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TORTS

TORTS. Remoteness and Damage. [1] GENERAL:CAUSATION . Duty of Care. breach. damage. = Negligence. causation. There must be a causal link between D’s breach of duty and damage to P or P’s property. Overseas Tankship (UK) Ltd v Morts Dock and Engineering Co Ltd ( The Wagon Mound 1).

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TORTS

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  1. TORTS Remoteness and Damage

  2. [1] GENERAL:CAUSATION Duty of Care breach damage = Negligence causation There must be a causal link between D’s breach of duty and damage to P or P’s property

  3. Overseas Tankship (UK) Ltd v Morts Dock and Engineering Co Ltd (The Wagon Mound 1) • The facts: • The rule: the replacement of ‘direct’ cause (Re Polemis )with reasonably foreseeable’ • It is not the hindsight of a fool, but the foresight of a reasonable man which alone can determine liability (per Viscount Simonds)

  4. CAUSATION: THE ELEMENTS • Causation involves two fundamental questions: • the factual question whether D’s act in fact caused P’s damage: causation-in-fact • Whether, and to what extent D should be held responsible for the consequences of his conduct: legal causation

  5. CLA s5D • (1) A determination that negligence caused particular harm comprises the following elements: • (a) that the negligence was a necessary condition of the occurrence of the harm( "factual causation" ), and • (b) that it is appropriate for the scope of the negligent person’s liability to extend to the harm so caused (scope of liability" ). • (4) For the purpose of determining the scope of liability, the court is to consider (amongst other relevant things) whether or not and why responsibility for the harm should be imposed on the negligent party.

  6. THE ELEMENTS OF CAUSATION Causation Legal Factual (Causation in fact)

  7. CAUSATION-IN-FACT • Causation in fact relates to the factor(s) or conditions which were causally relevant in producing the consequences • Whether a particular condition is sufficient to be causally relevant depends on whether it was a necessary condition for the occurrence of the damage • The necessary condition: causa sine qua non

  8. CAUSATION • To be successful in a claim for a remedy, P needs to prove that the loss for which he/she seeks compensation was caused in fact by the D’s wrongful act • Traditionally, the test whether D’s wrongful act did in fact cause the loss is the ‘but for’ test

  9. Kavanagh v Akhtar • Facts:a Muslim woman who was physically injured while shopping was forced by the medical condition she had to then cut her previously long hair… Husband rejects her causing her to suffer depression • In any event, the possibility that a person will desert a partner who has been disfigured in the eyes of the deserter is sufficiently commonplace to be foreseeable (Per Mason J) • It was not necessary that the defendant should have foreseen the precise nature of the consequences of his act. In the present case, the plaintiff’s psychiatric illness was foreseeable

  10. Chapman v Hearse; Jolley V Sutton • The place of intervening acts in causation • Jolley v Suttton • P then aged 14, sustained serious spinal injuries in an accident. It arose when a small abandoned cabin cruiser, which had been left lying in the grounds of the block of flats, fell on Justin as he lay underneath it while attempting to repair and paint it. As a result he is now a paraplegic. • D held liable; what must have been foreseen is not the precise injury which occurred but injury of a given description. The foreseeability is not as to the particulars but the genus.

  11. MATERIAL CONTRIBTION • In general, it is not sufficient for a plaintiff to show that the negligence was one of several possible causes; It needs to be demonstrated that D’s conduct was the most probable cause of P’s damage. • In Common Law, it is also not enough for P to show that D’s conduct materially increased the riskto D. P needs to prove that D’sconduct materially causedthe damage

  12. MATERIAL CONTRIBUTION • Bonnington Castings v Wardlaw [1956] AC 613 • The plaintiff had a lung disease because of fumes the employer had exposed him to, plus he had exposed himself to smoke – issue whether employer had caused the disease? • House of Lords held: P must make it appear at least that on the balance of probabilities the breach of duty caused or materially contributed to his injury

