Title: THE LAW OF TORTS
1THE LAW OF TORTS
2THE LECTURE STRUCTURE
- Texts
- Definition, aims and scope of law of torts
- Intentional torts
3TEXT BOOKS
- Dominic Villa Annotated Civil Liability Act
Lawbook Co. - Balkin and Davis The Law of Torts 5th Ed
LexisNexis (2013) - Luntz Hambly, Torts - Cases and Commentary, 7th
ed. LexisNexis, (2013) - Blay, Torts in a Nutshell LBC (2010)
4THE LAW OF TORTS
INTRODUCTION
- DEFINITION THE NATURE OF TORTS
- BD Chapter 1
5WHAT IS A TORT?
- A tort is a civil wrong
- That (wrong) is based a breach of a duty imposed
by law - Which (breach) gives rise to a (personal) civil
right of action for for a remedy not exclusive to
another area of law
6Discussion/Question
- Tort and Crime
- How does a tort differ from a Crime?
7THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A TORT AND A CRIME
- A crime is public /community wrong that gives
rise to sanctions usually designated in a
specified code. A tort is a civil private
wrong. - Action in criminal law is usually brought by the
state or the Crown. Tort actions are usually
brought by the victims of the tort. - The principal objective in criminal law is
punishment. In torts, it is compensation
8THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A TORT AND A CRIME
- Differences in Procedure
- Standard of Proof
- Criminal law beyond reasonable doubt
- Torts on the balance of probabilities
9 TORTS and CRIME
- A civil action
- Brought by the victim
- To provide a remedy
- Remedy compensation
- Proof balance of probabilities
- A criminal action
- Brought by the Crown
- To punish the perpetrator
- Remedy punishment
- Proof beyond reasonable doubt
10Question
- Are there any similarities between a tort and a
crime?
11SIMILARITIES BETWEEN TORTS AND CRIME
- They both arise from wrongs imposed by law
- Certain crimes are also actionable torts eg
trespass assault - In some cases the damages in torts may be
punitive - In some instances criminal law may award
compensation under criminal injuries compensation
legislation.
12TORT and CRIME
- The "roots of tort and crime" are "greatly
intermingled". And it is not only the roots of
tort and crime that are intermingled. The
increasing frequency with which civil penalty
provisions are enacted, the provisions made for
criminal injuries compensation, the provisions
now made in some jurisdictions for the judge at a
criminal trial to order restitution or
compensation to a person suffering loss or damage
(including pain and suffering) as a result of an
offence all deny the existence of any "sharp
cleavage" between the criminal and the civil law.
( Per GLEESON CJ, McHUGH, GUMMOW AND HAYNE JJ. In
Gray v Motor Accident Commission )
13TORTS DISTINGUISHED FROM BREACH OF CONTRACT
- A breach of contract arises from promises made by
the parties themselves.
14TORETS and CONTRACT
- Duty owed generally
- Duty imposed by law
- Â promises or agreement
- Protects what is already owned or possessed
- Damages unliquidated
- Duty to other contracting party
- Duty arises from parties'
- Protects expectation of future benefits
- Damages often liquidated
15SIMILARITIES BETWEEN TORT AND CONTRACT
- Both tort and breach of contract give rise to
civil suits - In some instances, a breach of contract may also
be a tort eg an employers failure to provide
safe working conditions
16Questions
- What are the objectives of tort law?
17THE OBJECTIVES OF TORT LAW
- Loss distribution/adjustment shifting losses
from victims to perpetrators - Compensation Through the award of (pecuniary)
damages - The object of compensation is to place the victim
in the position he/she was before the tort was
committed. - Punishment through exemplary or punitive
damages. This is a secondary aim.
18Question
- What interests are protected by the Law of Torts,
and how are these interests protected?
