TOPICS Tort, Negligence, Liability The elements of liability for Negligence; 14.1.1. The sources of the law of Negligence; 14.1.2. 'Trespass' and 'Actions on the case'; 14.2.1. The necessity of distinguishing the nature of particular conduct and harm; 14.3.1. Restricting liability for careless conduct causing harm; 14.3.2. The reasons for restricting liability; 14.3.3. Tort, Negligence, the existence of a duty of care The foreseeablity of harm; 14.4.1. How liability for careless conduct causing harm is limited; 14.4.1. The requirement of foreseeable harm; 14.4.1.1. Foreseeing particular harm; 14.4.1.2 . How foreseeability of harm is determined; 14.4.1.3. Determining who might foreseeably be harmed; 14.4.1.4. The foreseeability of psychiatric harm; 14.4.1.5. Tort, Negligence, duty situations How the courts establish a duty situation or relationship; 14.4.2.1. Recognised duty situations or relationships; 14.4.2.2. Plaintiffs with accentuated susceptibility to harm; 14.4.3.2. Rescuers; 14.4.3.3. Statutory authorities; 14.4.3.4. Manufacturers; 14.4.3.5. Occupiers; 14.4.3.6. Employees; 14.4.3.7. The 'unborn' plaintiff; 14.4.3.8. A failure to act that causes harm; 14.4.3.9. Institutions caring for children; 14.4.3.10. Negligent misstatements causing purely economic loss; 14.4.3.11. Establishing 'reasonable reliance' on a negligent misstatement; 14.4.3.12. The need to establish the 'vulnerability' of the plaintiff; 14.4.3.13. Liability for negligent misstatements passed on to a third party; 14.4.3.14. Cases that do not fall within a recognised duty situation or relationship; 14.4.2.3. Immunity from liability; 14.4.2.4. Tort, Negligence, breach of a duty of care Establishing a breach; 14.5.1. The obligation to prevent harm to the plaintiff ; 14.5.1.1. What harm must be foreseeable to a defendant who owes a duty of care; 14..1.2. The test by which the foreseeability of harm is determined?; 14.5.1.3. Legislative provisions; 14.5.1.4. The relevance of a defendant's particular knowledge; 14.5.1.5. The relevance of a defendant's professional expertise; 14.5.1.6. The relevance of a defendant's youthfulness; 14.5.1.7. The relevance of a defendant's mental illness; 14.5.1.8. The relevance of inexperience or lack of skill; 14.5.1.9. Tort, Negligence, avoiding a breach of a duty of care Taking reasonable steps to avoid harm; 14.5.2.1. The probability of harm; 14.5.2.3. The seriousness of harm; 14.5.2.4. Practicality of avoiding harm; 14.5.2.5. Justifiability; 14.5.2.6. Policy considerations; 14.5.2.7. The onus of proving a breach of a duty of care; 14.5.3.1. Drawing justifiable inferences from the facts; 14.5.3.2. The principle of 'res ipsa loquitur'; 14.5.3.3 - 14.5.3.4. Tort, Negligence, causation Establishing the cause of particular harm; 14.6.1. The concept of 'actionable' harm; 14.6.1.1. Distinguishing different types of harm; 14.6.1.2 – 4. The sufficiency of harm; 14.6.1.5. Proving the link between 'cause' and 'harm'; 14.6.2.1. The concept of causation; 14.6.2.2. Single causes of harm; 14.6.2.3. Combined causes of harm; 14.6.2.4. Multiple independent causes of harm; 14.6.2.5. Assessing the full extent of harm; 14.6.2.6. Omissions causing harm; 14.6.2.7. New intervening causes of harm; 14.6.2.8. Immediate and remote harm; 14.6.2.9. Causation of psychiatric harm; 14.6.2.10. The foreseeablity of the harm caused; 14.6.3.1. Reasonable foreseeability of consequences; 14.6.3.2. Unforeseeable harm caused; 14.6.3.3. The 'eggshell skull' rule; 14.6.3.4. Tort, Negligence, defences Possible grounds for avoiding liability ; 14.7.1. Contributory negligence; 14.7.2. Apportionment legislation; 14.7.3. Situations in which a plaintiff assumes the risk of harm; 14.7.4. Voluntary assumption of risk in common law; 14.7.5. Legislative reform of the assumption of risk; 14.7.6.
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