages
for pain, suffering, loss of companionship, and loss of consortium (love of
spouse). Unlike concrete material economic losses, such as lost wages, medical
bills, and damage to property such damages are abstract. Non-economic damages
may be limited by statute.
See,
e.g.: Hitaffer v. Argonne Co., Inc., 183 F.2d 811 (D.C.Cir. 1950), cert. denied
340 U.S. 852, (1950);
Yates
v. Foley, 247 So.2d 40 (Fla 1971); General Electric Co. v. Bush, 498 P.2d 366
(Nev. 1972);
Damages
for pain and suffering | schmerzengeld
Injuries
to the plaintiff’s sense of well being; The non material damages to a victim of
a tort which are remedied with money under a theory of compensation
Pure
motional damages, where allowed, are generally only allowed to immediate
relatives. However in cases where the defendant is in close proximity to a
violent accident and thus felt themselves in danger pure emotional damages will
be permitted. Further emotional damages for pain and suffering in addition to
and as a result of some substantive material damages will also be allowed.
See
also: intentional infliction of emotional distress, negligent infliction of
emotional distress.
Damage
per se / actionable per se | Eine Rechtsgutsverletzung wird einem
kompensationsfähigen Schaden gleichgesetzt
A
damage per se is one wherein damages are presumed upon occurrence of the tort,
e.g. in cases of libel where the libel concerns imputation of crime, a
loathsome disease, the unchastity of a woman, or words affecting the plaintiffs
trade, business or profession. However per se damages may be able to be refuted
by the defendant who will then bear the burden of proof for his affirmative
defense.
Damages,
presumed
Damages
which do not require proof as they are presumed as a matter of law to result
naturally and necessarily from a tortious act.
Damages,
punitive | dommages-intérêts punitifs
See
also: exemplary damages (syn.)
Punitive
damages are those damages awarded in case of willful, wanton, or malicious
conduct. They may even be available in cases of reckless negligence if the
damages are particularly severe or in cases of fraudulent acts. Punitive
damages serve to punish the defendant and deter others. The plaintiff must
prove both the necessity and extent of punitive damages according to the
ordinary standard of a preponderance of
the evidence. Conduct is malicious if it is accompanied by ill will, or spite,
or if it is for the purpose of injuring another. Conduct is reckless if it
reflects a complete indifference to the safety and rights of others.
See:
Wetherbee v. United lns' Co. of America, 18 C.A.3d 266, 95 Cal.Rptr. 678, 680.
Damages,
Special | Ersatz eines konkretes Vermögensschadens | dommages-intérêts spéciaux
Those
damages which do not arise ordinarily out of the injury but which arise
extraordinarily and thus must be specifically plead and proven. Such damages
are nonetheless concrete and material as opposed to abstract. That is they are
calculable in economic terms. Special damages must be plead and proven in cases
of slander. E.g. a plaintiff’s has been burgled, and as a consequence must seek
lodging elsewhere. This consequential damage, having to pay a hotelier, must be
specially plead and proven.
Sometimes
the special damage is said to constitute the substance of the action itself;
for example, in an action wherein the plaintiff declares for slanderous words,
which of themselves are not a sufficient ground or foundation for the suit, if
any particular damage result to the plaintiff from the speaking of them, that
damage is properly said to be the substance of the action.
Special
damages can include medical bills, repair and replacement of property, lost
wages and other concrete damages which are not abstract speculative or
subjective.
See:
Twin Coach Co. v. Chance Vought Aircraft Inc., 163 A.2d 278, 286.
Damages,
Treble / Treble Costs | Strafschadensersatz
Treble
damages is the measure for an award of punitive damages. The actual calculation
of punitive damages is not fixed according to a formula and must in all cases
be proven by the plaintiff, first as to existence, second as to extent. However
those damages can be as high as three times the substantive damages plus the
plaintiffs attorney’s fees and costs. Treble damages may also be governed by
statute which may abrogate the common law rule.
E.g.,
if a jury awards twenty dollars damages and punitive damages would be forty
dollars more. However the construction of treble damages is different from that
of treble costs.
Damages,
Treble costs
Treble
costs are sometimes awarded by statutes. When an act awards treble costs, the
party is allowed three times the usual costs, excepting the fees and costs of
their attorney which are not trebled.
Damnum
sine injuria
Literally
condemnation without injury, often mis-translated as damages with no injury but
in fact would be better translated as injury (a wrong) with no damages (a
measure).
Refers
to the legal situation in which plaintiff’s right is not respected by another
but where the breach of plaintiff’s right does not cause a damage, or at least
not a calculable or admissible damage. A finding of damnum sine injuria can be
the basis for a finding of nominal damages (q.v.).
Deceit
| Arglistige Täuschung | Betrug
Deceit
is a tort of fradulent misrepresentations: it’s elements are:
1)
A fraudulent statement
2)
Made with intent to decieve
3)
Which induces reliance on the part of the plaintiff
4)
And results in injury to the plaintiff.
The
tort will also lie where the statement was made with reckless disregard as to
its truth or falsehood.
Deceit
is similar to the tort of passing off; however in the tort of deceit the
injured plaintiff is a consumer, and in the tort of passing off the injured
plaintiff is a competitor.
In
some jurisdiction deceit or fraud is a statutory tort and includes an action
against false advertising.
See:
Karlin v. IVF America, 1999 N.Y. LEXIS 815, *; 93 N.Y.2d 282; 712 N.E.2d 662;
690 N.Y.S.2d 495 (Suit for false advertising permitted under fraud statute in
case of medical misrepresentation).
Defamation
| Verleumdung / Üble Nachrede / Beleidigung
Communication
to third parties of false statements about a person such that the statements
injure the person’s reputation or dissuade others from associating with them.
There
are two forms of defamation, slander, which is oral and libel which is written.
In cases of slander, damages must be
proven, but in cases of libel damages are not presumed and must be proven.
Truth
is a defence to an accusation of defamation.
This
tort corresponds, roughly, to the German torts of Verleumdung, üble Nachrede,
and Beleidigung.
Beleidigung
is a more extensive injury than defamation and includes words which are
insulting or emotionally injurious.
At
common law in England a court could order the defaming defendant to offer an
apology.
See,
e.g.
McGowen
v. Prentice, La.App., 341 So.2d 55, 57.
