Understanding TortsThis treatise is the perfect complement to first-year tort courses & is suitable for use with any tort casebook. Concise & authoritative, |
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Page 274
... dangerous . ” It is to plaintiff's substantial advantage to have defendant's conduct characterized as " abnormally dangerous . ” With this designation , plaintiff can prove liability without having to prove defendant's culpable conduct ...
... dangerous . ” It is to plaintiff's substantial advantage to have defendant's conduct characterized as " abnormally dangerous . ” With this designation , plaintiff can prove liability without having to prove defendant's culpable conduct ...
Page 334
... danger has been interpreted to mean that the product must be more dangerous than an ordinary consumer would expect when the product is used in its intended or reasonably foreseeable manner . Illumination on this point is found in ...
... danger has been interpreted to mean that the product must be more dangerous than an ordinary consumer would expect when the product is used in its intended or reasonably foreseeable manner . Illumination on this point is found in ...
Page 20
... dangerous . Transportation , dangerous 284-285 Blasting activity . . . 279-280 . Control , activity under defendant's 276-279 Due care , danger unavoidable even with exercise of ... 276 ... Historical background 273 Impoundment cases ...
... dangerous . Transportation , dangerous 284-285 Blasting activity . . . 279-280 . Control , activity under defendant's 276-279 Due care , danger unavoidable even with exercise of ... 276 ... Historical background 273 Impoundment cases ...
Contents
INTENTIONAL INTERFERENCES WITH PERSONS | 1 |
3 Omissions | 2 |
Page | 31 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
accident action approach assumption of risk award breach of duty burden causation chattel child claim common law comparative negligence compensation constitute context contributory negligence court held criminal culpable custom decision defamation defective defendant defendant's conduct determination doctrine duty owed economic loss emotional distress establish evidence example failure fault foreseeable immunity impose liability infra intentional torts intervening force jurisdictions jury justified land possessor licensee limited loss of consortium manufacturer medical malpractice mental distress negligently inflicted nuisance Overview Palsgraf permitted personal injury physical physician plaintiff potential privilege protect proximate cause punitive damages reasonable person recover recovery res ipsa loquitur responsibility Restatement result rule seller standard of care statute strict liability supra Supreme Court third party tort liability tortfeasors tortious transferred intent trespass trespass to chattel type of harm unreasonable victim warn warranty wrongful birth wrongful death
References to this book
A Proper Dyaloge Betwene a Gentillman and an Husbandman Douglas Harold Parker No preview available - 1996 |