  13. MATERIAL CONTRIBUTION • Chappel v Hart (1998) 156 ALR 517 • Court noted that the Plaintiff must show the Defendant’s action materially contributed to the Plaintiff’s injury

  14. INCREASE IN MATEARIAL RISK • M’Ghee v National Coal Bd (1972) 3 All ER 1008 • The P claimed employer’s failure to provide showers to wash away residue caused his dermatitis - the doctors were not certain if showers would have stopped the plaintiff contracting dermatitis D held liable but mainly on policy grounds • Wilsher v Essex Area Health Authority (1988): • a premature baby negligently received an excessive concentration of oxygen and suffered retrolental fibroplasia leading to blindness. However the medical evidence demonstrated that this can occur in premature babies who have not been given excessive oxygen, and there were four other distinct conditions which could also have been causative of the fibroplasia • M’Ghee distinguished on the grounds that there was only one causal candidate (brick dust)

  15. Bailey v The Ministry of Defence & Anor (2008) • The claimant aspirated her vomit leading to a cardiac arrest that caused her to suffer hypoxic brain damage. There was evidence of negligence by the medical team • the question: what caused her to aspirate her vomit. • Issue: whether the negligence had "caused or materially contributed to" the injury • Held: If the claimant could have established on the balance of probabilities that 'but for' the negligence of the defendant the injury would not have occurred, she would have been entitled to succeed. • The instant case involved cumulative causes acting so as to create a weakness so that she could not prevent the aspiration

  16. INCREASE IN MATERIAL RISK VERSUS MATERIAL CAUSATION • “A material increase in the risk of injury by a defendant is not legally equated with a material contribution to the injury by a defendant. However, in some circumstances if it were proved that the defendant did materially increase the risk of injuring the plaintiff then the court might infer causation, i.e. that the defendant’s negligence materially contributed to the injury (Wallaby Grip (BAE) Pty Ltd (in liq) v MacLeay Area Health Service )

  17. Causation principles under the CLA: s5D (2) • In determining in an exceptional case, in accordance with established principles, whether negligence that cannot be established as a necessary condition of the occurrence of harm should be accepted as establishing factual causation, the court is to consider (amongst other relevant things) whether or not and why responsibility for the harm should be imposed on the negligent party

  18. MULTIPLE CAUSES • Where the injury or damage of which the plaintiff complains is caused by D’s act combined with some other act or event, D is liable for the whole of the loss where it is indivisible; where it is divisible, D is liable for the proportion that is attributable to him/her

  19. MULTIPLE CAUSES: TYPES • Concurrent sufficient causes • where two or more independent events cause the damage/loss to D ( eg, two separate fires destroy P’s property) • Successive sufficient causes • Baker v Willoughby; Faulkner v Keffalinos; • D2 is entitled to take P (the victim) as he finds him/her • Where D2 exacerbates a pre-existing loss/injury (such as hasten the death of P) D2 is liable only for the part of the damage that is attributable to him

  20. The Law of Torts Particular Duty Areas: Product Liability Abnormal Plaintiffs Unborn Children

  21. Liability for Defective Products: The Scope • Product liability as a regime for protecting consumer rights: • Defective structures/premises (as products?) • Consumer goods as products

  22. Product Liability: Evolution in Common Law • Originally in Common Law, a consumer in receipt of defective goods (including goods that caused injury to the consumer because of defects) was protected by the warranties implied in the contract of sale • The implied warranties was later incorporated into statutes: • Sale of goods Act 1983 (UK) • Sale of Gods At 1923 (NSW)

  23. The Difficulties with Implied Warranties • Warranties do not ‘run’ with goods. It is simply an element of the contract and does not therefore attach to the goods as such • There is generally no ‘ vertical privity’ between the manufacturer and the ultimate consumer let alone between wholesalers and the ultimate consumers • Privity of contract ‘remained a recalcitrant obstacle to the extension o warranties between the manufacturer and the ultimate consumer ‘ (Fleming)

  24. The Emergence of Negligence Law: Donoghue v Stevenson • The existence of the duty of care between the manufacturer and ultimate consumer • ‘a manufacturer of products … owes a duty to the consumer to take reasonable care’

  25. The Sources of Law on Product Liability • Common Law: • contract • tort • Statute Law • Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cwth) • State fair trading legislation, State Sale of Goods legislation • Strict liability regime.