Wolfson
v. Kirk, Fla.App., 273 So.2d 774, 776.
Defamation
and Public Figures
Public
figures, including officeholders and candidates, have to show that the
defamation was made with malicious intent and was not just fair comment.
Defamation
and the Constitution
In
the U.S. the First Amendment freedoms of speech and press must also be
considred. New York Times v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254, 264 (1964); Masson, 501
U.S. at 510. The U.S. constitution protects
statements of opinion on matters of public concern that do not contain
or imply a provable factual assertion. Milkovich, 497 U.S. at 20.
Defamation
and Opinion
To
determine whether a statement implies a factual assertion, courts examine the
totality of the circumstances in which it was made. They look at the context
and contents which the work present – the subject of the work and the setting
in which the subject is treated. The court will look to the language for hyperbole or figurative language. They look
to see whether the statement can be proven or disproven and whether it merely
expresses an opinion.
'[T]he
First Amendment requires that the courts allow latitude for interpretation.'
Partington, 56 F.3d at 1154 (quoting Moldea v. New York Times Co., 22 F.3d 310,
315 (D.C.Cir.), cert. denied, 115 S.Ct. 202 (1994)).
Defamation,
Fact or Opinion
A
defense to defamation is that the supposedly defamatory statement was in fact
merely an expression of a personal subjective opinion. To determine whether a
statement is merely an opinion, the court puts itself in the position of a
reasonable person percieving the statement in the totality of circumstances.
"what constitutes a statement of fact in one context may be treated as a
statement of opinion in another, in light of the nature and content of the communication
taken as a whole." (Gregory v. McDonnell Douglas Corp. (1976) 17 Cal.3d
596, 601.) Where the statement is
'cautiously phrased in terms of apparency,' it is less likely to be seen as an
assertion and more likely to be seen as an opinion. Other facts and
circumstances of the publication must also be considered. The statement must
also be seen as a whole: 'It may not be divided into segments and each portion
treated as a separate unit.' It must be read as a whole in order to understand
its signification. import and the effect which it was calculated to have on the
reader, and construed in the light of the whole scope and apparent object of
the writer, considering not only the actual language used, but the sense and
meaning which may have been fairly presumed to have been conveyed to those who
read it.
Default
/ Defect | Fehlverhalten / Fehler (?)
A
flaw in a product which causes it to malfunction which malfunction may lead to
a tort. See: products liability.
A
defect is ordinarily a condition precedent to the finding of a tort under a
theory of strict liability. However there are exceptions to the rule: in cases
of negligent supply by a merchant of an inherently dangerous product to minor
the manufacturor can also be held liable.
Defective
Product
Where
a product is defective the products manufacturer can be implicated in tort on a
theory of strict liability.
A
product is in a defective condition, i.e. is unreasonably dangerous to the
user, when it has a propensity or tendency for causing physical harm beyond
that which would be contemplated by the ordinary user.
A
defective condition is a legal cause of injury if it directly produces the
injury. A defective condition may be a legal cause of damage even though it
operates in combination with the act of another, or some other natural cause.
Thus,
in cases involving defective or unreasonably dangerous products the
manufacturer may be liable even though it exercised all reasonable care in the
design, manufacture and sale of the product in question.
Manufacturers
are not on always liable for accidents resulting from misuse of their products.
The manufacturer is not an insurer. The mere possibility that injury result
from the use of a prodcut is insufficient to impute liability to a
manufacturer. (Moomey v. Massey Ferguson, Inc., C.A.N.M., 429 F.2d 1184. 1184.)
here is no duty upon the manufacturer to produce a product that is
'accident-proof.' However the manufacturer is required to make a product free
of defective and unreasonably dangerous conditions.
See:
Manieri v. Volkswagenwerk, A.G., 151 N.J.Super. 422, 376 A.2d 1317, 1322.
Defence
French
défense: Latin defensa: defendere, to strike down or away, ward off, repel.
Mid. Eng. defence.
That
which is proposed by the defendant to defeat their opponents claim by denial of
the injury, by justification of the cause of injury, or by reducing or
eliminating the damages therefrom.
Defence
| Einwendung / Rechtfertigung
Evidence
offered by the accused to refute a charge.
Defence,
Affirmative
A
defence based not on the falsehood of the accusation but rather upon some
excuse or justification (q.v.) which may limit the damages in whole or in part.
Common affirmative defences include assumption of risk, incapacity, self
defence and the statute of limitations among others. The defendant bears the
burden of proof as to affirmative defences.
Defence,
Dilatory.
A
defence made not on the merits but to obstruct and harrass the prosecution of
the claim and which does not touch upon the substantive merits of the claim.
Defence,
Equitable
A
defence founded not on a theory of law but on a theory equity or on both a
theory of law and of equity. See: Equity
Defence,
Full.
A
defence in the common law which contests both the finding of damages, that the
defendant was negligent, and the extent thereof, that if the defendant were
negligent, that his damages would be not what the plaintiff claims but some
other lower value.
Defence,
General
A
general denial of the material allegations of a claim.
Defence,
Legal
A
defence made on a theory of law as opposed to equity.
Defence,
Peremptory
A
defence which asserts that the plaintiff does not have or never had a cause of
action.
Defendant
| Beklagte
The
party against whom recovery is sought and thus s/he who defends. The party
complained against. In criminal cases, the person accused of the crime. In
civil matters, the person or organization that is being sued.
In
equity actions the defendant is sometimes called the respondent. In practice
this term has disapperead with the merger of law and equity. The term
respondent is also, and much more commonly, used to designate the person
responding to an appeal.
Delict/Tort
| Delikt (~Haftung)
Latin:
Torquere, To twist. French: Tort – Wrong
A
private, i.e. civil and not criminal, wrong or injury other than an injury
resulting out of a contractual obligation, for which the law will grant a
remedy. See: prima facie tort. See: tort, prima facie tort
Deterrence
| Abschreckung / Prävention
One
of the theories upon which liability in tort is justified. The idea being
simply that the liability in tort will deter and prevent negligent errors.
Discernment
| Einsichtsfähigkeit
Being
of such an age that the law will impose ordinary legal responsibility upon the
person. Having attained the age of majority and suffering from no
incapacitating infirmity. See: children, capacity.
