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Summary Trespass to the Person Revision

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A Tort law revision summary on trespass to the person. Received a 2:1 from Cambridge University!

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TRESPASS TO THE PERSON

3 MAIN TORTS
1. Battery
Conduct Requirement
 D must directly and voluntary apply force to the claimant

Fault Requirement
 Fowler v. Lanning – limits battery to cases of intentional touching
 Wilson v. Pringle – suggesting touching must be hostile (Weir calls this “nonsense”)

2. Assault
Conduct Requirement
 D must perform an act that makes the claimant think D is about to touch them
 C must believe he is in imminent danger (Turberville v. Savage)
 It doesn’t have to be shown that C was afraid of being attacked or that C was actually about to be attacked

Fault Requirement
 ‘Careless assaults’ exist – but it is doubtful whether courts would allow a claim of this sort
 Claims are more likely allowed when assault is intentional

3. False Imprisonment
Conduct Requirement
 D must perform act which directly results in the claimant’s freedom of movement being restricted
 Restriction has to be complete – Bird v Jones (claimant was free to walk the other way)
 Doesn’t have to be shown that C was aware he was falsely imprisoned

Fault Requirement
 Intent to deprive claimant of liberty (Smith LJ)

DEFENCE OF CONSENT
Physical contact is always lawful if the claimant consents. When is consent vitiated?

 Consent is vitiated if it was procured through illegitimate pressure/influence
 Withdrawal consent renders any further interference as unlawful. Exception – if its unreasonable to expect the
interference will be stopped immediately. Test – reasonable amount of time
 Also e.g. if patient agrees to procedure X, but doesn’t understand X due to doctor’s shortfall, the patient did not really
consent to X. (Chatterton v. Gerson)
 Medicine & children – Gillick competence test. Otherwise, consent of parents is needed

However, it is possible to consent to harm.
 Blake v. Galloway – claimant consented to risk of injury when playing game, so D not liable

STATUTORY POWERS
 Statutory powers may only interfere if it’s reasonable – must be executed for a purpose, meet legitimate expectations
and be consistent with ECHR
 If not – breach of a public law duty

WILKINSON V DOWNTON
 Recognised intentional infliction of mental shock. Now- boundaries of this tort are narrow due to freedom of
expression
 UKSC recognised 2 requirements (Rhodes v OPO)
1. Intention need not be to cause psychological illness – sufficient that D intended severe distress
2. Recklessness is not sufficient – there must be an actual intention to cause severe distress



BREACH OF DUTY
OBJECTIVITY
 Standard of care is objective.
 Special considerations:

i. Emergency: not fair to hold people to a reasonable person standard – acknowledged by S.4 Social
Action, Responsibility & Heroism Act
ii. Automatism: D has not breached standard of care if he is in this state (Mansfield v Weetabix)
iii. Isolated Mistake: Did D demonstrate a predominantly responsible approach?

 Two exceptions: assumption of responsibility & duty to act

BALANCING
 High risk – low cost: negligence
 Low risk – high cost: no negligence
 Low risk – low cost: depends on court

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