  26. Common Law: Negligence • Donoghue v Stevenson and the Common Law duty of manufacturers • The scope of the duty: • The extent of the duty:Junior Books v Veitchi (the duty extends beyond merely causing harm to safety or property) • Intermediate examination: Grant v. Aust. Knitting Mills • The range of defendants: Haseldine v. Daw

  27. The Act of the Defendant • Negligent design of product • O’Dwyer v. Leo Buring [1966] WAR 67 • Negligence in the manufacturing process: • Grant v. Australian Knitting Mills • Negligent Marketing of a Product • Adelaide Chemical & Fertilizer Co V. Carlyle • Failure to warn of dangers or proper use Norton Aust. Pty Ltd V. Steets Ice Cream Pty Ltd

  28. Statute • Sale of Goods Act (1923) NSW impliesinto contracts for sale of goods certain warranties: • fitness for purpose • merchantable quality • cannot be excluded

  29. Statute • Trade Practices Act (Comm) Pt V Div 2A • S74B Allows a consumer or person acquiring title through or under consumer an action against manufacturer in respect of goods unsuitable for purpose of sale.  • S.74C : Action in respect of false description • S.74D: goods of unmerchantable quality • S.74E: goods not corresponding with sample • S.74K : No exclusion or modification of T.P.A

  30. The TPA: The manufacturer • Manufacturer: defined widely (S74A (3) & (4)) to include a corporation • -allows its name or brand on goods • -holds itself out as manufacture • -is importer & manufacture has no Aust place of business

  31. The TPA: The Consumer • CONSUMER: person acquiring goods where; • -prices does not exceed the prescribed amount ($40,000) • OR • -where price was greater but goods were of a kind ordinarily acquired for personal domestic or household use.

  32. The TPA: Remedies • S75AE: Remedy for other persons who suffer consequential losses. • S75AF: Remedy for damage to personal, domestic or household goods: • S75AG: Remedy for damage to land or buildings

  33. The TPA: Defences • Defences: S75AK • Contrib. Neg: S75AN • 3 year time limit: S75AQ

  34. The TPA Part VA • Pt VA T.P.A was enacted in 1992 and deals with the liability of manufacturers and importers of defective goods • S.75A: Applies to goods “if their safety is not such as person generally are entitled to expect” • S.75AD: A corporation supplying such goods is liable for damages to a person injured or killed

  35. Fair Trading Act (1987) (NSW)

  36. The Action: TPA or Tort • Under the TPA the Plaintiff does not prove: • -duty of care • -negligence • P should where possible plead 2 causes of action: • -in tort • -under TPA

  37. Abnormal Plaintiffs and Particularly Sensitive Plaintiffs • To be liable, P must show that she/he was foreseeable. In general the abnormal P is not foreseeable • There is a distinction to be drown between the abnormal Plaintiff and the particularly sensitive Plaintiff

  38. Abnormal Plaintiffs • In general where D is negligent, D takes P as he /she finds P. Any unusual condition that aggravates the damage cannot be used by D as a defence • Haley v. London Electricity Bd. Ablind P held not to be abnormal: D “ought to anticipate the presence of such person within the scope and hazard of their operations”

  39. Particularly Sensitive Plaintiff • Where P suffers damage because of a particular sensitivity in circumstances where D’s conduct is not considered a breach, P cannot claim • Levi. V Colgate Palmolive • “the bath salts supplied to P were innocuous to normal persons… the skin irritation which she suffered…was attributable exclusively to hypersensitiveness” 

  40. The Unborn Child • In general, a duty of care may be owed to P before birth • Watt v. Rama: “the possibility of injury on birth to the child was… reasonably foreseeable…On the birth the relationship crystallised and out of it arose a duty on the D…” • X v. Pal: Duty to a child not conceived at the time of the negligent act • Lynch v. Lynch:Mother liable in neg to her own foetus injured as result of mother’s neg driving.