Disclaimer
/ Waiver |
Ordinarily
a tort will imply a remedy – ‘for every right there is a remedy’. However a
plaintiff may have waived their right, either expressly or implicitly. Where
that waiver was knowing, (i.e. appreciating the risks and dangers) intelligent
and voluntary (absence of coercion) that plaintiff will not be able to recover
for they have accepted the risk and thus the damage.
To
avoid tort liability manufacturors and merchants will often include disclaimer
clauses in their sales contracts. However these clauses may – or may not – be
declared void as against public policy.
Discrimination
| Diskriminierung
The
effect of a statute which arbitrarily affords certain privileges to one class
of persons yet denying them to another class of persons where no reasonable
distinction can be made between the two classes. Unfair treatment or denial of
rights or privileges to persons because of their race, age, nationality or
religious heritage or convictions.
Baker
v. California Land Title Co., O.C.Cal., 349 F.Supp. 235, 238, 239.
Division
of the burden of proof | Beweislastverteilung
In
some cases the burden of proof of certain elements of the claim will be on one
party, while other elements of the same claim will be on the other. For
example, in cases of libel, the plaintiff must prove the defamatory assertion
after which damages are presumed. The defendant however can move to prove the
truth of the matter asserted - but will bear the burden of proving the truth of
the libelous statement.
Due
Care / Standard of Care
The
care that an ordinarily reasonable and prudent person would use under the same
or similar circumstances. Proving the failure to exercise due care toward a
person who one has a legal duty resulting in injury to that person establishes
a prima facie tort. Due care is one of the standards of care (q.v.) in tort.
Physicians
are held to a higher standard of care, not that of a reasonably prudent person
but of a reasonably prudent physician.
Gillette
v. Tucker, 67 Ohio St. 106, 65 N.E.
865.
Bruni
v. Tatsumi, 46 Ohio St.2d 127, 129, 346 N E.2d 673, 676
doctors
Duress
| Zwang / Nötigung
Overwhelming
force which compels a defendant to act or fail to act to the injury of another.
Though that act or ommission would normally constitute a tort, here it may not
if the defendant can prove that their conduct was justified because of duress.
Hyde
v. Lewis, 25 lll.ApP.3d 495, 323 N.E.2d 533, 537.
Williams
v. Rentz Banking Co., 112 Ga.App. 384, 145 S.E.2d 256, 258.
Duty
Legal
or moral obligation. When recognised as a legal obligation the precondition for
all torts.
Rasmussen
v. Prudential lns. Co., 277 Minn. 266, 152 N,W.2d 359, 362.
Duty
of Care | Verkehrspflicht („Sorgfaltspflicht“)
The
duty of the defendant to act as a reasonably prudent person. This duty may be
elevated to one of utmost care in certain situations such as bailors
Duty
to act | Pflicht zu Handeln
Ordinarily
the common law, unlike continental civil law, does not impose an affirmative
duty to act. However the exceptions to the general rule of “no duty” are
numerous: For example family members, working colleagues and contracting
parties will all have a legal duty in tort to act non-negligently toward each
other.
Duty
to ensure safe premises | Verkehrssicherungspflicht
An
owner of real property is under a duty to warn invitees of hidden dangers on
his or her property.
Duty,
Organisational | Organisationspflicht
The
liability of a corporation is the same as that of a natural person. However the
corporation’s shareholders – unlike its board of director’s and employees –
will only be liable for the torts of the corporation to the extent of their
investment. Like any employer a corporation can be held liable for torts to
it’s employees which occur at the workplace according to the vicarious
liability imposed by the principle of respondeat superior (q.v.).
Due
Care / Standard of care
The
ordinary care which one is obliged to use towards others to protect against
risk of injury. The care attention and watchfulness which a reasonable person
would exercise under the circumstances in which he or she finds herself.
Failure to meet this standard constitutes one element of a prima facie tort,
namely breach of legal duty. The standard of care may be higher than ordinary
due care so the terms are not exactly synonymous. Due care is the ordinary
standard of care.
The
general rule is that the standard of care is that of a reasonably prudent
person. Exceptionally higher or lower standards of care can be imposed.
Murray
v. De Luxe Motor Stages of lllinois, Mo.App., 133 S.W.2d 1074, 1078.
Duty
Anglo-French
deuté indebtedness, obligation, from deu owing, due.
An
obligation, whether imposed by law or assumed by contract to conduct oneself
according to a certain standard such as
the standard of ordinary care. For example landowners have a duty to
maintain safe premises, drivers have a duty to drive responsably. Proving the
existence of a duty is one element of a prima facie tort. (proving its breach,
causation in fact, and legal causation are the others).
No
Duty Doctrine
The
general rule at common law is that persons are generally not subject to legal
duty. This is not the case in civil law jurisdictions. There are many
exceptions to the general rule in the common law.Family relations and
co-workers owe a duty to each other. Duty can be assumed by one’s actions. Thus
though one has no duty to aid a stranger once aid is offered to them that aid
must be non-negligent.
Duty,
breach
Literally,
to break.
The
term used to designate the failure to comply with one’s legal duty, for example
in tort the legal duty to act non-negligently. Breach of an existing legal duty
is one element of a prima facie tort (q.v.).
-E-
Efficient
Cause
A
synonym for proximate cause. Hillis v. Home Owners' Loan Corporation, 348 Mo.
601
That
cause which vhich Produces results which would not have come to pass except for
its interposition, and tor which, therefore, the person who set in motion the
owgina chain of causes is not responsible.
Southland
Greyhound Lines v. Cotten, Tex.Civ.App., 55 S.W.2d 1066, 1069
See
also: intervening / superseding cause.
Emergency
| Notfall ?
At
common law – unlike the continental civil law - there is no duty to rescue
persons in an emergency. The only justification for that rationale is the fact
that some persons may not in an emergency have the calm required to perform a
rescue.
Statutes
in some common law jurisdictions impose an affirmative duty to rescue or
perform medical treatment on physicians and other persons employed as
professional rescuers.
State
v. Perry, 29 Ohio App.2d 33, 278 N.E.2d 50, 53.
Eminent
domain
Eminent
domain is the right of the soveriegn over all property within its territorium.
It is the right of the soveriegn to confiscate without compensation.
Constitutional limitations on this sovereign power may exist and do exist in
the United States where property when taken
by the government must be fairly compensated and may only be taken for
public use.
