THE SUPREME COURT BRENDAN O NEILL AND DUNNES STORES. Judgment delivered by O Donnell, J on the 16th day of November 2010

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "THE SUPREME COURT BRENDAN O NEILL AND DUNNES STORES. Judgment delivered by O Donnell, J on the 16th day of November 2010"

Transcription

1 THE SUPREME COURT 77/07 Fennelly, J. O Donnell, J. McKechnie, J. BETWEEN: BRENDAN O NEILL PLAINTIFF AND DUNNES STORES DEFENDANT Judgment delivered by O Donnell, J on the 16th day of November 2010 On the 4th July 2002 the Plaintiff was doing some evening shopping in a shopping centre in Thurles in which the Defendant was the principal tenant. Around the time the Plaintiff was approaching the rear door of the centre, Mr Keith Byrne a security guard employed by the Defendant, saw two youths in the off licence of the Defendant s store taking bottles from shelves and putting them into their inside pockets. They were tall, well built, and it appears, intoxicated. He approached them and asked for identity as they appeared to be under 18. One of them, Ciaran McCormack, produced a false ID. The other Alexander Colville, said he would get his from a car and then ran away. Mr Byrne gave chase and caught Alexander Colville just outside the centre. Alexander Colville struggled and tried to reach for one of the bottles in his coat to strike Mr Byrne and Mr Byrne asked a Sadie Stapleton, a cleaner in the shopping centre to go and get help from, he said, some of the managers in Dunnes Stores. Ms Stapleton encountered the Plaintiff and a number of others coming into the shopping centre and said words to the effect help, there is after being a robbery. Ms Stapleton s recollection was not markedly different. She thought she said something like help Keith outside, he s in trouble. Only the Plaintiff responded. The Plaintiff saw Mr Byrne struggling with Alexander Colville and saw Alexander Colville trying to get a bottle to strike Mr Byrne. The Plaintiff says that Mr Byrne asked him for help. Although Mr Byrne denied this, the trial judge accepted the Plaintiff s evidence in this regard, and on this appeal the Appellant properly accepts that this is the factual basis upon which the Court must now proceed. The Plaintiff went to Mr Byrne s assistance and Mr Byrne frankly acknowledges that when the Plaintiff came to help, Mr Byrne did not turn it down. It is apparent that this was a difficult situation for Mr Byrne who was the only security guard then on duty. The Plaintiff helped Mr Byrne to restrain Alexander Colville who was at that stage trying to hit Mr Byrne with a bottle. At this point Ciaran McCormack was on the scene pulling and kicking

2 at both Mr Byrne and Mr O Neill telling them to leave his friend alone. However Mr Byrne had been able to phone the gardaí on his mobile phone. The police station was close by and a member of the gardaí, Garda Henry Delaney, arrived. The Plaintiff continued to restrain Alexander Colville. Ciaran McCormack went back into the shopping centre. Mr Byrne pointed him out to Garda Delaney and told him that Ciaran McCormack had been involved in the incident. Garda Delaney went back into the centre, got Ciaran McCormack and brought him back and began to take details. Ciaran McCormack became extremely aggressive and started pushing and kicking at Mr Byrne, the Plaintiff and Garda Delaney. Garda Delaney then told Ciaran McCormack to go away and he left. Mr Colville was still being held by the Plaintiff and Mr Byrne. More youths came on the scene and there was a lot of pushing and shoving. Garda Delaney had radioed for help and more gardaí arrived on the scene. Just about that time Ciaran McCormack came back from behind the shopping bay with a motor cycle chain and swung it, striking the Plaintiff across the face, fracturing his nose, injuring his face and driving the Plaintiff back against a pebble dashed wall injuring his back. Ciaran McCormack continued to stand swinging the chain but eventually the gardaí subdued him. During the altercation, the Plaintiff and Mr Byrne were told by some of the youths that they knew where they lived, and that they would be killed. It was a very violent incident and the most serious during the two years or so in which Mr Byrne had been employed in Thurles. In these proceedings, the Plaintiff sues the Defendant contending that the Defendant s negligence caused, or was a cause, of his injuries. The case started in the Circuit Court but because the condition of the Plaintiff worsened, it was transferred to the High Court. Nevertheless, the case was conducted in a fairly straightforward way. There was a small number of witnesses, no expert evidence, and the case concluded in one day. To this account of the facts it is necessary to add some further elements of the evidence, most of which emerged from the testimony of Mr Byrne. Mr Byrne had received training in unarmed combat, restraint and self defence in the Army. At the time of the trial he was working as a body guard in Haiti. He accepted on a number of occasions that there was an inevitable risk of injury when he confronted any suspected shop lifter. That, he accepted frankly, was part of the job. He himself sustained some minor injuries in the fracas. The Defendant company had a protocol for behaviour of security guards. He did not have a copy in court and the Defendant did not put the protocol of evidence. Mr Byrne recalled however, that it provided that if he felt he could deal with the situation he could go ahead and deal with it but if he felt he was outnumbered then he was to wait for help. On the night in question he was the only security guard on duty. Normally during the day, there were two or three security guards, but on this occasion he did not know whether the other security guard was off duty or had finished work for the evening. The security manager had finished work at approximately 6p.m. which would have been the norm on a late night shopping. He had been supplied with a two-way radio but he did not have it with him that evening. He said that there was no point since there was no one to take the other unit. There was also no arrangement that a manager working that evening

3 should take the other unit. In denying that he had sought assistance from the Plaintiff he explained that It would be completely against procedure to get a member of the public involved. On this relatively sparse evidential basis the Court had to determine the Plaintiff s claim for damages. At the close of the Plaintiff s case the Defendant had sought a non suit, indicating however that it intended to go into evidence in the event that the application was refused. Accordingly the issue at that stage was whether the evidence disclosed a prima facie case. The trial judge duly refused the application and indicated he would give his reasons in his judgment. In the event, after hearing all the evidence, the trial judge found that the Defendant had been negligent. The judge s reasoning is set out in a relatively short passage in his judgment. First he held that having only one guard on duty was inadequate. Second, leaving Mr Byrne to communicate by way of mobile phone was much less efficient than having an effective two-way radio system. Third, Mr Byrne, while acting conscientiously in confronting what the trial judge called, vividly, two drunken louts had attempted a citizen s arrest, rather than adopting the more prudent course of relying on his own observations and the CCTV evidence to ground a complaint to the gardaí. The trial judge concluded Mr Byrne negligently breached that protocol and the defendant is vicariously liable for that act. The situation requiring assistance of a rescuer was reasonably foreseeable and was brought about by a combination of Mr Byrne s non adherence to the protocol and the Defendants failure to provide appropriate backup for Mr Byrne. It seems therefore that the trial judge identified two distinct bases for liability: first, primary liability of a wrongdoer to a rescuer who responds to the peril created by the wrongdoer; and second, the vicarious liability of an employer for the negligent acts of his or her employee. The trial judge proceeded to award the Plaintiff damages. Against the decision on liability the Defendant appeals to this Court. There is no appeal on the quantum of the damages. On this appeal the Defendant takes four points which are interrelated to some extent. First, it is said that the trial judge was wrong to refuse the Defendant s application for a non suit at the end of the Plaintiff s case. It was pointed out that almost all the evidence on which the trial judge relied in his finding of liability was derived from the Defendant s evidence. Looked at critically, it is suggested, there was no prima facie case at the close of the Plaintiff s case. It was argued that the trial judge had failed to give separate reasons for the refusal of the non suit application, his reasons being subsumed in the general reasons upon which he found the Defendant negligent. It is clear that there was very little evidence to sustain a finding at the close of the plaintiff s case: the bulk of the evidence helpful to the Plaintiff was elicited in the crossexamination of the Defendant s witnesses. However, before proceeding to analyse in any detail the precise weight of the evidence adduced by the Plaintiff, a more basic issue arises: on the assumption that there was no sufficient evidence to find a prima facie case at the close of the Plaintiff s case, but where the Defendant goes into evidence and

