Vicarious Liability Flashcards

(26 cards)

1
Q

What is vicarious liability?

A

When a person or organisation is legally responsible for a tort they did not commit due to their relationship with the tortfeasor.

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2
Q

What is the two-stage test for vicarious liability?

A
  1. Relationship akin to employment.
  2. Close connection between that relationship and the wrongdoing.
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3
Q

What does Stage 1 require?

A

A relationship akin to employer and employee.

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4
Q

What test is used to determine employment status?

A

The Economic Reality (Multiple) Test.

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5
Q

Which case sets out the Economic Reality Test?

A

Ready Mixed Concrete – concrete lorry drivers.

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6
Q

What are the three elements from Ready Mixed Concrete?

A
  1. Work for regular pay.
  2. Under control of company.
  3. Other terms consistent with employment (uniform, tax, training).
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7
Q

What distinguishes a traditional employee?

A

Regular pay and contract of employment.

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8
Q

What is meant by ‘akin to employment’?

A

A relationship similar to employment (e.g. zero-hour contracts).

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9
Q

How does an independent contractor differ?

A

Works for themselves; not under employer’s full control.

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10
Q

When is the Control Test used?

A

When one employer lends an employee to another.

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11
Q

Which case sets the presumption for borrowed employees?

A

Mersey Docks v Coggins & Griffiths – permanent employer presumed liable.

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12
Q

Which case shows control can shift liability?

A

Hawley v Luminar – bouncer; new employer liable due to high control.

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13
Q

Which case extended liability to non-traditional employees?

A

Cox v Ministry of Justice – prisoner working in kitchen.

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14
Q

What two factors were identified in Cox v MoJ?

A
  1. Actions furthered D’s business.
  2. D created the risk by assigning the activity.
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15
Q

Which case applied Cox where status unclear?

A

Barclays Bank v Various Claimants – doctor medical exams.

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16
Q

What does Stage 2 require?

A

A close connection between employment and wrongdoing.

17
Q

How can Stage 2 be satisfied?

A

Authorised wrongful act OR unauthorised act closely connected to authorised work.

18
Q

Which case sets out modern ‘course of employment’?

A

Morrisons v Various – data leak; was it personal or work-related?

19
Q

Which case shows intentional wrongdoing within employment?

A

Mohamud v Morrisons – racial abuse connected to job.

20
Q

Which case shows intentional wrongdoing as frolic of his own?

A

N v CC Merseyside – officer rape; personal act.

21
Q

Which case shows unintentional wrongdoing within employment?

A

Rose v Plenty – milkman used child labour; still business-related.

22
Q

Which case shows unintentional wrongdoing as frolic?

A

Twine v Beans Express – forbidden lift; personal reasons.

23
Q

[Diagram: Stage 2 Flowchart]

A

Always start with Morrisons.
Ask: Work benefit or frolic of his own?
Work → Likely V.L.
Personal → No V.L.

24
Q

What Act governs contribution between employer and tortfeasor?

A

Civil Liability (Contribution) Act 1978.

25
What does the 1978 Act allow?
Employer can reclaim damages from tortfeasor after paying claimant.
26
Why is contribution rarely used?
Employees often lack funds; legal costs outweigh recovery.