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Summary OCR A-level Law - Tort law

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In-depth summary of aspects of tort law covered by OCR. Explains cases and how they make an impact on future precedent and decisions.











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Uploaded on
August 3, 2025
Number of pages
16
Written in
2024/2025
Type
Summary

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TORT
LAW
NOTES

Negligence

, Falling so below the standard of the reasonable person, doing something
they wouldn’t do, or not doing something they would do (objective test)

Duty of care

 Neighbour principle stablished in Donoghue v Stevenson in which you
should avoid acts or omissions you can reasonably foresee would harm
your neighbour
 The Caparo test is used in novel cases to establish a duty of care, there
must be:
 Reasonably foreseeable harm (Kent v Griffiths) - The defendant's
actions would cause harm if carried out
 Sufficient enough proximity (Bourhill v Young) - Closeness
between parties, whether in time, space or relationship
 Fair, just and reasonable to impose a duty (Hill v CC West
Yorkshire) - will it open floodgates or destroy public policy if
imposed?
 However, if there’s already an established principle or precedent, that
should be used, not the Caparo test
 Nettleship v Weston – Road user to other road users
 Montgomery v Lanarkshire – Doctor to patient
 Mullin v Richards – Child to another child
 Bolam & Bolitho – Reasonable professionals are held against
other reasonable professionals (would a member of the same
profession act in the same way?)



Breach of duty

 The defendant fell so below the standard expected of them in keeping
others from harm
 This is an objective standard, so it looks at what the reasonable man
would do (Vaughn v Menlove) - this applies to the situations as
mentioned above
 However, there are some risk factors that can mitigate the duty of care
owed:
 Adequate precautions (Latimer v AEC) - If all reasonable
precautions had been taken, there’s no breach
 Size of risk (Bolton v Stone) - the higher the risk, the greater the
duty of care due to the standard of precautions needed

,  Special characteristics (Paris v Stepney) - Need to be taken into
consideration, meaning a greater duty of care is owed
 Social utility (Day v high performance sports & Tomlinson v
Congleton) - If the actions of the defendant benefit society,
there’s np breach if this outweighs the harm

Causation

 Was the defendant the factual and legal cause of the harm suffered by
the claimant?
 Factual causation is established through the “but for” test (Barnet and
Chelsea) - but for the defendant’s actions, would the harm still be
suffered?
 For legal causation, consider intervening acts that may break the chain
of causation, e.g. acts of the claimant, acts of nature or acts of a third
party
 There must also be remoteness of damage – the injury suffered was a
foreseeable result of the defendant’s breach (Wagon Mound)
 If a type of injury is totally foreseeable, the defendant may be liable
(Bradford v Robinson rentals – claimant suffered frostbite)
 The thin skull rule also applies – you must take your victim as you find
them (Smith v Leech Brain)
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