4 supplies the deficiency in the Plaintiff s case, can an appeal court ignore the evidence which ex hypothesi show that the Defendant s had been negligent and nevertheless overturn what appears to be a correct decision in favour of the Plaintiff, on the grounds that the Plaintiff had failed to establish a prima facie case in his own evidence and that the trial judge had wrongly refused the Defendant s application for a non suit? It appears that the practice in criminal cases on this issue is a little unclear (See Ryan and Magee, The Irish Criminal Process, p.341), but on the hearing of the appeal, the Court drew the attention of the parties to a decision of the Court of Appeal in England in Payne v Harrison [1961] 2 QB 403, where in a similar situation, and having held that the judge had not in fact erred in law because there was just sufficient evidence at the end of the case for the plaintiff to justify his ruling, the Court of Appeal went on to observe that since the defendant had not stood on his submission and had gone into evidence, the duty of the appellate court was to assess the position realistically and consider the whole of the evidence including that of the defendant. It would, the court considered, be a denial of justice if the court made its assessment on only that part of the evidence as it stood at the close of the plaintiff s case when the judge made the ruling appealed against. While this decision is merely of persuasive authority, it accurately expresses the conclusion to which I was inclined to come of my own volition. In the circumstances, I do not consider it necessary to analyse whether there was just sufficient evidence to establish a prima facie case at the close of the Plaintiff s case. Instead, I will consider the entirety of the evidence and whether the trial judge was correct to find that the Defendant was liable to the Plaintiff. The second and somewhat related argument was that it was said that there was no expert evidence to support the Plaintiff s case. It was however accepted that there is no absolute requirement that expert evidence be given in support of any plaintiff s claim and there are many matters which are within the ordinary judgment of the courts. In AG (Ruddy) v Kenny (1960) 94 ILTR 185, 186, Davitt, P. observed that: There are certain matters in which the law considers that the Court is not as capable as are expert witnesses in drawing inferences; matters which require special study and experience in order that a just opinion may be formed, as for instance, matters of art, science, medicine, engineering and so forth. In regard to such matters, witnesses of whose expertness the Court is satisfied are allowed to give evidence of their opinion. It follows that where something is not a matter which requires special study or expertise, the Court is in a position to draw its own conclusions. However, that is not to say that the absence of expert evidence did not hamper the plaintiff s case. In Bradley v CIE [1976] IR 215, the Supreme Court outlined a test of negligence in the context of employment, but which is of wider application. Henchy, J. cited the formulation of Lord Dunedin in Morton v William Dixon Ltd [1909] SC 807: It is absolutely necessary that the proof of the fault or omission should be one of two kinds, either to shew that the thing which he did not do was the thing which

5 was commonly done by others in like circumstances, or to shew that it was a thing which was so obviously wanted that it would be folly in anyone to neglect to provide it. Subsequent glosses on that passage have emphasised that the fundamental test is the conduct and judgment of the reasonable and prudent man, and have explained that the reference to folly means no more than imprudent or unreasonable. Henchy, J. concluded that the test does no more than provide a mode of testing whether in the class of cases to which it refers the employer is taking reasonable care for the safety of his employee or, as it was sometimes put, whether he has subjected him to unnecessary risk. In my view, Bradley v CIE provides some focus on the true issue in controversy here. It is not the case that it is always necessary to have so-called expert evidence, sometimes fanciful and nearly always expensive, on matters that are little more than common sense. It cannot be suggested that there is an academic discipline of management of shopping centres in substantial rural towns. The particular issues involved are not so recondite that it could be said that a court can only apply the test identified in Bradley to the facts of this case with the benefit of expert evidence. However, the difficulty here is not that such expert evidence was essential but rather that such evidence is a convenient way of giving evidence of general practice. Here it could be said with some force that there was no evidence from any witness as to whether or not it was normal to have two or more security men on duty for late night shopping in a store with the size and throughput of Dunnes Stores in Thurles. While there was reference in cross-examination to a protocol produced by Dunnes, only a portion of which Mr Byrne could remember, the document itself was not put in evidence. In the event there are significant difficulties with treating this as evidence of general practice from which negligence can be deduced. First, it is, strictly speaking, only the evidence of Dunnes own practice and not the general practice of reasonable store owners. Second, the evidence itself was somewhat equivocal. Even if it was accepted that Mr Byrne was outnumbered and he maintained he only went after one culprit, Alexander Colville his memory of the protocol was that he was not to act if he felt it was outside his capacities. The test therefore was a somewhat subjective one and was not obviously breached. All of this illustrates what was missing in the Plaintiff s case. Given the rather dramatic and dangerous situation which arose, the fact that no other Dunnes Stores employee was able to come to Mr Byrne s assistance and the fact that it seems highly probable that late night opening on Thursday is at least as busy and possibly more troublesome than day time shopping, it seems likely that a person with even basic experience would be able to point to a series of flaws in the manner in which the system operated on that evening and could have compared it unfavourably with best practice. However, no evidence of that nature was given, and I do not think that a court would be justified in determining of its own knowledge that it was, for example, folly or even unreasonable, for Dunnes only to have had one security guard on late night shopping in July 2002 or for a security guard to confront one or at best two juvenile, if somewhat troublesome, shoplifters, or when one ran off, to have pursued him.

6 Indeed in this regard, I would be very slow to impose through the law of negligence some inflexible rule that there must always be a minimum of two security guards in any store, at least on the limited evidence proffered in this case. I would be even more reluctant to stigmatise as negligent, the acts of the security guard who confronted, chased and detained a shoplifter especially one who appeared unruly, intoxicated and given to violence. It is one thing for prudence to suggest caution rather than courage in certain circumstances; it is quite another that the law should demand caution and penalise courage. However, there is a more narrow basis for the conclusion that in this case Dunnes Stores failed to adhere to an appropriate standard of care. Perhaps the most telling piece of evidence was that volunteered by Mr Byrne in cross-examination that it was completely against procedure to involve a member of the public. Mr Byrne gave that evidence while denying that he had requested Mr O Neill s assistance, but the trial judge found that Mr Byrne had indeed asked Mr O Neill for help and on the evidence, that conclusion was entirely appropriate and cannot now be challenged on this appeal. On one view, it might be said that involving a member of the public in breach of certain procedures makes Mr Byrne negligent, and Dunnes Stores vicariously liable for his default. However, I think that that analysis would be more than a little artificial: I am not sure that it can be said that any security guard (no more than any citizen), can be said to owe a duty of care to members of the public not to involve them by asking them for help to detain a suspect. It is I think preferable to see that evidence as the clearest possible indication that if there was any system in place on the evening, it had gone badly wrong. In the absence of evidence of common practice it may not be possible to say with certainty that there ought to have been another security guard to assist Mr Byrne, but there certainly ought to have been someone available to assist him. The image of the two-way radio which was useless because there was no one to communicate with, is itself telling. It is clear that there were managers on duty, (indeed Mr Byrne said that he asked Ms Stapleton to get them) and that such managers could have assisted Mr Byrne if alerted to the situation. It seems clear that there ought to have been a more effective and immediate method of communication with managers than having to resort to asking a passing cleaning lady to call them. It does not appear that there was any system in place where the two-way radio could be held by another person for the evening or any arrangement for Mr Byrne to be able to communicate with any other member of staff. Even on the limited evidential record therefore, I consider that the trial judge is entitled to come to the conclusion that this state of affairs was unreasonable and, if necessary, amounted to the type of folly which Lord Dunedin identified more than 100 years ago. The third and fourth points argued by the Appellant can be taken together. Even assuming some default on the part of Dunnes Stores (such as that identified above) it was nevertheless said that Dunnes Stores were not liable because their action or inaction did not cause the peril or give rise to the necessity for rescue. On the contrary, it was said Mr O Neill s injures were caused by the wrongful and indeed criminal acts of third parties. The Appellant also stressed the fact that at the time of the assaults on Mr O Neill, Garda Delaney had arrived and was sufficiently in charge to tell Mr McCormack to go