  41. Wrongful Birth Claims • Claims by parents in respect of the birth of a child who would not have been born but for the D’s negligence. • Vievers v Connolly (1995) 2 Qd R 325 (Mother of disabled child born bec. Pl lost opportunity to lawfully terminate pregnancy. Damages included costs for past & future care of child for 30 years.) • CES v Superclinics (1995-6) 38 NSWLR 47 Mother lost opportunity to terminate pregnancy as a result of D’s neg failure to diagnose pregnancy. NSW Ct of Appeal held claim maintainable but damages not to include costs of raising the chills as adoption was an option. • Melchior v Cattanach [2001] QCA 246 Mother of healthy child after failed sterilization procedure. Qld CT Appeal held damages shld include reasonable costs of raising the child. High Ct agreed on appeal

  42. Wrongful Life Claims • Claim by child born as a result of negligent treatment by De of child’s parent. • Bannerman v Mills (1991) ATR 81-079. Summary dismissal of claim by child born with disabilities as result of mother having rubella whilst pregnant. Tort of wrongful life unknown to common law

  43. Wrongful Life Claims • Edwards v Blomeley; Harriton v Stevens; Waller v James (2002 ) NSW Supreme Court, Studdert J. • ·No duty of care to prevent birth • ·Policy reasons - • 1.Sanctity & value of human life • 2.impact of such claim on self-esteem of disabled persons • 3.exposure to liability of mother who continued with pregnancy • 4.Plaintiffs’ damage not recognizable at law - would involve comparison of value of disabled life with value of non-existence • 5.Impossibility of assessment of damages in money terms - taking non-existence as a point of comparison.

  44. CLA Part 11 s71 • In any proceedings involving a claim for the birth of a child to which this Part applies, the court cannot award damages for economic loss for: (a) the costs associated with rearing or maintaining the child that the claimant has incurred or will incur in the future, or (b) any loss of earnings by the claimant while the claimant rears or maintains the child. (2) Subsection (1) (a) does not preclude the recovery of any additional costs associated with rearing or maintaining a child who suffers from a disability that arise by reason of the disability.

  45. Defective Premises • In general the occupier of premises owes a duty of care to persons who come on to the premises • While the notion of occupier's liability may have developed initially as a separate category of tort law, it now considered under the general principles of negligence • Zaluzna v Australian Safeway Stores

  46. Occupiers’ Liability • What are Premises? • -Land and fixtures • -but Cts have used wide interpretations including moveable structures eg: • scaffolding (London Graving Dock v. Horton [1951] AC 737 • Ships and gangways eg. Swinton v. China Mutual Steam Navigation Co Ltd (1951) 83 CLR 553

  47. Occupiers’ Liability • Who is an occupier – control • Wheat v. Lacon [1966] AC 522 • Kevan v. Commissioner for Railways [1972] 2 NSWLR 710

  48. The Liability of Public Authorities

  49. Introduction: Public Authorities and the Rule of Law • Applying the same rules of civil liability to the actions of public authorities or corporation: • The rationale: No legal or natural person is above the law • The difficulties: The nationalization and provision of public utilities and community facilities necessarily distinguish public corporations from ordinary citizens

  50. The Rule of Law and Public Authorities • “When a statute sets up a public authority, the statute prescribes its functions so as to arm it with appropriate powers for the attainment of certain objects in the public interest. The authority is thereby given a capacity which it would otherwise lack, rather than a legal immunity in relation to what it does, … There is, accordingly, no reason why a public authority should not be subject to a common law duty of care in appropriate circumstances in relation to performing, or failing to perform, its functions, except in so far as its policy-making and, perhaps, its discretionary decisions are concerned” (per Mason J in Sutherland Shire Council v Heyman)

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