Authority
of Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma v. Langley, 555 P.2d 1025, 1028.
Emotional
Distress | Gefühlsschaden
Damages
for emotional distress were greeted with skepticism at common law, all the more
so where no claim of material injury was averred. Still one could consider
assault an example where even the common law would permit recovery for
intentional infliction of emotional distress. And later the common law did
recognize exactly this tort: an intentional, i.e. willfull, action undertaken
to cause emotional distress can be a cause of action in tort. More dubious
however is the claim of a tort for negligent infliction of emotional distress.
Such claims have been recognized by some jurisdictions but only very recently
and not without skepticism and criticism. See: Negligent infliction of
emotional distress, intentional infliction of emotional distress.
Employee
vs. Independent Contractor
To
determine whether a person is an employee or a contractor a number of factors
must be considered in their totality: none of the factors are dispositive alone
but taken together with the others will lead to the determination of the status
of the person. A designation of the relationship by the parties without the
underlying relation is not controlling.
One
of the most important considerations is the degree of control exercised by the
company over the work of the workers.
Another factor to be considered is the duration of the relationship:
independent contractors are seasonal whereas employees are generally employed
indefinitely at will. An independent contract will tend to be paid not by the
hour but by the job as a flat rate or on commission.
Persons
injured by the negligence of an independent contractor will not be able to
recover against the person who bid the services of that contractor unless there
was negligence as to the hiring of the contractor. In contrast victims of
ordinary employees may have a recovery either against the employer or the
employee who will be jointly and severally liable under a theory of respondeat
superior. See: respondeat superior, vicarious liability, organizational
liability.
Riverbend
Country Club v. Patterson, Tex. Civ. App., 399 SW.2d 382, 383 (1965)
Hammes
v. Suk, 291 Minn. 233, 190 N.W.2d 478, 480, 481.
Sparks
v. L. D. Folsom Co., 217 Cal.App.2d 279, 31 Cal.Rptr. 640,
Housewright
v. Pacific Far East Line, Inc. (1964) 229 Cal. App. 2d 259, 40
Cal.Rptr.
208, 212;
Dowling
v Mutual Life Ins. Co. of New York, 168 So.2d 107, 112 (La.App.1964).
Enterprise
liability
Liability
of a business either for the on-the-job injuries of its employees or for the
collective liability of an entire industrial sector where it is clear that that
sector had produced a defective product but where the specific manufacturer
cannot be identified. See mass tort, market share liability (q.v.).
Employment
The
hiring of a person for compensation. Whether an act occurred “within the scope
of employment” will determine the liability of the employer for the torts of
the employee toward third parties.
Hinton
v. Columbia River Packers' Ass'n, C.C.A.Or., 117 F.2d 310. 117
Employment-at-will
Employment
for so long or so brief as the employer chooses. This is the usual form of
employment in the United States. At will employees may be fired at any time for
any reason or no reason at all.
Epedemiological
proof
The
study of medicine and probabilities in order to determine the causation of
illness and the application of these two sciences to the proof of facts in a
court of law. Epedemiological proofs are most often used in cases of toxic
torts (q.v.) and mass torts (q.v.).
Equity
Latin
aequitat- aequitas fairness, justice, from aequus equal, fair
Equity
can refer to an interest in a property not equivalent to the value of the
property. This meaning is not our concern here but is mentioned in order to
prevent further confusion in an already dense and obscure area of the common
law.
Historically
speaking the equity courts assured the function of justice as fairness and corrected
the mechanical legalistic application of rules of the law courts.
The
courts of equity arose in England from a need to provide relief for claims that
did not conform to the writ system existing in the courts of law. Originally,
the courts of equity exercised great discretion in fashioning remedies. Over
time, they established precedents, rules, and doctrines of their own that were
distinct from those used in the courts of law.
The
courts of equity were instituted by the King, then through his Chancellor to
correct the harsh legalism of the law courts. As a special and discretionary
correction instance the equity courts imposed moral restrictions upon the
plaintiffs and also limited the remedies they would award. While some remedies
would only be available at law, others would only be available at equity
(namely injunction and specific performance). Thus a procedural legalism
developed regqrding legal or equitable jurisdiction. This legalism however recreated the very problem
the equity courts were intended originally to correct! This situation has been
remedied somewhat by the fusion of law and equity courts into one general court
of first instance both in the U.S. and the U.K. – though the procedural
distinctions continue to survive.
Gilles
v. Department of Human Resources Development, 11 Cal.3d 313, 521 P.2d 110.
Evidence
Those
objects or statements which tend to prove or disprove the elements of a claim.
The things presented in court for the purpose of proof of matters there
asserted.
Taylor
v. Howard, lll R.I. 527, 304 A.2d 891, 893.
Testimony,
documents, photographs, maps and video tapes are all examples of evidence.
Evidence,
Clear and Convincing | hohe Wahrscheinlichkeit
See
supra clear and convincing evidence
Beyond
reasonable doubt | mit an sicherheit grenzende Wahrscheinlichkeit
A
standard of proof in the common law.
State
v. Dubina, 318 A.2d 95, 97.
Preponderance
of | Überwiegende Wahrscheinlichkeit
See:
Proof by a preponderance of the evidence infra
Presentation
of evidence | Beweisaufnahme
See
Presentation of evidence infra
Presentation
of evidence | Beweisaufnahme
Evaluation
of evidence | Beweiswürdigung
The
determination of the trier of fact as to whether the movant has carried their
burden of proof, i.e. whether the means of proof meet or exceed the standard of
proof.
Excuse.
A
reason alleged for the doing or not doing a thing. An excuse can reduce damages
partially or entirely. Excuses are either because the tort feasor had no choice
or because they had no intention to commit the act or its consequences. Minor
children, lunatics, and the infirm may be excused due to their lack of
discernment. Self defence and destruction of a good to prevent a greater evil
is an excuse because the defendant had no choice.
Expectation
damages | Erfüllungsinteresse
Those
damages which a plaintiff sustains not based on the injury but because of the
loss of some future, possibly speculative, stream of income. Courts will be
hostile to expectation damages because of their speculative character.