7 away. It was also emphasised that the actual assault on Mr O Neill had come out of the blue and clearly was not anticipated by the Garda. The consideration of these arguments involves surveying a difficult intersection between two areas of the law of negligence which have posed problems of analysis over the years; the rescuer cases and those cases in which it is contended that an alleged tortfeasor is responsible for injury caused by the wrongful acts of a third party. At the outset it is necessary to consider if this was truly a rescue case at all. The Appellant referred to the decision of this Court in Phillips v Durgan [1991] ILRM 321. In that case, a couple had been retained by the first named plaintiff s brother to clean a house and then to decorate it. The kitchen was very greasy. The gas cooker which was the only means for heating water, was itself defective, producing only a guttering flame. The first named plaintiff slipped and a towel she was carrying caught light from the cooker. She was badly burned and her husband, the second plaintiff, also sustained burns trying to rescue her from the fire. In the High Court, the trial judge had rejected the contention that the defendant s negligence was a primary cause of the fire but had found for the plaintiffs, considering that it was a form of rescue case. The Supreme Court held that the case could not be treated as a rescue case but nevertheless upheld the award on the grounds that the defendant had been in breach of a primary duty of care owed to the plaintiff and since the defendant was the occupier of premises, which posed a danger to lawful entrants, including the plaintiffs. It appears to be suggested that this case is similar in that it is suggested that the true cause of Mr O Neill s injuries was the wrongful, indeed criminal, act of Ciaran McCormack. When Phillips v Durgan is analysed, it seems to me to illustrate precisely why this is indeed a case which is properly addressed by reference to the principles established in the rescue cases. As Cardozo, J. memorably observed in Wagner v International Railway (1921) 133 NE 437: Danger invites rescue. The cry of distress is the summons to relief. The law does not ignore these reactions of the mind in tracing conduct to its consequences. In the classic rescue case therefore, a member of the public with no previous connection to the incident or the parties responds either to a cry for help or to a situation which itself cries out for help. However the relationship of the Phillips to Mr Durgan was established by the existing contract between them. They did not come upon a scene and respond to it: they were required to be there by virtue of their agreement with Mr Durgan and his invitation to his unsafe premises. It was entirely understandable therefore that the Supreme Court rejected the attempt to characterise them as somehow akin to rescuers. By contrast, the Plaintiff here is almost in the classic situation. A member of the public with no prior knowledge or contact with any of the parties, he responded not just to the situation but to a positive cry for help. Quite apart from the dearth of evidence, this case is undoubtedly made more complex as a matter of law by the fact that the direct cause of the Plaintiff s injury was the wrongful

8 acts, both criminal and tortious, of another party, Ciaran McCormack, for whom Dunnes Stores were not responsible. Looked at from one perspective it might be said and was said by the Appellant that the source of the peril giving rise to the need for rescue by Mr O Neill was Mr McCormack s violent act and not the carelessness of Dunnes Stores. Alternatively, it was said that the wrongful acts of Ciaran McCormack were the proximate cause of Mr O Neill s injuries and constituted a novus actus interveniens breaking any causal link between the negligence of Dunnes Stores and the injuries suffered. I should say at this point that I am using the term negligence in its meaning in common usage even among lawyers, rather than as a term of art. It is technically incorrect to speak of negligence in the absence of establishing a duty of care, and in one sense the question whether Dunnes Stores owed a duty of care to members of the public to protect them from the risk of assault is at the very heart of this case. There is no reason in principle why, if on the established law a party can be liable for injury caused by the wrongful act of a third party, the first party s liability should not extend to any rescuer who is injured in an attempt to rescue an individual. As Cardozo, J. observed in Wagner the wrongdoer may not have foreseen the coming of the deliverer. He is accountable as if he had. It is necessary however to separate those two strands of authority. The classic case where an initial act of negligence made a party responsible for the loss caused by the wrongful act of the third party is the well known case of Home Office v Dorset Yacht Company [1970] AC 1004, considered recently in this Court, in Breslin v MIBI [2003] 2 IR 203. The principle in the Dorset Yacht case was expressed succinctly, by McWilliam, J. in a Circuit Court case of Dockery v O Brien (1975) 109 ILTR 127: With regard to a novus actus interveniens, Lord Reid, in the Dorset Yacht Company case, said that, if what was relied on as a novus actus interveniens is the very thing which is likely to happen if the want of care which is alleged takes place, the principle involved in the maxim is no defence, and he added that, unfortunately, tortious or criminal action by a third party may be the very kind of thing which is likely to happen as a result of the wrongful or careless act of the defendant This was the very kind of thing which a reasonable person should have foreseen. Applying that test here, it seems to me there is a strong connection between the wrongdoing identified on the part of Dunnes Stores and what occurred here. Mr Byrne sought help. Had no help been forthcoming from any member of the public and had Mr Byrne been badly injured, I apprehend that Dunnes Stores would have been liable to him. (See e.g. Walsh v Securicor (Ireland) Limited [1993] 2 IR 517). In the event, Mr O Neill responded to the request for help. Mr Byrne had to seek assistance from a member of the public, against all procedure, precisely because he had no effective method of seeking help from his co-employees. As Mr Byrne frankly admitted, the risk of some struggle, violence and perhaps injury, was an inescapable part of the job. It was therefore entirely foreseeable that if a security guard was put in a situation requiring assistance and was obliged to seek assistance from a member of the public, and if that member of the public

9 responded, then he may well have be injured in offering assistance. In this regard I think it is irrelevant that the precise nature of the savage attack on Mr O Neill may not have been foreseen: it is enough that the type of damage here physical injury caused by an attempt to restrain a wrongdoer was readily foreseeable. If the foregoing analysis is correct, then the rest of the case follows quite readily. There is no logical or conceptual difficulty in permitting recovery by a rescuer in circumstances where the defendant is or would be liable for the foreseeable wrongful acts of a third party. To illustrate this, it may be useful to adapt the facts of the leading case of Smith v Littlewoods Organisation Ltd [1987] AC 241, which was also considered in Breslin v MIBI. There, fire was started by vandals in the defendants vacant cinema premises which spread to adjoining buildings. The owners of those buildings sued the defendants. It was known that trespassers had used the vacant cinema, but on the facts of the case the defendants succeeded because there was no evidence that the defendants had knowledge of the fact that vandalising trespassers were in the habit of lighting fires in the disused cinema. However, had the defendants been so aware, there is no doubt that they would have been liable in such circumstances to their neighbours. If that finding had been made, I do not think there would have been any difficulty in extending liability to any rescuer who was injured while entering any of the buildings attempting to rescue someone, even though the direct cause of the peril in that case the fire would have been the vandals rather than the cinema owners. The conceptual difficulty with the rescuer cases is the sometimes attenuated chain of causation and the indulgent view that courts take of the issue of the duty of care. An often quoted observation is that of the late Professor Fleming in The Law of Torts 5th Edition (1992) p.170: A remarkable change has overtaken the legal position of the rescuer; once the Cinderella of the law, he has since become its darling. The rest of the paragraph which explains this observation is also worthy of quotation: It used to be that his claim for injury in coming to the aid of someone imperilled by the defendant was defeated in short shrift on the grounds that his voluntary intervention either severed the causal link with the defendants negligence or showed that he voluntarily assumed the risk. These theories have all toppled like nine pins; indeed in its anxiety to support the rescuer, modern law has generally evinced little interest in the conventional requirements of foreseeability and duty. (emphasis added) Indeed, Professor Fleming draws an instructive comparison between the foreseeability requirements of rescue cases and those for example, in nervous shock cases: In any event, foreseeability must here be a very broad notion, in marked contrast especially to the nervous shock cases of the opposite end of the spectrum. The divergent judicial reaction to these two situations strikingly illustrates the fact that,

10 far from foreseeability being a true or sole determinative duty, weighty policy considerations militate, in the one case in favour, in the other against the plaintiff s claim to legal protection. Behind the ambivalence of the foreseeability formula lies the desire, on the one hand, to encourage altruistic action and, on the other a decided hesitation based on administrative grounds to permit recovery from mental distress. In my view, this case fits comfortably within the approach so described. Indeed, for the reasons set out above, this is a case in which there is a particularly close connection between the negligence established against the Defendant and the injury caused to the Plaintiff. This analysis also disposes of the argument that the peril giving rise to the need for rescue was not caused by the Defendant, but rather by the wrongful act of a third party. Because this case involves the complication of third party wrongdoing, it is I think necessary to consider whether the Defendant was a cause, rather than necessarily the proximate cause if any, of the Plaintiff s injuries, as long as the wrongdoing itself was the very thing which was to be anticipated as a result of the Defendant s negligence. Furthermore, while it might be said that the situation was caused at least in part by the wrongful shoplifting and attempt to escape of Alexander Colville, there is little doubt that the need for rescue by a member of the public was caused by the negligence of Dunnes Stores. If Dunnes Stores had not been negligent as outlined above, Mr Byrne and Ms Stapleton would not have had to ask Mr O Neill or any other member of the public for help; if Mr O Neill had not responded to the requests for help he would not have been injured. In these circumstances, and notwithstanding the somewhat rudimentary nature of the case made and the tenuous evidential basis for the trial judge s conclusions, I consider that the appeal in this case should be dismissed. This is a result which I think accords with both legal principle and common sense. It would indeed be regrettable if the message delivered by the law of tort to a member of the public faced with a cry for help, is that if they intervene they do so at their own risk and that in all the circumstances it would be wiser to pass by on the other side. Lord Atkin observed that the example of the Good Samaritan in the parable may not answer all the questions of the law of negligence, but neither the law nor morality has ever sought to encourage imitation of the Levite.

