Tresspass to land (elements)
= unlawful direct interference with C’s possession of land
Tresspass to land (defences)
Tresspass to the person (general and defences)
Actionable per se => no need to show actual injury or harm
Trespass to the person (assault)
= intentional act by D that causes C to reasonably apprehend the immediate infliction of a battery/unlawful force upon him
Trespass to the person (battery)
= intentional direct application of unlawful force to another person
Interpreted broadly by the courts (Valid if medium is used provided that the medium is controlled by D and the application of force to C follows from its use without any intervention (eg throwing fireworks))
Unlawful force = Physical conduct which is not generally acceptable in the conduct of everyday life
Trespass to the person (false imprisonment)
= unlawful constraint of C’s freedom of movement from a particular place
Unlawful (defence is D can establish lawful grounds for doing so)
- Not a defence that D mistakenly believed they had the right to detain C
Constraint must be complete is in every direction
Trespass to goods
= intentional and direct interference with C’s possession of goods
Interference = Taking, damaging, interfering with them (incl touching provided it goes beyond what is acceptable in everyday life)
Damage not required
Conversion
= dealing with goods in a way which is seriously inconsistent with the rights of the owner
Acts of conversion
- When D’s actions are inconsistent with the tights of the owner to such an extent as to exclude the owner from use and possession of the goods
- Incl wrongful acquisition (theft), wrongful transfer, wrongful detention, and substantially changing, severely damaging, or misusing a chattel
Negligence (general)
= a breach by D of a legal duty of care owed to C, that results in actionable damage to C unintended by D
C must establish:
1. D owed a duty of care
2. D breached that duty
3. D’s breach caused damage to C
Negligence (duty of care)
Various established duty situations
Not an established duty (ie novel duty), courts will imply a duty of care only if:
1. Foreseeability
- D’s negligence must have created a foreseeable risk to THIS C
2. Proximity
- So closely and directly affected by the act that they ought reasonably to have them in D’s contemplation
3. Fair, just and reasonable to impose a duty
- Allows court to consider policy factors
Negligence (duty of care for omissions?)
General rule = no liability for pure emissions - D owes no duty to act to prevent harm to C
Exceptions –
1. Special relationship (eg parent/child or assumes responsibility)
Negligence - scope of duty of care
If harm suffered by C was not within the scope fo D’s duty of care, damages will not be recoverable even if D owed C a duty and acted negligently
Negligence - breach of duty
ie whether D fell below the relevant standard of care
Negligence - proving brecah of duty
ie C must provde that the breach caused the damage
Res ipsa loquitor (‘the thing speaks for itself’):
- ie where an absence of explanation of how the incident happened – court may be able to infer breach from the circs of the accident
- Three conditions needed to apply:
1. Cause of the accident is unknown
2. The thing causing the damage must be under the control of D or someone for whom D is responsible
3. Accident must be such as would not normally happen if proper care had been taken
=> enables court to draw inference of negligence
- May be rebutted if D is able to show they did exercise reasonable care
If guilty in criminal proceedings, conviction admissible as evidence in any civil claim arising from the incident
Negligence - causation
Three components:
Negligence - divisible vs indivisible injuries
Divisible
- damages can be apportioned between Ds according to share of injury each of them caused
=> C can only recover a portion of damages from each D, so must sue all if they are to recover in full
Indivisible
- C can recover fully from either D
- paying D may recover from other(s) a contribution to the damages payable
Successive injuries
- D in second accident only liable to the extent that their negligence made C’s damage worse than it already was
Negligence - defences
Pure economic loss (general rule)
General rule = no duty of care is owed in tort in respect of PEL
=> e.g. defective item of property
- Cost of damage to product itself is PEL and not recoverable (may be recoverable in contract)
- Damages other property => can claim (as consequential economic loss)
Pure economic loss (negligent misstatement)
Damages can be recovered in negligent misstatement where:
ie assumption of resposiblity by D and reasonable reliance by C
Pure psychiatric harm (general)
= psychiatric harm that stands alone ie does not flow from physical injury or damage
May be:
- A medically-recognised psychiatric condition; or
- A shock-induced physical condition (eg a miscarriage)
ie not consequential psychiatric harm (in which case usual negligence rules apply)
General rule = no DoC for PPH
PPH - primary victims
C must have:
1. Been in the actual area of danger; or
2. Reasonably believed he was in danger
DoC owed to a primary victim in respect of PPH if the risk of physical injury was foreseeable
PPH - secondary victims
Duty only established if:
Employers liability (general)
Duty of care = to take reasonable care of their safety while at work
Nondelegable ie ‘personal to the employer’
=> They must ensure reasonable care is taken by others
=> If person to whom a task is delegated fails to take such reasonable care then employer’s duty is breached
Employers liability - established duties
Established duties of the employer to take reasonable steps to provide:
Extends to stress-induced psychiatric harm