19INTERESTS PROTECTED IN TORT LAW
- Personal security
- Trespass
- Negligence
- Reputation
- Defamation
- Property
- Trespass
- Conversion
- Economic and financial interests
20 INTEREST PROTECTED AND RELEVANT ACTIONS
- Personal Security
- Reputation
- Property
- Liberty
- Mental tranquility
- Abuse of legal process
- Financial Interest
- Trespass, Negligence
- Defamation
- Trespass, Negligence, Conversion, Detinue
- False Imprisonment
- Nervous shock, Wilkinson v Downtown
- Malicious prosecution
- Negligence ( pure financial loss)
21SOURCES OF TORT LAW
- Common Law
- The development of torts by precedent through the
courts - Donoghue v Stevenson
- Statute
- Thematic statutes eg Motor Accidents legislation
- Motor Accidents Compensation Act 1999
- General statutes eg Civil Liability legislation
- The Civil Liability Act (NSW) 2002
22LIABILITY IN TORT LAW
- Liability responsibility
- Liability may be based on fault or it may be
strict - Fault liability the failure to live up to a
standard through an act or omission . - Types of fault liability
FAULT LIABILITY
NEGLIGENCE
INTENTION
23Intention in Torts
- Deliberate or wilful conduct
- Constructive intent where the consequences of
an act are substantially certain the
consequences are intended - Where conduct is reckless
- Transferred intent where D intends to hit B
but misses and hits P
24Negligence in Torts
- When D is careless in his/her conduct
- When D fails to take reasonable care to avoid a
reasonably foreseeable injury to another and
that party suffers damage.
25STRICT LIABILITY
- No fault is required for strict liability
26ACTIONS IN TORT LAW
- Trespass
- Directly caused injuries
- Requires no proof of damage ( actionable per se)
- Action on the Case/Negligence
- Indirect injuries
- Requires proof of damage
27THE DOMAIN OF TORTS
Financial loss
Negligence
Trespass
Defences
Nuisance
Breach of statutory duty
Defamation
Particular Duty Areas
Conversion
Vicarious liability
Product liability
Liability of public authorities
Concurrent liability
28INTENTIONAL TORTS
INTENTIONAL TORTS
Trespass
Conversion
Detinue
29WHAT IS TRESPASS?
- Intentional act of D which directly causes an
injury to the P or his /her property without
lawful justification - The Elements of Trespass
- fault intentional act
- injury must be caused directly
- injury may be to the P or to his/her property
- No lawful justification
30INJURY IN TRESPASS
- Injury a breach of right, not necessarily
actual damage - Trespass requires only proof of injury not actual
damage
31THE GENERAL ELEMENTS OF TRESPASS The DNA
Direct interference with person or property
Intentional act
Absence of lawful justification
A specific form of trespass
x element
32SPECIFIC FORMS OF TRESPASS
TRESPASS
PERSON
PROPERTY
BATTERY
ASSAULT
FALSE IMPRISONMENT
33BATTERY
- The intentional act of D which directly causes a
physical interference with the body of P without
lawful justification - The distinguishing element physical interference
with Ps body
34THE INTENTIONAL ACT IN BATTERY
- No liability without intention
- The intentional act basic willful act the
consequences.
35THE ACT MUST CAUSE PHYSICAL INTERFERENCE
- The essence of the tort is the protection of the
person of P. Ds act short of physical contact
is therefore not a battery - The least touching of another could be battery
- Cole v Turner (dicta per Holt CJ)
- The fundamental principle, plain and
incontestable, is that every persons body is
inviolate ( per Goff LJ, Collins v Wilcock)
36The Nature of the Physical Interference
37Rixon v Star City Casino
- D places hand on Ps shoulder to attract his
attention no battery -
38Collins v Wilcock
- Police officer holds Ds arm with a view to
restraining her when D declines to answer
questions and begins to walk away battery
39 Platt v Nutt
40SHOULD THE PHYSICAL INTERFERENCE BE HOSTILE?