THE SUPREME COURT BRENDAN O NEILL AND DUNNES STORES. JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice Fennelly delivered the 16th day of November 2010.

THE SUPREME COURT BRENDAN O NEILL AND DUNNES STORES. JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice Fennelly delivered the 16th day of November 2010. THE SUPREME COURT APPEAL NO. 77/2007 Fennelly J. O Donnell J. McKechnie J. BRENDAN O NEILL PLAINTIFF/RESPONDENT AND DUNNES STORES APPELLANT/DEFENDANT JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice Fennelly delivered the 16th

More information

TORTS SPECIFIC TORTS NEGLIGENCE

TORTS SPECIFIC TORTS NEGLIGENCE TORTS A tort is a private civil wrong. It is prosecuted by the individual or entity that was wronged against the wrongdoer. One aim of tort law is to provide compensation for injuries. The goal of the

More information

TORTS SUMMARY LAWSKOOL PTY LTD

TORTS SUMMARY LAWSKOOL PTY LTD SUMMARY LAWSKOOL PTY LTD CONTENTS INTRODUCTION TO NELIGENCE 7 DUTY OF CARE 8 INTRODUCTION 8 ELEMENTS 10 Reasonable foreseeability of the class of plaintiffs 10 Reasonable foreseeability not alone sufficient

More information

Patrick Breslin, Plaintiff v. Noel Corcoran and The Motor Insurers Bureau of Ireland, Defendants [S.C. No. 222 of 2001] Supreme Court 27th March, 2003

Patrick Breslin, Plaintiff v. Noel Corcoran and The Motor Insurers Bureau of Ireland, Defendants [S.C. No. 222 of 2001] Supreme Court 27th March, 2003 2 I.R. The Irish Reports 203 Patrick Breslin, Plaintiff v. Noel Corcoran and The Motor Insurers Bureau of Ireland, Defendants [S.C. No. 222 of 2001] Supreme Court 27th March, 2003 Tort Negligence Causation

More information

MARK SCHEME for the May/June 2010 question paper for the guidance of teachers 9084 LAW. 9084/43 Paper 43, maximum raw mark 75

MARK SCHEME for the May/June 2010 question paper for the guidance of teachers 9084 LAW. 9084/43 Paper 43, maximum raw mark 75 UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS GCE Advanced Level MARK SCHEME for the May/June 2010 question paper for the guidance of teachers 9084 LAW 9084/43 Paper 43, maximum raw mark 75 This mark

More information

Negligence: Approaching the duty of care

Negligence: Approaching the duty of care Negligence: Approaching the duty of care Introduction: Elements of negligence: - The defendant owed the plaintiff a duty of care. - That the duty must have been breached. - That breach must have caused

More information

THE LAW PROFESSOR TORT LAW ESSAY SERIES ESSAY QUESTION #3 MODEL ANSWER

THE LAW PROFESSOR TORT LAW ESSAY SERIES ESSAY QUESTION #3 MODEL ANSWER THE LAW PROFESSOR TORT LAW ESSAY SERIES ESSAY QUESTION #3 MODEL ANSWER Carol stopped her car at the entrance to her office building to get some papers from her office. She left her car unlocked and left

More information

Mitchell v Glasgow City Council [2009] UKHL 11, [2009] 1 AC 874, [2009] 2 WLR 481, [2009] 3 All ER 205 HL

Mitchell v Glasgow City Council [2009] UKHL 11, [2009] 1 AC 874, [2009] 2 WLR 481, [2009] 3 All ER 205 HL Mitchell v Glasgow City Council [2009] UKHL 11, [2009] 1 AC 874, [2009] 2 WLR 481, [2009] 3 All ER 205 HL Summary James Mitchell, 72, was attacked in July 2001 with an iron bar by his neighbour, James

More information

CALIFORNIA ESSAY WRITING WORKSHOP PROFESSOR CHRISTOPHER IDE-DON UC DAVIS SCHOOL OF LAW

CALIFORNIA ESSAY WRITING WORKSHOP PROFESSOR CHRISTOPHER IDE-DON UC DAVIS SCHOOL OF LAW CALIFORNIA ESSAY WRITING WORKSHOP PROFESSOR CHRISTOPHER IDE-DON UC DAVIS SCHOOL OF LAW CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION A. Bar Exam Basics Editor's Note 1: The Professor refers to specific page numbers throughout

More information

J U D G M E N T CRIMINAL APPEAL NO OF 2007 (Arising out of S.L.P (Crl.) No.4805 of 2006) Dr. ARIJIT PASAYAT, J.

J U D G M E N T CRIMINAL APPEAL NO OF 2007 (Arising out of S.L.P (Crl.) No.4805 of 2006) Dr. ARIJIT PASAYAT, J. Supreme Court of India Naresh Giri vs State Of M.P on 12 November, 2007 Author:. A Pasayat Bench: Dr. Arijit Pasayat, P. Sathasivam CASE NO.: Appeal (crl.) 1530 of 2007 PETITIONER: Naresh Giri RESPONDENT:

More information

Question 1. Under what theory or theories might Paul recover, and what is his likelihood of success, against: a. Charlie? b. KiddieRides-R-Us?

Question 1. Under what theory or theories might Paul recover, and what is his likelihood of success, against: a. Charlie? b. KiddieRides-R-Us? Question 1 Twelve-year-old Charlie was riding on his small, motorized 3-wheeled all terrain vehicle ( ATV ) in his family s large front yard. Suddenly, finding the steering wheel stuck in place, Charlie

More information

Liability for Injuries Caused by Dogs. Jonathan Owen

Liability for Injuries Caused by Dogs. Jonathan Owen Liability for Injuries Caused by Dogs Jonathan Owen Introduction 1. This article addressed the liability for injuries caused by dogs, such as when a person is bitten, or knocked over by a dog. Such cases,

More information

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF BRITISH COLUMBIA

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF BRITISH COLUMBIA Date of Release: May 1, 1992 No. 17176 Kamloops Registry IN THE SUPREME COURT OF BRITISH COLUMBIA BETWEEN: ) ) JACQUELYN BARBARA DAVIDSON ) ) REASONS FOR JUDGMENT PLAINTIFF ) ) OF THE HONOURABLE AND: )

More information

Contents. Table of Statutes. Table of Secondary Legislation. Table of Cases. General Principles of Liability

Contents. Table of Statutes. Table of Secondary Legislation. Table of Cases. General Principles of Liability Contents Table of Statutes Table of Secondary Legislation Table of Cases Chapter 1: General Principles of Liability 1.1 Introduction 1.2 Interests protected 1.3 The mental element in tort 1.3.1 Malice

More information

LAWS1100 Final Exam Notes

LAWS1100 Final Exam Notes LAWS1100 Final Exam Notes Topic 4&5: Tort Law and Business (*very important) Relevant chapter: Ch.3 Applicable law: - Law of torts law of negligence (p.74) Torts (p.70) - The word tort meaning twisted

More information

GENERAL CLOSING INSTRUCTIONS. Members of the jury, it is now time for me to tell you the law that applies to

GENERAL CLOSING INSTRUCTIONS. Members of the jury, it is now time for me to tell you the law that applies to GENERAL CLOSING INSTRUCTIONS Members of the jury, it is now time for me to tell you the law that applies to this case. As I mentioned at the beginning of the trial, you must follow the law as I state it