Extent
of Liability | Haftungsausfüllung
The
principle that, once a foundation of liability has been determined, that that
liability must be discharged; also the methods by which that liability is
discharged
-F-
Fault
| (zivilrechtliches) Verschulden
The
entire system of negligent torts, with the exception of strict liability, is
predicated on the notion of some fault, i.e. the absence of the care of a
reasonably prudent person. Fault can be defined as negligence or the failure to
perform a legal duty.
l
Continental Ins. Co. v. Sabine Towing Co., C.C.A.Tex., 117 F.2d 694, 697.
Kersey
Mfg. Co. v. Rozic, 207 Pa.Super, 182, 215 A.2d 323, 325.
Fault,
Comparative | Mitverschulden
See
negligence, comparative (syn.)
Fualt,
Contributory | Mitverschulden
See
negligence contributory
Federal
Law | Bundesrecht
The
United States, like many other former British colonies, is a federal system
predicated upon the dual sovereignty of the states/provinces on the one hand,
and on the national soveriegn at another. Germany is also a federal system,
however the German federal government has broader powers than that of the
United States
Fellow
servant rule | Nicht Haftung des Arbeitgebers, wenn ein Arbeiter schuldhaft
einen anderen Verletzt
At
common law an employer would not be held liable for torts injuring an employee
which occurred on the premises of the work-place but which were the fault of
one of his servants. Prior to the industrial revolution, where there were both
fewer and less serious accidents and where there was less mobility the fellow
servant rule made sense. But with the reality of grave injury and highly mobile
employees the necessity of providing at least de facto insurance for workers
led to the abandonment of this rule and a determination of a general liability
for an employer for all torts occurring at the work-place in the scope of the
employees duties. This general liability is known as the principle of
“respondeat superior”.
Walsh
v. Eubanks, 183 Ark. 34, 34 S.W.2d 762, 764.
Southern
Ry. Co, v. Taylor, 57 App.D.C. 21, 16 F.2d 517, 519.
Foreseebility
| Vorhersehbarkeit
The
modern determination of a negligent tort is dependant upon the foreseeability
of the tort arising from the defendants conduct. That is, whether a reasonably
prudent person would be able to foresee that their conduct would result in
damage to the plaintiff.
Emery
v. Thompson, 347 Mo. 494, 148 S.W.2d 479, 480.
Clark
v. Wagoner, Tex., 452 S.W.2d 437, 439.
Wyatt
v. Motsenbocker, Tex.Civ.App., 360 S.W.2d 543, 546.
Foundation
of liability / basis of liability | Haftungsgrund
The
principle that a tort must first be grounded in some factual instance. This
principle of German law has no exact conceptual equivalent in the theory of
common law torts though of course in practice analogues and paralells can be
found.
-G-
General
Contract Terms | Allgemeine Geschäftsbedingungen
Those
clauses of a contract which are not negotiated. These clauses, often in fine
print, may or may not be read and may or may not be comprehended or
comprehensible. Thus courts may, at their discretion, set them aside if
manifest injustice results under a theory of unconscionability. German law
appears however to take these clauses much more seriously, both to the benefit
of the consumer and to society at large through greater legal certainty. [?]
Governmental
immunity
The
principle of the common law is that “the king can do no wrong” – that is that
there be no remedy against the sovereign because of sovereign immunity unless
the sovereign waive that immunity. This principle continues to exist in America
however the government consents to be sued according to the federal tort claims
act.
Local
governments can be sued directly under 42 U.S.C.A. § 1983
Monell
v. Department of Social Services of N. Y., 429 U.S. 1071, 97 S.Ct. 807, 50
L.Ed.2d 789.
See:
Sovereign Immunity (syn)
Principe
Compania Naviera, S.A. v. Board of Com'rs of Port of New Orleans, D.C.La., 333
F.Supp. 353, 355.
Governmental
Liability | Staatshaftung
The
liability of the government in tort was limited at common law by government
immunit (also known as soveriegn immunity) (q.v.). This has changed with the
introduction of tort-claim statutes, both by federal and state governments.
-H-
Honour;
Reputation : Ehre
The
moral right of a person to be held in good esteem by the community until their
comportment prooves that they are in fact otherwise.
Hospital
Liability | Krankenhausträgerhaftung
Hospitals
may be immune from torts either as charities, when run by the private sector,
under the principle of charitable immunity or, when run by the state, under a
theory of governmental immunity. This immunity however would not exculpate the
negligence of the hospital’s employees.
-I-
Immunity:
See
governmental Immunity
Independent
Contractor
See:
employee vs. independent contractor
Informed
Consent
See:
consent, informed
Insurance
| Versicherung
Industrialisation
led to serious work-place accidents. Consequently to avoid the worst injustices
governments enacted mandatory insurance systems to cover workers against such
accidents. The tort system also plays an insurance role, but is generally not
as efficient due to the costs of attorneys as an insurance system.
First
party | Schadensversicherung
Insurance
by a person of their person or property. Such insurance could arguably be
considered as deductible from whatever damages award that the insured receives
in the event of being victim of a tort-feasor. In cases of obligatory insurance
a good argument can be made that reducing the damages award by the insurance is
just, particularly in cases of no-fault liability such as auto accidents.
However in cases of voluntary assurance the collateral source rule would be
perverse: it would undermine the deterrence function of tort law by permitting
plaintiffs to escape unsanctioned or under-sanctioned and punish prudent
plaintiffs who seek insurance.
Third
party | Haftpflichtversicherung
(Obligatory)
Insurance of persons against accidents that they cause. Such insurance where
mandatory is clearly legal. What of cases where the insurance is not mandatory?
There the risk is percieved that permitting insurance coverage may lead to
irresponability. However that rationale is not strong: the costs of litigation,
both in terms of money and time, as well as the threat of punitive damages and
higher premiums indicate that the deterrence function of tort law is probably
not undermined by permitting insurance to cover tortious losses.
Social
| Sozialversicherung
As
explained above, social insurance is a mandatory insurance coverage which is
intended to spread losses for injury through society. Social insurance serves
the goal not of deterrence or punishment or even prevention but rather the goal
of compensation.
Immunity
Exemption
from legal duties. In so far as torts are concerned, immunities may be
classified according to their extent, being absolute or qualified, or their
object, being governments or persons.
Governmental
Immunity
A
principle precluding the institution of a suit against the government without
its consent.
