Causation in fact outline 111104 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 9
About This Presentation
Title:

Causation in fact outline 111104

Description:

Grimstad, Kirincich, Haft, Zuchowicz, Reynolds ... Most restrictive: Only necessary results (Ryan) Less restrictive: Non-necessary results: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:77
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 10
Provided by: margosc
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Causation in fact outline 111104


1
Causation in fact (outline 11/11/04)
  • Problem (1) Negligent defendant, uncertainty as
    to whether it caused the harm (or whether the
    harm was caused by some non-human or non-liable
    agent)
  • Grimstad, Kirincich, Haft, Zuchowicz, Reynolds
  • Problem (2) Negligent defendants, uncertainty as
    to which one caused the harm.
  • Summers v. Tice DES cases
  • Problem (3) Overdetermination.
  • Kingston

2
Factual Causation Issues
  • What is the substantive standard (i.e., the
    question the jury is asked)?
  • What showing meets the burden of production? Or
    the same thing whats the standard of review?
  • Who bears the burden of proof? Governs
  • The risk of the absence of information
  • The winner in equipoise
  • Standard of proof How certainly must the facts
    be established?

3
Causation in fact
  • What is the substantive standard (i.e., the
    question the jury is asked)?
  • Ordinary answer Did the defendants negligence
    (or other breach) cause the plaintiffs harm?
    (But-for)
  • Kingston premise, two defendants case Would each
    of the defendants breaches have caused the harm,
    independently of the other?
  • Summers, aggressively Did negligence of one of
    the defendants cause the harm? (DES cases are
    similar, but adjust damages to account for odds)

4
Causation in fact
  • What meets the burden of production?
  • General answer Could a reasonable juror find
    that the defendant, more likely than not, caused
    the plaintiffs harm?
  • Grimstad (drowning 1) Speculation doesnt
    count.
  • Kirincich (drowning 2) Might the negligence
    have caused the harm?
  • Zuchowicz Where act is deemed negligent because
    it increases the risks of the very kind of
    accident that occurred, that meets the burden of
    production.

5
Causation in fact
  • Who bears the burden of proof (and therefore the
    risk of the absence of information about
    chances)?
  • Ordinary answer The plaintiff.
  • Haft Where breach greatly enhanced the chances
    of the harm (maybe only where lack of proof is
    also caused by the breach), defendants bear the
    burden of proof. Zuchowicz maybe comes out to
    the same place.
  • Summers, read conservatively (about equipoise)
    the defendants, where they acted in concert.

6
Proximate Cause (outline 11/16/04)
  • Coincidence (Berry v. Sugar Notch Borough)
  • The issue of intervening cause
  • Natural intervention
  • Human intervention (criminal, negligent, etc.)

7
When do we get to proximate cause?
  • Issues that precede proximate causation
  • Negligence
  • But-for (factual) causation

8
The problem of coincidence
  • Berry v. Sugar Notch Borough
  • Foreseeability A foreseeable connection exists
    when a given negligent act, viewed ex ante, makes
    the resulting accident more probable.

9
The problem of intervening cause
  • Ordinary and natural consequences
  • Most restrictive Only necessary results (Ryan)
  • Less restrictive Non-necessary results
    Reasonable, ordinary, probable (foreseeable?)
    So, what do do with results that are
    eitherindependently negligent or criminal?
  • Harm within the risk (Hines v. Garrett)
  • Foreseeability
  • special rules for criminal misconduct? Watson,
    Yes(?) Brower, No
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com