More information

9084 LAW. 9084/43 Paper 4, maximum raw mark 75

9084 LAW. 9084/43 Paper 4, maximum raw mark 75 CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS Cambridge International Advanced Level MARK SCHEME for the May/June 2015 series 9084 LAW 9084/43 Paper 4, maximum raw mark 75 This mark scheme is published as an aid

More information

ANSWER A TO QUESTION 3

ANSWER A TO QUESTION 3 Question 3 Roofer contracted with Hal to replace the roof on Hal s house. The usual practice among roofers was to place tarpaulins on the ground around the house to catch the nails and other materials

More information

Civil Liability Amendment (Personal Responsibility) Act 2002 No 92

Civil Liability Amendment (Personal Responsibility) Act 2002 No 92 New South Wales Civil Liability Amendment (Personal Responsibility) Act 2002 No 92 Contents Page 1 Name of Act 2 2 Commencement 2 3 Amendment of Civil Liability Act 2002 No 22 2 4 Consequential repeals

More information

Sample. Aims of this Chapter. 2.1 Introduction. Outline

Sample. Aims of this Chapter. 2.1 Introduction. Outline Chapter 2: The Duty of Care Outline 2.1 Introduction 2.2 The neighbour test 2.3 The three-stage test from Caparo Industries plc v Dickman [1990] 2.4 The role of public policy 2.5 Psychological/psychiatric

More information

MBE WORKSHOP: TORTS PROFESSOR LISA MCELROY DREXEL UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW

MBE WORKSHOP: TORTS PROFESSOR LISA MCELROY DREXEL UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW CHAPTER 1: TORTS MBE WORKSHOP: TORTS PROFESSOR LISA MCELROY DREXEL UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW Editor's Note 1: The below outline is taken from the National Conference of Bar Examiners' website. NOTE: The

More information

1. I allow the claimant's appeal from the decision of the

1. I allow the claimant's appeal from the decision of the HZG/SH/CH/7 Commissioner' File: SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION ACT 1992 SOCIAL SECURITY CONTRIBUTIONS AND BENEFITS ACT 1992 APPEAL FROM DECISION OF SOCIAL SECURITY APPEAL TRIBUNAL ON A QUESTION OF LAW

More information

California Bar Examination

California Bar Examination California Bar Examination Essay Question: Torts And Selected Answers The Orahte Group is NOT affiliated with The State Bar of California PRACTICE PACKET p.1 Question Manufacturer designed and manufactured

More information

Week 2 - Damages in Contract. The plaintiff simply needs to show that there was a breach of contract

Week 2 - Damages in Contract. The plaintiff simply needs to show that there was a breach of contract Week 2 - Damages in Contract In order for the court to award the plaintiff compensatory damages in contract, it must find that: a) Does the plaintiff have a cause of action in contract (e.g breach of contract)?

More information

Principles of Common Law 4 January 2017

Principles of Common Law 4 January 2017 Prof. Dr. iur. Kern Alexander Fall 06 Principles of Common Law 4 January 07 Duration: 0 minutes Please check both at receipt as well as at submission of the exam the number of question sheets. The examination

More information

The section Causation: Actual Cause and Proximate Cause from Business Law and the Legal Environment was adapted by The Saylor Foundation under a

The section Causation: Actual Cause and Proximate Cause from Business Law and the Legal Environment was adapted by The Saylor Foundation under a The section Causation: Actual Cause and Proximate Cause from Business Law and the Legal Environment was adapted by The Saylor Foundation under a Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0

More information

MARK SCHEME for the May/June 2011 question paper for the guidance of teachers 9084 LAW. 9084/43 Paper 4, maximum raw mark 75

MARK SCHEME for the May/June 2011 question paper for the guidance of teachers 9084 LAW. 9084/43 Paper 4, maximum raw mark 75 UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS GCE Advanced Level MARK SCHEME for the May/June 2011 question paper for the guidance of teachers 9084 LAW 9084/43 Paper 4, maximum raw mark 75 This mark

More information

George Mason University School of Recreation, Health & Tourism Court Reports American Powerlifting Association v. Cotillo (Md.

George Mason University School of Recreation, Health & Tourism Court Reports American Powerlifting Association v. Cotillo (Md. PARTICIPANT ASSUMES RISK OF INJURY INTEGRAL TO SPORT AMERICAN POWERLIFTING ASSOCIATION v. COTILLO Court of Appeals of Maryland October 16, 2007 [Note: Attached opinion of the court has been edited and

More information

MARK SCHEME for the October/November 2013 series 9084 LAW. 9084/42 Paper 4, maximum raw mark 75

MARK SCHEME for the October/November 2013 series 9084 LAW. 9084/42 Paper 4, maximum raw mark 75 CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS GCE Advanced Level MARK SCHEME for the October/November 2013 series 9084 LAW 9084/42 Paper 4, maximum raw mark 75 This mark scheme is published as an aid to teachers

More information

ESPINOZA V. SCHULENBURG: ARIZONA ADOPTS THE RESCUE DOCTRINE AND FIREFIGHTER S RULE

ESPINOZA V. SCHULENBURG: ARIZONA ADOPTS THE RESCUE DOCTRINE AND FIREFIGHTER S RULE ESPINOZA V. SCHULENBURG: ARIZONA ADOPTS THE RESCUE DOCTRINE AND FIREFIGHTER S RULE Kiel Berry INTRODUCTION The rescue doctrine permits an injured rescuer to recover damages from the individual whose tortious

More information

IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA

IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA SAFLII Note: Certain personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been redacted from this document in compliance with the law and SAFLII Policy IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA GAUTENG DIVISION,

More information

NEGLIGENCE. All four of the following must be demonstrated for a legal claim of negligence to be successful:

NEGLIGENCE. All four of the following must be demonstrated for a legal claim of negligence to be successful: NEGLIGENCE WHAT IS NEGLIGENCE? Negligence is unintentional harm to others as a result of an unsatisfactory degree of care. It occurs when a person NEGLECTS to do something that a reasonably prudent person

More information

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT 07-203 ROSEMARY WATERS VERSUS BROOKSHIRE GROCERY COMPANY ************** APPEAL FROM THE ALEXANDRIA CITY COURT PARISH OF RAPIDES, DOCKET NO. 101,398 HONORABLE

More information

Negligence Case Law and Notes

Negligence Case Law and Notes Negligence Case Law and Notes Subsections Significance Case Principle Established Duty of Care Original Negligence case Donoghue v Stevenson [1932] ac 562 The law takes no cognisance of carelessness in

More information

CRIMINAL LAW SUMMARY LAWSKOOL.CO.UK LAWSKOOL PTY LTD

CRIMINAL LAW SUMMARY LAWSKOOL.CO.UK LAWSKOOL PTY LTD CRIMINAL LAW SUMMARY LAWSKOOL.CO.UK LAWSKOOL PTY LTD CONTENTS INTRODUCTION TO CRIMINAL LAW 7 DEFINITION OF CRIMINAL LAW 7 Deterrence 7 Rehabilitation 7 Public Protection 7 Retribution 8 CRIMINAL LAW AND

More information

Answer A to Question 4

Answer A to Question 4 Question 4 A zoo maintenance employee threw a pile of used cleaning rags into a hot, enclosed room on the zoo s premises. The rags contained a flammable cleaning fluid that later spontaneously burst into

More information

Legal Liability in Adventure Tourism

Legal Liability in Adventure Tourism Legal Liability in Adventure Tourism Ross Cloutier Bhudak Consultants Ltd. www.bhudak.com The Legal System in Canada Common Law Records creating a foundation of cases useful as a source of common legal

More information

INDIVISIBLE INJURIES

INDIVISIBLE INJURIES INDIVISIBLE INJURIES Amelia J. Staunton February 2011 1 CONTACT LAWYER Amelia Staunton 604.891.0359 astaunton@dolden.com 1 Introduction What happens when a Plaintiff, recovering from injuries sustained

More information

COURT OF APPEAL FOR ONTARIO

COURT OF APPEAL FOR ONTARIO BETWEEN COURT OF APPEAL FOR ONTARIO CITATION: Downer v. The Personal Insurance Company, 2012 ONCA 302 Ryan M. Naimark, for the appellant Lang, LaForme JJ.A. and Pattillo J. (ad hoc) John W. Bruggeman,

More information

LAW REVIEW JUNE 1989 PLAYGROUND SUPERVISION QUESTIONED IN EYE INJURY CASES

LAW REVIEW JUNE 1989 PLAYGROUND SUPERVISION QUESTIONED IN EYE INJURY CASES PLAYGROUND SUPERVISION QUESTIONED IN EYE INJURY CASES James C. Kozlowski, J.D., Ph.D. 1989 James C. Kozlowski This month's column presents two court decisions which examine various aspects of playground

More information

ESSAY INTRODUCTION PROFESSOR RICHARD T. SAKAI. Copyright 2018 by BARBRI, Inc.