Governmental
immunity exempts the government from liability for its torts. It is referred to
as either governmental immunity or as soveriegn immunity. The terms are
synonymous.
The
principle of the common law is that “the king can do no wrong” – that is that
there be no remedy against the sovereign because of sovereign immunity unless
the sovereign waive that immunity.
This
principle continues to exist in America however the government consents to be
sued according to the federal tort claims act. According to Holmes, the
"sovereign is exempt from suit [on the] practical ground that there canbe
no legal right against the authority that makes the law on which the right
depends." 205 U.S. 349, 353.
"[S]tatutes
waiving the sovereign immunity of the United States must be`construed strictly
in favor of the sovereign." McMahon v.United States, 342 U.S. 25, 27
(1951).
The
government can waive its immunity.
Local
municipalities often enjoy “regulatory immunity” for those tasks which arise
out of any of the municipality's regulatory
decisions involving cable television. See, e.g.
Caprotti
v. Town of Woodstock, 1999 N.Y. LEXIS
3729, *; 94 N.Y.2d 73; 721 N.E.2d 957; 699 N.Y.S.2d 707
Types
of Personal Immunity
Personal
immunities protect government official from personal liabilities for torts
committed in the scope of their office. Personal immunities are either
qualified or absolute. For a good summary see
Lauer
v. City of New York, 2000 N.Y. LEXIS 907, *; 95 N.Y.2d 95; 733 N.E.2d 184; 711
N.Y.S.2d 112
Qualified
Immunity
Qualified
immunity protects government officials from personal liability for the torts
they commit in the service of the government. It protects them “from liability
for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established
statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have
known."
Harlow
v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 818 (1982).
"Therefore,
regardless of whether the constitutional violation occurred, the officer should
prevail if the right asserted by theplaintiff was not `clearly established' or
the officer could have reasonably believed that his particular conduct was
lawful." Romero v. KitsapCounty, 931 F.2d 624, 627 (9th Cir. 1991)
(emphasis added). Furthermore, "[t]he entitlement is an immunity from suit
rather than a mere defense to liability; .. . it is effectively lost if a case
is erroneously permitted to go to trial." Mitchell v. Forsyth, 472 U.S.
511, 526 (1985).
The
qualified immunity test requires a two-part analysis: "(1) Was the law
governing the official's conduct clearly established? (2) Underthat law, could
a reasonable officer have believed the conduct was lawful?" Act-Up!, 988
F.2d at 871; see also Tribble v. Gardner, 860 F.2d321, 324 (9th Cir. 1988),
cert. denied, 490 U.S. 1075 (1989).
Even
where there has been a constitutional violation immunity will protect the
government officer if he or she "could have reasonably believed that
hisparticular conduct was lawful." Romero, 931 F.2d at 627.
"[A]
district court's denial of a claim of qualified immunity, to the extent that it
turns on an issue of law, is an appealable 'final decision'within the meaning
of 28 U.S.C. section 1291 notwithstanding the absence of a final
judgment." Mitchell v. Forsyth, 472 U.S. 511, 530(1985).
Qualified
immunity only applies to the acts of the government official undertaken in the
scope of their office.
Absolute
Immunity
Absolute
immunity is unconditional immunity from all personal civil liability, e.g.
diplomatic immunity.
Charitable
Immunity
Immunity
from civil liability and particularly as regards negligent torts that is
granted to a charitable or nonprofit organization such as a hospital.
Corporate
Immunity
Immunity
from liability in tort granted to an officer of a corporation who acted in good
faith within the scope of their duties.
Discretionary
Immunity
Qualified
immunity from civil liability for tortious acts or omissions that arise from a
government employee's discretionary acts performed as part of their duties
Executive
Immunity
Immunity
granted to officers of the executive branch of government from personal
liability for tortious acts or omissions done pursuant to their duties. The US
president's executive immunity is absolute, the immunity of other federal
executive officials is qualified.
Judicial
Immunity
Absolute
immunity from liability that is granted to judges and court officers such as
grand juries and prosecutors and for tortious acts or omissions done within the
scope of their jurisdiction orauthority.
Legislative
Immunity
Absolute
immunity from liability that is granted to legislators for tortious acts or
omissions done in the course of legislative activities.
Official
Immunity
Discretionary
immunity from personal liability that is granted to public officers for
tortious acts and omissions
Ministerial
/ Discretionary distinction
The
law in this field is intricate and frankly byzantine.
Where
municipalities have waived their common-law tort immunity for the negligence of
their employees, a distinction is drawn, between "discretionary" and
"ministerial" governmental acts. A public employee's discretionary
acts--meaning conduct involving the exercise of reasoned judgment--may not result in the municipality's liability even
when the conduct is negligent. By contrast,
ministerial acts--meaning conduct requiring adherence to a governing
rule, with a compulsory result--may
subject the municipal employer to liability for negligence (see, Tango v
Tulevech, 61 NY2d 34, 40-41). No one disputes that the Medical Examiner's
misconduct here in failing to correct
the record and deliver it to the authorities was ministerial.
Lauer
v. City of New York, 2000 N.Y. LEXIS 907, *; 95 N.Y.2d 95; 733 N.E.2d 184; 711
N.Y.S.2d 112
Imputation
| Zurechnung
The
determination of a legal duty or right to a person. The imputation may occur
through implication or through legal fiction, i.e. a constructive duty or
right.
Imputed
Negligence
Negligence
where the fault of one person is transferred to another. For example, the
negligence of a child may be imputed to a parent or that of a worker to his or
her employer.
Schmidt
v. Martin 212 Kan. 373, 510 P.2d 1244, 1246.
See
also: respondeat superior, master and servant, children.
Indemnity
| Entschädigung
Compensation
given (often from an insurance fund) to make whole the injury already
sustained. May refer either to compensation via private insurance, social
insurance or indemnisation of the victim of a tort by the tortfeasor through
whatever resources the tortfeasor has.
Independent
Contractor | selbständiger Vertragspartner
A
person or business who serves another but on their own account, thus generally
being paid either a flat rate or commission. The independent contractor is not
subject to the control of she who hires them and thus the person who engages
the contractor is not liable for the acts or ommissions of the contractor.
informed
consent
A
rule of full disclosure of all relevant facts which is necessary prior to the
validity of a waiver of rights. Informed consent is most often a statutory
obligation and effects most usually the field of medicine. Thus the physician
must inform the patient of the risks and advantages of the procedure or
medicine as well as the possible alternatives so that the patient can make a
fully informed choice. Except in emergency, physicians must obtain the informed
consent of the patient prior to treatment.
