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Summary A* FULL OCR A-Level Tort Law Revision Notes

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Subido en
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Escrito en
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These are full A* level notes for each individual topic including evaluation and tips for application coming from an A* a level student. Purchase my other modules on my shop including Contract Law, Criminal Law and Legal System.

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Aneesa Ahmed



Complete Tort Law
OCR A-Level Law
Contents
- Negligence and Medical Negligence (2)
- Evaluation of Negligence (4)
- Occupier Liability 1957 (6)
- Evaluation of OLA57’ (8)
- Occupiers Liability 1984 (9)
- Evaluation of OLA84’ (11)
- Nuisance (12)
- Rylands v Fletcher (14)
- Vicarious Liability (15)
- Evaluation of Vicarious Liability (17)
- Tort Defences (18)
- Tort Remedies (19)


Timing: 30mins or less/ question




Page 1 of 19

,Aneesa Ahmed


Negligence AO1

- Common law offence began in Donoghue v Stevenson
- Comprised of 3 elements (duty, breach damage)

DUTY

- Established duty? (Robinson v CC west yorks)

Novel situations (Caparo)(Only mention the test if Caparo is needed!!)

1. Proximity (Bourhill v young- woman was not in close proximity, she moved
towards the blood scene)
2. Forseeability (Haley v LEB- foreseeable for blind man to fall though hole in
ground)
3. FJR (Griffiths v Lindsay- not FJR to expect taxi driver to wait for man to go inside)

BREACH

Breach is falling below the standard of a reasonable person (Blyth v Birmingham
waterworks)

1.Standard can change

- Children- Mullins v Richard’s- ruler fight breaks into child’s eye, low standard for
children
- Experts- Bollam v Friern- doctors have a higher standard
- Knowledge at the time- Roe v Minister of Health
- Beginners- Nettleship v Western- learner driver till liable

2.Four risk factors:

1. Likelihood- Bolton v stone- low likelihood of cricket ball going over fence
2. Seriousness- Paris v Stepney- very serious to not
3. Cost of avoiding- Latimer v AEC- high cost of avoiding would be closing down
the factory
4. Utility- Watt v Hertz- utility in fireman standing on the back of truck to save
woman
- Res Ipsa Loquitur (Ward v Tesco- split yogurt, facts speak for themselves )

DAMAGE

1.Causation:

a) Factual Causation: Barnett v Chelsea- stomach pain was acc arsenic
poisoning, undiagnosed




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,Aneesa Ahmed


b) Legal causation (break in the chain of causation or reasonable action): The
Oropesa- after crash, lifeboat capsized but reasonable action for captain to
tell them to get on lifeboat

2.Thin Skull Rule- doesn’t break chain (Smith v Leech Brain- lip had pre-cancerous
cells)

3.Multiple causes means D not liable (Wilsher v Essex- multiple causes for death of
baby)

4.Remoteness: damage must be foreseeable, not remote (Wagon Mound- fire on
harbour too remote damage, Hughes v Lord Advocate- burns from paraffin lamp was
foreseeable)

Defences (2)

- Contributory negligence (Froom v Butcher- not wearing seatbelt 20%, Sayers v
Harlow-escape bathroom by stepping on toilet roll holder- 25% and Clay v TUI-
claim failed)
- Volenti- if the claimant accepts the risk and still continues there is a complete
defence (Morris v Murray- consent to be a passenger in plane with drunk pilot)

Medical Negligence

- Bollam and Friern- act as a reasonable expert
- Bolitho v Hackney- adds another level (illogical- determined by judge)
- FB v Princess Alexandra Hospital (standard for new doctor is the same)
- Montgomery v Lanarkshire (mother given C-section—> client needs to be made
aware of the alternative treatments)
- FC: Barnett v Chelsea

A02 Checklist

- Established or novel situation?- 3 part test
- Does the standard change?
- Breach- Risk factors, Res Ipsa Loquitur
- Is there damage? Factual and Legal cause- is there a break or reasonable?
- Thin skull rule?
- Are there multiple causes?
- Is the damage remote or foreseeable?
- Is the Claimant also negligent- (defences) contributory negligence? / Volenti




Page 3 of 19

,Aneesa Ahmed


Evaluation of Negligence

AO3

Intro:

- Common law offence been around for many years aims to question duty, breach
and damage
- Aim is to help and ensure justice but there are still many issues especially due to
money and medical negligence and experts
1. Need to prove fault/ breach (compensation)
- Can be costly especially with the need to expert advice e.g. in med neg
- Need to prove fault results in delays
- Burden of proof on claimant can be harsh BUT seems fair
2. Ad hoc (case by case) development of law
- Starts with decisions made in Donoghue v Stevenson
- There is no statute, it is all common law: undemocratic even though negligence
issues often conflict with society… judges have to make political and moral
decisions without experiences that parliament does
3. Inconsistent decisions
- Some decisions do not align with moral views
- E.g. Nettleship v Western—> morally blameless but legally at fault because she
is insured, perhaps unfair on beginner
- But in other contexts this is helpful e.g, Mullins v Richard’s —> makes sense for
lower standard for children
4. Vague tests (lack of definition, scope etc) —> hard to define bc they are part
of judgements
- Donoghue v Stevenson ‘neighbour principle’- Lord Atkin questions if there is a
duty of care at all —> broad test which is narrowed by Caparo
- Vague on the degree of proximity in situations not regarding a manufacturer
- Leaves too much space for Judges to use subjective opinion
- Caparo test is vague about factors: foreseeability, proximity, FJR
- Remoteness of damage is vague
- Thin skull rule vague but good because protects weaker parties
- Risk factors—> too many, but their to protect, how to measure things like size of
risk
- Tests like causation and remoteness —> where to draw the line between
foreseeable and remote.
5. Determining scope of medical negligence
- Bolam test criticised for being heavily weighted in favour of professionals
needing only another doctor to agree with the decision—> issues with primary
etc



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, Aneesa Ahmed


- Solved/adapted by Bolitho test by adding illogical test but again issue of opinion
as this is left up to Judges
- Issues with BUT FOR tests where there are multiple causes e.g. Wilsher v Essex
—> unfair that just because there are multiple causes that the doctor was not
liable, what about the parents that lost their baby, seams harsh to forget about
them VS Fairchild v Glenhaven —> all people liable for asbestos because unsure
where the poisoning came from
- But fair in terms of communication e.g. Montgomery v Lanarkshire—> pregnant
lady should have been made aware of all of her options
6. Juries
- Juries do not have the knowledge especially with medneg cases for the decision
to be left up to them
7. Unfair on Defendants
- Success may depend on a different in the outcome—> this could be a technical
point e.g. Fairchild v Glenhaven which could be unjust

Conclusion + reforms

- Many problems with the current law especially with medical negligence despite
some changes being made
- To avoid costly issues there could be compulsory insurance e.g. America to
protect those in these situations
- Possible ‘no-fault’ compensation system




Page 5 of 19

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Subido en
12 de junio de 2025
Número de páginas
19
Escrito en
2024/2025
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Hi find my A* notes used for my A-Levels in Law, Religious Studies and Economics. Take a look at the packages as well to find discounts for all the content for individual papers or an entire course. My notes work specifically for OCR in Law and Religious Studies and AQA for Economics; however, they will fit with many exam boards and undergraduate study. Thanks for looking at my shop, please feel free if you have any questions or want to discuss prices!

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