ESSAY INTRODUCTION PROFESSOR RICHARD T. SAKAI. Copyright 2018 by BARBRI, Inc. ESSAY INTRODUCTION PROFESSOR RICHARD T. SAKAI Copyright 2018 by BARBRI, Inc. i TABLE OF CONTENTS PART ONE: OVERVIEW OF THE CALIFORNIA BAR EXAMINATION Pages 3 4 PART TWO: Page 5 THE ESSAY SECTION INSTRUCTIONS

More information

Law of Tort (Paper 22, Unit 22) Syllabus - for the June and October 2009 Examinations

Law of Tort (Paper 22, Unit 22) Syllabus - for the June and October 2009 Examinations Outline of assessment Law of Tort (Paper 22, Unit 22) Syllabus - for the June and October 2009 Examinations Time allowed: 3 hours. Each question carries a total of 25 marks. The examination paper is divided

More information

CED: An Overview of the Law

CED: An Overview of the Law Torts BY: Edwin Durbin, B.Comm., LL.B., LL.M. of the Ontario Bar Part II Principles of Liability Click HERE to access the CED and the Canadian Abridgment titles for this excerpt on Westlaw Canada II.1.(a):

More information

TORTS 1 MID-TERM EXAM MODEL ANSWER (FALL 2006) I. General Comments:

TORTS 1 MID-TERM EXAM MODEL ANSWER (FALL 2006) I. General Comments: TORTS 1 MID-TERM EXAM MODEL ANSWER (FALL 2006) I. General Comments: The exam was designed to test your ability to recognize the intentional tort causes of action that a potential plaintiff could bring,

More information

TORT LAW. Third Edition. Lewis N. Klar, Q.C. B.A., B.C.L., LL.M. Professor of Law University of Alberta THOMSON - ^ CARSWELL

TORT LAW. Third Edition. Lewis N. Klar, Q.C. B.A., B.C.L., LL.M. Professor of Law University of Alberta THOMSON - ^ CARSWELL TORT LAW Third Edition Lewis N. Klar, Q.C. B.A., B.C.L., LL.M. Professor of Law University of Alberta THOMSON - ^ CARSWELL TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface Table ofcases v xix Chapter 1 INTRODUCTION TO TORT LÄW

More information

PROFESSOR DEWOLF FALL 2009 December 12, 2009 FINAL EXAM SAMPLE ANSWER

PROFESSOR DEWOLF FALL 2009 December 12, 2009 FINAL EXAM SAMPLE ANSWER TORTS PROFESSOR DEWOLF FALL 2009 December 12, 2009 FINAL EXAM SAMPLE ANSWER MULTIPLE CHOICE 1. (A) is incorrect, because this statement omits the requirement that Blinker intended to cause such fear; (B)

More information

Washoe Tribe of Nevada and California. Law & Order Code TITLE 3 TORTS. [Last Amended 10/1/04. Current Through 2/3/09.]

Washoe Tribe of Nevada and California. Law & Order Code TITLE 3 TORTS. [Last Amended 10/1/04. Current Through 2/3/09.] Washoe Tribe of Nevada and California Law & Order Code TITLE 3 TORTS [Last Amended 10/1/04. Current Through 2/3/09.] 3-10 DEFINITIONS The following words have the meanings given below when used in this

More information

IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE BETWEEN AND. (POLICE CONSTABLE) EDGAR BAIRD THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO Defendants.

IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE BETWEEN AND. (POLICE CONSTABLE) EDGAR BAIRD THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO Defendants. REPUBLIC OF TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE NO. CV 2009-00642 BETWEEN OTIS JOBE Claimant AND (POLICE CONSTABLE) EDGAR BAIRD THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO Defendants BEFORE

More information

Vicarious Liability: imposed in certain relationships eg. Employee/ Employer

Vicarious Liability: imposed in certain relationships eg. Employee/ Employer CONCURRENT LIABILITY: VICARIOUS LIABILITY AND INTRODUCTION TO!" NEGLIGENCE Vicarious Liability: imposed in certain relationships eg. Employee/ Employer Vicarious liability may exist if the wrongful act

More information

Berger, Nazarian, Leahy,

Berger, Nazarian, Leahy, UNREPORTED IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS OF MARYLAND No. 2067 September Term, 2014 UNIVERSITY SPECIALTY HOSPITAL, INC. v. STACEY RHEUBOTTOM Berger, Nazarian, Leahy, JJ. Opinion by Nazarian, J. Filed:

More information

CRIMINAL LAW SUMMARY 2011

CRIMINAL LAW SUMMARY 2011 SUMMARY 2011 LAWSKOOL PTY LTD CONTENTS PRE-TRIAL PROCEDURES DISCRETION TO ARREST Internal police guidelines LEGALITY OF ARREST POLICE INTERVIEW IN CUSTODY PHYSICAL ELEMENTS Conduct Conduct which occurs

More information

THE SUPREME COURT PETER CREIGHTON AND

THE SUPREME COURT PETER CREIGHTON AND THE SUPREME COURT APPEAL NUMBER 230/2009 HIGH COURT RECORD NUMBER 2003/13989p Fennelly J. O Donnell J. McKechnie J. BETWEEN PETER CREIGHTON PLAINTIFF/RESPONDENT AND IRELAND, THE ATTORNEY GENERAL, THE MINISTER

More information

NUISANCE (PRIVATE) ENGLAND AND WALES

NUISANCE (PRIVATE) ENGLAND AND WALES Legal Topic Note LTN 67 October 2014 NUISANCE (PRIVATE) ENGLAND AND WALES The Civil wrong (tort) of Private Nuisance 1. This Legal Topic Note deals with the subject of private nuisance. A separate Legal

More information

Answer A to Question 4

Answer A to Question 4 Question 4 A residence hall on the campus of University was evacuated after a number of student residents became seriously ill from aerial dispersal of bacteria that had infested the air conditioning system.

More information

MODEL MOTOR VEHICLE NEGLIGENCE CHARGE AND VERDICT SHEET. MOTOR VEHICLE VOLUME REPLACEMENT JUNE

MODEL MOTOR VEHICLE NEGLIGENCE CHARGE AND VERDICT SHEET. MOTOR VEHICLE VOLUME REPLACEMENT JUNE Page 1 of 25 100.00 MODEL MOTOR VEHICLE NEGLIGENCE CHARGE AND VERDICT SHEET. NOTE WELL: This is a sample only. Your case must be tailored to fit your facts and the law. Do not blindly follow this pattern.

More information

When do parole authorities owe a duty of care to those injured by prisoners on parole? By Martin Cuerden

When do parole authorities owe a duty of care to those injured by prisoners on parole? By Martin Cuerden When do parole authorities owe a duty of care to those injured by prisoners on parole? By Martin Cuerden The responsibility of parole authorities for offences com m itted by those on parole is a topical

More information

Report of a Complaint Handling Review in relation to Police Scotland

Report of a Complaint Handling Review in relation to Police Scotland Report of a Complaint Handling Review in relation to Police Scotland independent and effective investigations and reviews independent and effective investigations and reviews Index 1. Role of the PIRC

More information

SUPREME COURT OF QUEENSLAND

SUPREME COURT OF QUEENSLAND SUPREME COURT OF QUEENSLAND CITATION: R v Condon [2010] QCA 117 PARTIES: R v CONDON, Christopher Gerard (appellant) FILE NO/S: CA No 253 of 2009 DC No 114 of 2009 DIVISION: PROCEEDING: ORIGINATING COURT:

More information

MARK SCHEME for the October/November 2013 series 9084 LAW. 9084/43 Paper 4, maximum raw mark 75

MARK SCHEME for the October/November 2013 series 9084 LAW. 9084/43 Paper 4, maximum raw mark 75 CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS GCE Advanced Level MARK SCHEME for the October/November 2013 series 9084 LAW 9084/43 Paper 4, maximum raw mark 75 This mark scheme is published as an aid to teachers

More information

SHOPLIFTING Detention and Use of Force

SHOPLIFTING Detention and Use of Force SHOPLIFTING Detention and Use of Force By Ralph Witherspoon, CPP Each year shoplifting incidents cost retail merchants in the United States well over $10 billion in losses. For the many stores operating

More information

The Reasonable Person Test An Objective/Subjective Dichotomy

The Reasonable Person Test An Objective/Subjective Dichotomy Is it always true that the reasonable person test eliminates the personal equation (Glasgow Corp v Muir, per Lord MacMillan)? In particular, how do you reconcile Philips v William Whiteley with Nettleship

More information

TORT LAW NOTES. The case below demonstrates that fault is an essential element of liability in trespass to person.