Injunction
| Unterlassungsanordnung
An
injunction at common law is an equitable remedy which can bar, either
temporarily or permanently, and either prospectively or retrospectively any
conduct of a defendant which constitutes a nuisance. Breach of such injunction
will give rise to liquidated damages.
Gainsburg
v. Dodge, 193 Ark. 473, 101 S.W.2d 178, 180.
Injury
| Verletzung (eines rechtlich geschützten Interesses)
Injury
implies damages and although the two terms are not synonyms they are very
nearly so. Injury is the ordinary consequence of violation of one’s rights
though injury does not always lead to damages which is why though the two terms
are nearly the same they are not exactly so. Wherever there are damages there
was an injury but ther is not always damages where there is injury. This
principle of damnum sine injuria(q.v.) may be difficult for the lay person.
However injury can encompassing abstract rights with no monetary value. Thus in
cases of damnum sine injuria the injury is either de minimis, i.e. a trifling
and too small to be remedied practically at the law or incommensurate. In such
cases the plaintiff will have a satisfaction remedy of nominal damages - which
are also called symbolic damages.
Personal
| Verletzung körperlicher Integrität (Körperschaden)
Many
torts, though not all, involve injuries to the body of a person. Such injuries
are known as personal injuries.
Intent
| Vorsatz
The
autonomous individual – despite the fact of mutual dependance of people on
others - is the centerpiece of the liberal notion of humanity. Thus the legal
concept of intent, i.e. volition is central to an understanding of law in the
liberal regimes. Intent is that state of
minde
which is determined to do a certain thing.
Reinhard
v. Lawrence Warehouse Co., 41 Cal. App.2d 741, 107 P.2d 501, 504.
State
v. Gantt, 26 N.C. App. 554, 217 S.E.2d 3, 5.
Intentional
infliction of emotional distress
The
common law would not have recognized a claim for IIED as such, though such a
claim could have been made using the general claim of action on the case or
trespass on the case (q.v.) which are synonymous terms for the same action.
Alternatively an IIED claim could have been – and as case, could be – made on a
theory of assault if the victim were placed in fear of imminent bodily harm.
This claim – where recognized – requires an intent on the part of the tort
feasor, and an intent to harm the person. Thus there is less concern with
fraudulent or exageratted claims that inheres in claims of negligent infliction
of emotional distress (q.v.).
Even
where this claim is recognized it is limited. E.g.,
“In
our view, allowing emotional distress claims
against a municipality for an official's negligent failure to transmit correct
information to law enforcement authorities conducting criminal investigations
in this case will have far-reaching effects in future cases.”
Lauer,
Respondent, v. City of New York
95
N.Y.2d 95; 733 N.E.2d 184; 711 N.Y.S.2d 112; 2000 N.Y. LEXIS 907
Intentional
Interference With Prospective Economic Advantage
This
tort protects the relationship of trust and confidence between two persons as
regards a third person. To prove a tort of intentional interference with
prospective economic advantage the plaintiff must show:
1)
An economic relationship between themselves and another person
2)
A potential future benefit arising out of the relation
3)
That defendant knew of the relationship
4)
Action or intent to commit acts designed to disrupt the relationship
5)
Damages caused by the defendant’s acts.
Buckaloo
v. Johnson (1975) 14 Cal.3d 815, 827.
Essentially
this tort remedies situation where a contract would have been formed but for
the tortious interference of the defendant.
See
Besicorp Ltd. v Alan R. Kahn, 2002 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 77, * ; 736 N.Y.S.2d
708; 2002 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 77
Intentional
Interference with Contract
The
tort of intentional interference with contract grew out of the tort of
'inducing breach of contract.'' (Seaman's Direct Buying Service Inc. v.Standard
Oil Co. (1984) 36 Cal.3d 752, 765.) and is in fact one type thereof.
Essentially
this tort remedies situation where a contract has been formed but is repudiated
because of the tortious interference of the defendant.
See,
e.g. Builders Corporation ofAmerica v. U.S. (N.D.Cal.'57 148 F.Supp. 482, 484,
fn. 1, revd. on other grounds (9th Cir.'58) 259 F.2d 766, see also Pacific Gas
& ElectricCo. v. Bear Stearns & Co.(1990) 50 Cal.3d 1118, 1126.)
'The
actionable wrong lies in the inducement to break thecontract or to sever the
relationship, not in the kind of contract or relationship so disrupted, whether
it is written or oral, enforceable or notenforceable.' ' Pacific Gas &
Electric Co. v. Bear Stearns & Co., supra, 50 Cal.3d at 1127.
The
act of inducing breach of contract must be intentional. Thus an act which
unintentionally leads to the breach of contract would not be grounds for a
cause of action.
Intentional
torts | Vorsätzliche Delikte
For
every intentional tort there is a corresponding crime. Thus the tort of assault
/ the crime of assault, the tort of battery / the crime of battery etc. The
intentional torts are those torts committed not through negligence or under a
theory of strict liability but deliberately.
Intervening
cause / Intervening Efficient Cause
Where
a necessary cause to a tort occurs and where a superseeding sufficient cause
intervenes that intervening cause will clearly be a tort. The question then is
what of the underlying necessary cause? Will it also be a tort? If the
necessary cause was not however sufficient then it will not be a legal cause
and will not give rise to a cause of action. If on the other hand the necessary
cause was in fact sufficient but did not occur due to the intervening cause
liability for the earlier necessary cause will also lie.
For
example imagine a person has been poisoned: because of the poison they will
die. However before they die a second tort feasor shoots them to death. Clearly
the second party is liable. The first party is also liable – strictly speaking
the second cause is not an intervening cause.
Imagine
the opposite case: defendant is drunk, and drives with a passanger. At a
traffic light, the passenger gets out of the stopped car, and crosses the
street against the signal – and is struck by another driver. Clearly the
drunken driver is negligent and is also factually a cause, i.e. a necessary
cause. However his action is not sufficient: once the passenger got out of the
car and crossed the street the second car acts as an intervening cause.