- Hostility may establish a presumption of
battery but - Hostility is not material to proving battery
- The issue may revolve on how one defines
hostility
41THE INJURY MUST BE CAUSED DIRECTLY
- Injury should be the immediate The Case Law
- Scott v Shepherd ( Lit squib/fireworks in market
place) - Hutchins v Maughan( poisoned bait left for dog)
- Southport v Esso Petroleum(Spilt oil on Ps beach)
42THE ACT MUST BE WITHOUT LAWFUL JUSTIFICATION
- Consent is Lawful justification
- Consent must be freely given by the P if P is
able to understand the nature of the act - Allen v New Mount Sinai Hospital
- Lawful justification includes the lawful act of
law enforcement officers
43TRESPASSASSAULT
- The intentional act or threat of D which
directly places P in reasonable apprehension of
an imminent physical interference with his or her
person or of someone under his or her control
44(No Transcript)
45 THE LAW OF TORTS
- WEEK 2
- ASSAULT
- FALSE IMPRISONMENT
- TRESSPASS TO LAND
46TRESPASSASSAULT
- The intentional act or threat of D which
directly places P in reasonable apprehension of
an imminent physical interference with his or her
person or of someone under his or her control - It is any act and not a mere omission to act
by which a person intentionally or recklessly
causes another to apprehend immediate and
unlawful violence
47 The Gist of the Action
- Assault necessarily involves the apprehension of
injury or the instillation of fear or fright. It
does not necessarily involve physical contact
with the person assaulted nor is such physical
contact, if it occurs, an element of the assault.
(Barwick CJ in The Queen v Phillips (1971) 45
ALJR 467 at 472
48THE ELEMENTS OF ASSAULT
- There must be a direct threat
- Hall v Fonceca (Threat by P who shook hand in
front of Ds face in an argument) - Barton v Davis
- In general, mere words are may not actionable
- Barton v Armstrong
- But mere silence as in silent telephone calls,
may constitute an assault R v Burstow
R v Ireland 1998 AC 147. - In general, conditional threats are not
actionable - Tuberville v Savage
- Police v Greaves
49THE ELEMENTS OF ASSAULT
- The apprehension must be reasonable the test is
objective - The interference must be imminent
- -Police v Greaves
- Barton v Armstrong
- Zanker v Vartzokas (P jumps out of a moving van
to escape from Ds unwanted lift)
50Zanker v Vartzokas and the issue of
imminence/immediacy
- The Facts
- Accused gives a lift to victim and offers money
for sex victim refuses. - Accused responds by accelerating car, Victim
tries to open door, but accused increases
acceleration - Accused says to victim I will take you to my
mates house. He will really fix you up - Victim jumps from car then travelling 60km/h
51Zanker v Vartzokas The Issues
- Was the victims fear of sexual assault in the
future reasonable? - Was the feared harm immediate enough to
constitute assault?
52Zanker v Vartzokas The Reasoning
- Where the victim is held in place and unable to
escape the immediacy element may be fulfilled. - The essential factor is imminence not
contemporaneity - The exact moment of physical harm injury is
known to the aggressor - It remains an assault where victim is
powerless to stop the aggressor from carrying
out the threat
53THE GENERAL ELEMENTS OF TRESPASS
Intentional act
Direct interference
Absence of lawful justification
A specific form of trespass
x element
54SPECIFIC FORMS OF TRESPASS
TRESPASS
PERSON
PROPERTY
BATTERY
ASSAULT
FALSE IMPRISONMENT
55FALSE IMPRISONMENT
- The intentional act of D which directly causes
the total restraint of P and thereby confines
him/her to a delimited area without lawful
justification - The essential distinctive element is the total
restraint
56 THE ELEMENTS OF THE TORT
- It requires all the basic elements of trespass
- Intentional act
- Directness
- absence of lawful justification/consent , and
- total restraint
57RESTRAINT IN FALSE IMPRISONMENT
- The restraint must be total
- Bird v Jones (passage over bridge)
- Rudduck v Vadarlis
- The Balmain New Ferry Co v Robertson
- Total restraint implies the absence of a
reasonable means of escape - Burton v Davies (D refuses to allow P out of car)
- Restraint may be total where D subjects P to
his/her authority with no option to leave - Symes v Mahon (police officer arrests P by
mistake)
58VOLUNTARY CASES
- In general, there is no FI where one voluntarily
submits to a form of restraint - Herd v Werdale (D refuses to allow P out of mine
shaft) - Robison v The Balmain New Ferry Co. (D refuses to
allow P to leave unless P pays fare) - Lippl v Haines
- Where there is no volition for restraint, the
confinement may be FI (Bahner v Marwest Hotels
Co.)
59KNOWLEDGE IN FALSE IMPRISONMENT
- The knowledge of the P at the moment of restraint
is not essential. - Merring v Graham White Aviation
- Murray v Ministry of Defense