TORT LAW NOTES. The case below demonstrates that fault is an essential element of liability in trespass to person. TORT LAW NOTES TRESPASS TO PERSON Traditionally, there were two types of actions that were concerned with the plaintiff s person. They were trespass and action on the case. The distinction between these

More information

NO IN THE INTERMEDIATE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF HAWAI'I. STATE OF HAWAI'I, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. JONATHAN FONTES, Defendant-Appellant.

NO IN THE INTERMEDIATE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF HAWAI'I. STATE OF HAWAI'I, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. JONATHAN FONTES, Defendant-Appellant. NO. 29408 IN THE INTERMEDIATE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF HAWAI'I STATE OF HAWAI'I, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. JONATHAN FONTES, Defendant-Appellant. APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIRST CIRCUIT

More information

It s a fair cop: Supreme Court reviews duty of care

It s a fair cop: Supreme Court reviews duty of care It s a fair cop: Supreme Court reviews duty of care Patrick West, Barrister, St John s Chambers Published on 14 February 2018 (And a foot note on the Worboys Case) Robinson v Chief Constable of West Yorkshire

More information

THE SUPREME COURT JUDICIAL REVIEW PAUL BYRNE DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS (AT THE SUIT OF GARDA JOSEPH ENRIGHT)

THE SUPREME COURT JUDICIAL REVIEW PAUL BYRNE DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS (AT THE SUIT OF GARDA JOSEPH ENRIGHT) THE SUPREME COURT JUDICIAL REVIEW 385/05 Fennelly, J Finnegan, J O Donnell J BETWEEN: PAUL BYRNE APPELLANT V DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS (AT THE SUIT OF GARDA JOSEPH ENRIGHT) RESPONDENT Judgment delivered

More information

Anglo-American Contract and Torts. Prof. Mark P. Gergen. 11. Scope of Liability (Proximate Cause)

Anglo-American Contract and Torts. Prof. Mark P. Gergen. 11. Scope of Liability (Proximate Cause) Anglo-American Contract and Torts Prof. Mark P. Gergen 11. Scope of Liability (Proximate Cause) 1) Duty/Injury 2) Breach 3) Factual cause 4) Legal cause/scope of liability 5) Damages Proximate cause Duty

More information

Checklist XX - Sources of Municipal and Personal Liability and Immunity. Subject matter MA COTA Maintenance of highways and bridges

Checklist XX - Sources of Municipal and Personal Liability and Immunity. Subject matter MA COTA Maintenance of highways and bridges Checklist XX - Sources of Municipal and Personal Liability and Immunity See also extensive case law in this volume under the sections identified below, and in the introduction to Part XV. A. Public highways

More information

Case 1:14-cv Document 10 Filed in TXSD on 09/25/14 Page 1 of 11

Case 1:14-cv Document 10 Filed in TXSD on 09/25/14 Page 1 of 11 Case 1:14-cv-00133 Document 10 Filed in TXSD on 09/25/14 Page 1 of 11 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS BROWNSVILLE DIVISION DIGNA O. QUEZADA CUEVAS, Plaintiff, v.

More information

UNLAWFUL AND DANGEROUS ACT MANSLAUGHTER:

UNLAWFUL AND DANGEROUS ACT MANSLAUGHTER: Unlawful and Dangerous Act Manslaughter 228 UNLAWFUL AND DANGEROUS ACT MANSLAUGHTER: R. v. WILLS1 The defendant ("D") was out shopping with his de facto wife when he saw in the street his legal wife from

More information

9 of their attorneys you have learned the conclusion which 10 each party believes should be drawn from the evidence

9 of their attorneys you have learned the conclusion which 10 each party believes should be drawn from the evidence 6 THE COURT: Thank you very much, Mr. Kelly. 7 Members of the jury, you have now heard all the 8 evidence Introduced by the parties and through the arguments 9 of their attorneys you have learned the conclusion

More information

FOREWORD... 1 LAW... 2

FOREWORD... 1 LAW... 2 FOREWORD... 1 LAW... 2 GCE Advanced Level... 2 Paper 9084/01 Law and the Legal Process... 2 Paper 9084/02 Legal Liabilities... 3 This booklet contains reports written by Examiners on the work of candidates

More information

Case3:09-cv EMC Document1 Filed08/28/09 Page1 of 8

Case3:09-cv EMC Document1 Filed08/28/09 Page1 of 8 Case:0-cv-00-EMC Document Filed0//0 Page of LAW OFFICES OF PANOS LAGOS Panos Lagos, Esq. / SBN 0 Woodminster Lane Oakland, CA 0 ( 0)0-0 ( 0)0-FAX panoslagos@aol.com Attorney for Plaintiff, OSCAR JULIUS

More information

Relate the essential elements that must be proved in order to show liability. List the most common causes of lawsuits against emergency responders.

Relate the essential elements that must be proved in order to show liability. List the most common causes of lawsuits against emergency responders. Legal Issues in Search and Rescue Response By Patrick "Rick" LaValla and Norman Lawson OBJECTIVES Discuss the basic issues of liability in SAR response. Relate the essential elements that must be proved

More information

STATE OF MICHIGAN COURT OF APPEALS

STATE OF MICHIGAN COURT OF APPEALS STATE OF MICHIGAN COURT OF APPEALS DAVID SMITH, Personal Representative of the Estate of JOSEPH SMITH, Deceased, UNPUBLISHED June 22, 2001 Plaintiff-Appellant, v No. 219447 Wayne Circuit Court ROBERT S

More information

Answer A to Question 10. To prevail under negligence, the plaintiff must show duty, breach, causation, and

Answer A to Question 10. To prevail under negligence, the plaintiff must show duty, breach, causation, and Answer A to Question 10 3) ALICE V. WALTON NEGLIGENCE damage. To prevail under negligence, the plaintiff must show duty, breach, causation, and DUTY Under the majority Cardozo view, a duty is owed to all

More information

Leicestershire Constabulary Counter Allegations Procedure

Leicestershire Constabulary Counter Allegations Procedure Leicestershire Constabulary Counter Allegations Procedure This procedure supports the following policy: Counter Allegations Policy Procedure Owner: Department Responsible: Chief Officer Approval: Protective

More information

Sergeants OSPRE Part 1 Statistics - Evidence

Sergeants OSPRE Part 1 Statistics - Evidence Sergeants OSPRE Part 1 Statistics - Evidence Topic 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Probability Rating 7 Question 6 Question 6 Question 5 Question 4 Question 5.6 Questions Grounds for Refusing Bail x2 Police Bail

More information

CLOSING INSTRUCTIONS. this case. As I mentioned at the beginning of the trial, you must keep an open

CLOSING INSTRUCTIONS. this case. As I mentioned at the beginning of the trial, you must keep an open CLOSING INSTRUCTIONS I. GENERAL CLOSING INSTRUCTIONS Members of the jury, it is now time for me to tell you the law that applies to this case. As I mentioned at the beginning of the trial, you must keep

More information

DUTY OF CARE. The plaintiff must firstly establish that the defendant owed hum a duty of care: this arises where:

DUTY OF CARE. The plaintiff must firstly establish that the defendant owed hum a duty of care: this arises where: DUTY OF CARE REASONABLE FORESEEABILITY AND SALIENT FEATURES To recover damages in negligence, a plaintiff must firstly establish that the defendant owed him a duty of care. In broad terms, a duty of care