Phillabaum
v. Lake Erie & W. R. Co., 315 Ill. 131, 145 N.E. 806, 808.
Coyle
v. Stopak, 86 N.W.2d 758, 768;
-J-
Joint
and Several Liability | Mitverschuldung
/ Mitgefährdung / Gesamtschuldnerische Haftung
Where
two plaintiffs contribute to the defendants injury and where either plaintiffs
conduct would have led to the injury they are both liable as as
joint-tortfeasors. The plaintiff can recover against either of them for the
entire cost of their injury, though the joint tort-feasors may have causes of
action inter se.
Joint
tortfeasors:
See
concurrent tortfeasor
Justification
| Rechtsertigungsgrund
The
act by which a party accused shows and maintains a good and legal reason in
court, why he did the thing he is called upon to answer. Justifiable actions
include self defence, or even defence of one’s house or property. Libel and
slander can be justified by proving the truth of the assertion or because the
defendant had the write to publish, for example before a government inquiry.
Justification
must be specially pleaded. When proven however it is a completely bars the
action.
Young
Women's Christian Ass'n of Princeton, N.J. v. Kugler, D.C.N.J., 342 F.Supp.
1048, 1062.
-L-
Law
See
: action at law
Legal
Cause / Proximate Cause | Zurechnungsgrund
Causation
in tort is divided between factual cause, i.e. those necessary causes but for
which the tort would not have occurred, and proximate or legal cause, which
concerns those causes which were not only necessary but sufficient (or
sometimes efficient) and thus which will give rise to legal liability in tort.
See:
causation, legal cause
Krauss
v. Greenbarg, C.C.A.Pa., 237 F.2d 569, 572
Giles
v. Moundridge Milling Co., 351 Mo. 568, 173 S.W.2d 745, 750.
Liability
| Haftung
Liability
is the legal obligation of a person to be held responsable for the injury to
another whether that injury is contractual (breach of contract) or tortious
(negligence, strict liability, intentional tort).
The
consequence of a finding of a prima facie tort if unrefuted by some affirmative
defence rise to legal liability in tort.
Mayfield
v. First Nat. Bank of Chattanooga, Tenn., C.C.A.Tenn., 131 F.2d 1013, 1019.
Insurance,
liability | Haftpflichtversicherung
See
insurance
Extent
of liability | Haftungsausfüllung
In
German law the court distinguishes between a finding of negligence and a
determination of the extent of damages. The determination of the extent of damages
establishes what remedies the defendant has against the plaintiff, e.g. how
much she will be compensated. The common law does this as well though is not as
doctrinally strict in that the German determination of negligence and its
extent corresponds also to another principle which does not appear to have an
analogue in the common law that injury and damage be united in one person
(Tatbestandprinzip). The common law reaches the same result albeit using a
slightly different conceptual apparatus. In a case where there was no unity of
injury and damages, that is where there is an injury but no damages (damnum
sine injuria) the common law would award nominal damages.
Foundation
of liability | Haftungsgrund
The
foundation of liability is the determination of the negligence of the tort
feasor and the injury arising therefrom to the plaintiff. It does not however
concern the determination of the extent of liability (q.v.). In German law that
is a separate inquiry, though in the common law the separation is not as
distinct.
Joint
and several liability | Gesamtschuldnerische Haftung
When
several tort-feasors actions result in a tortious injury to the plaintiff and
where each of their actions independantly would have led to the injury they
shall be considered jointly and severally liable. The plaintiff may further
choose to sue any or all of them either individually or as a group.
Insurance
liability | Haftpflichtversicherung
See
liability insurance
Proportional
liability | Anteilshaftung
At
common law the all-or-nothing rule (q.v.) required that a plaintiff have either
a full recovery against defendant or none at all. This was seen to have led to
substantive injustice in that somewhat negligent defendants would be able to
avoid liability entirely – or be implicated for the entirety of the damages
plaintiff suffered.
Proportional
liability proposes to remedy the all-or-nothing rule by permitting a defendant
to be held liable for damages only in proportion to their fault in creating the
accident. Thus if the defendant were found only to have contributed to 20
percent of the tort (leaving aside for the moment the question of how that
determination is made and whether a sufficient cause can only be partially
responsible for a consequence) the defendant would be only liable for twenty
percent of the damages. Thus proportional liability often arises in questions
of joint and several liability.
Contributory
negligence vs. comparative fault
Proportional
liability also arises in cases of contributory negligence / comparative fault.
At common law the rule of contributory negligence held that if the plaintiff
were at all responsible for their misfortune – that is if the plaintiff’s own
negligence contributed to the tort – be that contribution ever so small the
plaintiff would have no recovery because of the all-or-nothing rule. This rule
was also seen to be injust and in some jurisdictions has been replaced with the
rule of comparative fault. According to the rule of comparative fault a finding
of plaintiff’s negligence will reduce the award of damages to the plaintiff.
Thus if plaintiff were ten per cent at fault for creating their injury then the
damage award to the plaintiff would be reduced by ten percent.
In
cases of products liability liability according to market share and
epedemiological proof can be used to avoid the problems of causal
indeterminicity – although they raise other problems of indeterminicity and may
undermine legal certainty. In those cases proof is obtained via statistical
evidence and thus the rationale of proportional liability appears again.
Market
share liability
The
rationale of proportional liability can arise first in cases where it is known
that the plaintiff was injured by a product, but not known which manufacturer
created the product. There a proportional market share liability may be
applied, at least where it is known that all such products were in fact
defective. Thus if plaintiff ingests a defective drug, and a certain
corporation has fifteen percent of the market share then the defendant would be
fifteen per cent liable for the damages arising out of their injury. See, e.g.
Hamilton
v. Beretta U.S.A. Corp., 2001 N.Y. LEXIS 946, *; 96 N.Y.2d 222; 750 N.E.2d
1055; 727 N.Y.S.2d 7 (Market share liability where handgun manufacturer unknown
due to negligence of manufacturer).
Epedemiological
Proof
The
second instance, epedemiological proof, arises where it is certain that the
plaintiff was injured but uncertain what the cause was. For example a
corporation negligently dumps toxic wastes. As a result the rate of cancer in
that zone doubles. Plaintiff might be able to argue that the defendant should
be fifty per cent liable for their cancer.
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