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Complete Summary, IRAC Cases & Exam Outline

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This document provides a complete, exam‑ready overview of Tort Law, covering all essential principles, elements, and cases needed for first‑year law students. It includes clear explanations, structured summaries, and practical examples to help students understand negligence, duty of care, causation, vicarious liability, defences, and other core tort concepts. The notes are written in a concise, easy‑to‑follow format designed to support quick revision before exams. They are suitable for 1st‑year/LLB/1L students and align with common Tort Law curricula used internationally. These notes are ideal for students who want: • A clear summary of key Tort Law topics • Case explanations that are simple and exam‑focused • A structured guide for problem‑question analysis • Reliable, well‑organised content for fast revision Perfect for anyone preparing for end‑of‑semester Tort Law exams or needing a strong foundation in the subject.

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Uploaded on
January 4, 2026
Number of pages
3
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Summary

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Tort Law – Summary of Common Exam
Topics
⭐ 1. Negligence (Most Tested Topic)
Negligence is the failure to act as a reasonable person would.

To succeed in a negligence claim, the plaintiff must prove:

• Duty of Care – A legal obligation to avoid causing harm.

• Breach of Duty – The defendant acted below the standard of a reasonable
person.

• Causation –

• Factual causation: “But for” the defendant’s conduct, harm would not have
occurred.

• Legal causation: Harm must be reasonably foreseeable.

• Damage – Actual harm suffered (physical, financial, emotional).

Negligence is the backbone of most tort exams.




⭐ 2. Duty of Care
Courts decide if a duty exists by looking at:

• Foreseeability of harm

• Relationship between parties

• Public policy considerations

This is often tested using scenarios (e.g., car accidents, medical negligence).




⭐ 3. Breach of Duty
Measured using the reasonable person test.

Courts consider:
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