More information

REPUBLIC OF TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO IN THE COURT OF APPEAL BETWEEN TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO ELECTRICITY COMMISSION AND

REPUBLIC OF TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO IN THE COURT OF APPEAL BETWEEN TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO ELECTRICITY COMMISSION AND REPUBLIC OF TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO CvA. No. 174 of 1999 IN THE COURT OF APPEAL BETWEEN TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO ELECTRICITY COMMISSION APPELLANT AND JOHN MORRISON AND LYNDA MORRISON RESPONDENTS CORAM: S. SHARMA,

More information

Question Farmer Jones? Discuss. 3. Big Food? Discuss. -36-

Question Farmer Jones? Discuss. 3. Big Food? Discuss. -36- Question 4 Grain Co. purchases grain from farmers each fall to resell as seed grain to other farmers for spring planting. Because of problems presented by parasites which attack and eat seed grain that

More information

Answers to practical exercises

Answers to practical exercises Answers to practical exercises Chapter 15: Answering problem questions Page 360: Evaluation/Marking Exercise Evaluating the work of others can be a really powerful way of improving your own work. The question

More information

STATE OF MICHIGAN COURT OF APPEALS

STATE OF MICHIGAN COURT OF APPEALS STATE OF MICHIGAN COURT OF APPEALS DAVID YOUMANS, Plaintiff-Appellant, UNPUBLISHED July 26, 2011 v No. 297275 Wayne Circuit Court BWA PROPERTIES, L.L.C., LC No. 09-018409-NI Defendant-Appellee. Before:

More information

LAW REVIEW MARCH 1995 INTOXICATED TRESPASSER DROWNS IN CLOSED CITY POOL

LAW REVIEW MARCH 1995 INTOXICATED TRESPASSER DROWNS IN CLOSED CITY POOL INTOXICATED TRESPASSER DROWNS IN CLOSED CITY POOL James C. Kozlowski, J.D., Ph.D. 1995 James C. Kozlowski The Garcia decision described herein presents a fairly commonplace situation where an adult trespasser

More information

YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to Answer the Complaint, a copy of

YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to Answer the Complaint, a copy of STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GREENVILLE Amber Childs Howard, as Personal Representative of the Estate of Jordan Barry Howard, vs. Plaintiff(s), Steve Loftis in his official capacity as the Sheriff

More information

MARK SCHEME for the May/June 2012 question paper for the guidance of teachers 9084 LAW. 9084/42 Paper 4, maximum raw mark 75

MARK SCHEME for the May/June 2012 question paper for the guidance of teachers 9084 LAW. 9084/42 Paper 4, maximum raw mark 75 UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS GCE Advanced Level MARK SCHEME for the May/June 2012 question paper for the guidance of teachers 9084 LAW 9084/42 Paper 4, maximum raw mark 75 This mark

More information

Illinois Official Reports

Illinois Official Reports Illinois Official Reports Appellate Court Bulduk v. Walgreen Co., 2015 IL App (1st) 150166 Appellate Court Caption SAIME SEBNEM BULDUK and ABDULLAH BULDUK, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. WALGREEN COMPANY, an

More information

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF NEW ZEALAND CA95/05. MARGARET BERRYMAN Second Appellant. Hammond, Chambers and O'Regan JJ

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF NEW ZEALAND CA95/05. MARGARET BERRYMAN Second Appellant. Hammond, Chambers and O'Regan JJ IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF NEW ZEALAND CA95/05 BETWEEN AND AND KEITH HUGH NICOLAS BERRYMAN First Appellant MARGARET BERRYMAN Second Appellant THE NEW ZEALAND DEFENCE FORCE Respondent Hearing: 27 June 2006

More information

California Bar Examination

California Bar Examination California Bar Examination Essay Question: Criminal Law/Criminal Procedure/Constitutional Law And Selected Answers The Orahte Group is NOT affiliated with The State Bar of California PRACTICE PACKET p.1

More information

9084 LAW 9084/41 Paper 41 (Law of Tort), maximum raw mark 75

9084 LAW 9084/41 Paper 41 (Law of Tort), maximum raw mark 75 UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS GCE Advanced Subsidiary Level and GCE Advanced Level MARK SCHEME for the October/November 2009 question paper for the guidance of teachers 9084 LAW 9084/41

More information

~~~~~ Week 6. Element of a Crime

~~~~~ Week 6. Element of a Crime ~~~~~ Week 6 Element of a Crime PHYSICAL ELEMENTS OF A CRIME (AR) Physical elements may refer to: o A specified form of conduct such as: An act; An omission; or There is a CL duty not to cause harm to

More information

THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA JUDGMENT

THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA JUDGMENT THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA JUDGMENT In the matter between: Case No: 115/12 THE MINISTER OF DEFENCE APPELLANT and LEON MARIUS VON BENECKE RESPONDENT Neutral citation: Minister of Defence

More information

Campbell v. Royal Bank of Canada [1964] S.C.R. 85

Campbell v. Royal Bank of Canada [1964] S.C.R. 85 Osgoode Hall Law Journal Volume 3, Number 3 (October 1965) Article 13 Campbell v. Royal Bank of Canada [1964] S.C.R. 85 G. W. D. McKechnie Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.osgoode.yorku.ca/ohlj

More information

IN THE YOUTH COURT AT AUCKLAND CRN: [2017] NZYC 375. NEW ZEALAND POLICE Prosecutor. H C Young Person

IN THE YOUTH COURT AT AUCKLAND CRN: [2017] NZYC 375. NEW ZEALAND POLICE Prosecutor. H C Young Person NOTE: NO PUBLICATION OF A REPORT OF THIS PROCEEDING IS PERMITTED UNDER S 438 OF THE CHILDREN, YOUNG PERSONS, AND THEIR FAMILIES ACT 1989, EXCEPT WITH THE LEAVE OF THE COURT THAT HEARD THE PROCEEDINGS,

More information

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT MEMPHIS February 25, 2015 Session

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT MEMPHIS February 25, 2015 Session IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT MEMPHIS February 25, 2015 Session LYDRANNA LEWIS, ET AL. V. SHELBY COUNTY, TENNESSEE Appeal from the Circuit Court for Shelby County No. CT00368611 Robert S. Weiss,

More information

LAW REVIEW AUGUST 1997 MARTIAL ARTS PARTICIPANTS DO NOT ASSUME INCREASED RISK OF INJURY. James C. Kozlowski, J.D., Ph.D James C.

LAW REVIEW AUGUST 1997 MARTIAL ARTS PARTICIPANTS DO NOT ASSUME INCREASED RISK OF INJURY. James C. Kozlowski, J.D., Ph.D James C. MARTIAL ARTS PARTICIPANTS DO NOT ASSUME INCREASED RISK OF INJURY James C. Kozlowski, J.D., Ph.D. 1997 James C. Kozlowski Under the assumption of risk doctrine, there is generally no legal duty to eliminate

More information

THE BUILDING CONTROL AMENDMENT REGULATIONS. Martin Waldron BL

THE BUILDING CONTROL AMENDMENT REGULATIONS. Martin Waldron BL MARTIN WALDRON BL FCIArb MSCSI MRICS Accredited Adjudicator & Mediator Law Library The Four Courts Dublin 7 +353(1)8177865 +353(86)2395167 www.waldron.ie martin@waldron.ie THE BUILDING CONTROL AMENDMENT

More information

IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG

IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG (1) REPORTABLE: YES / NO (2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO (3) REVISED... DATE SIGNATURE ) CASE NUMBER: 13/45391 HEARD: 29 FEBRUARY

More information

MARK SCHEME for the October/November 2012 series 9084 LAW. 9084/41 Paper 4, maximum raw mark 75

MARK SCHEME for the October/November 2012 series 9084 LAW. 9084/41 Paper 4, maximum raw mark 75 CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS GCE Advanced Level MARK SCHEME for the October/November 2012 series 9084 LAW 9084/41 Paper 4, maximum raw mark 75 This mark scheme is published as an aid to teachers

More information

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA FOURTH DISTRICT

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA FOURTH DISTRICT DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA FOURTH DISTRICT DENISE NICHOLSON, Appellant, v. STONYBROOK APARTMENTS, LLC, d/b/a SUMMIT HOUSING PARTNERS, LLC, Appellee. No. 4D12-4462 [January 7, 2015]

More information