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Exam (elaborations)

Tort Law - Negligence: Duty, breach, causation, defences (Exam Plan)

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I scored 75% in Tort Law and received a Distinction (74%) overall in the GDL at the University of Law using these notes. These notes are written in the form of step-by-step exam plans. Compared to standard notes, this will save you lots of time. Most people will make notes during workshops, and then create exam plans nearer exams. Here, you take both steps together. Although the GDL has been replaced with the PGDL in the UK, many of the topics in these notes are still covered. Some sections are coded according to this key: YELLOW - the order of the steps to take during exam questions, and additional guidance in italics, ORANGE - the fact pattern for which this section of the exam plan/notes applies, GREEN - cases, BLUE - legislation, PALE RED - other sources, C - claimant, D - defendant , X - used as a placeholder for the names of people in the legal problem, [ ] - placeholders in which you insert the relevant information from the legal problem.

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Tort Law - Negligence (Duty, breach, causation, defences)

N.B. always consider the time limits for tort claims - Limitation Act 1980:
- Normally, the limitation period is six years from when the cause of action arises
- Except:
- Defamation cases concerning the publication of defamatory statements - 1
yr
- Personal injury claims - within 3 yrs of the date of injury
- Children - the time period does not start to run until the child turns 18

[STEP 1] Introduce negligence claim

C v D - [INSERT TORT]

[INSERT C] can consider suing [INSERT D] in the tort of negligence for [INSERT C’s
HARM CAUSED BY D’S ACT].

Negligence is a breach by the defendant (D) of a legal duty of care owed to the claimant
(C) that results in actionable damage to C, unintended by D.

[IF FOLLOW UP] [INSERT C] can consider suing [INSERT D] in negligence (see
definition above) for [INSERT C’s HARM].

[STEP 2] Duty of care

Duty of care

Established duty situations:

[INSERT RELEVANT ESTABLISHED DUTY FROM BELOW LIST] is likely to be an
established duty situation (insert authority if there is one).

[IF ESTABLISHED DUTY PRESENT] [INSERT D] owes [INSERT C] a duty of care in
relation to [INSERT SCENARIO].

Examples:
- One road user to another (driver to other drivers;driver to passenger; driver to
pedestrian; cyclist to driver;cyclist to pedestrian…)
- Doctor - patient
- Teacher - pupil
- Tutor - tutee

, - Employer - employee (GO TO WS6)
- Manufacturer - consumer
- Adult / parent in loco parentis - child
- Advocate - client (Arthur J S Hall and Co. v Simmons)
- One road user - another road user (e.g. driver - pedestrian (London Passenger
Transport Board v Upson) , driver - cyclist, pedestrian - driver…)
- Driver - passenger (Nettleship v Weston)
- D to rescuer - where D’s actions create a dangerous situation so that it is
reasonably foreseeable that someone may attempt a rescue (Baker TE Hopkins
& Son Ltd).
- Fellow participants in sporting events (Condon v Basi)
- Contractors - those who could be foreseeably injured by their carelessness (AC
Billings v Riden), including trespassers (Buckland v Guildford Gas Light & Coke
Co)
- Includes all situations which were novel when considered in court, and so
satisfied the Caparo test:
- Kent v Griffiths [2000] - ambulance service failed to arrive in reasonable
time, liable for C’s harm (cardiac arrest during the delay)

- Phelps v Hillingdon LBC [2001] - psychologist - patient, failed diagnoses

- Vowles v Evans [2003] - referee to player

- Established that a duty of care does not exist for:
- Fire service to emergency caller (Capital & Counties v Hampshire County
Council).
- Ratio - lack of sufficiently proximate relationship between the fire
brigade and the emergency caller (which was the owner of the
building on fire)

Novel duty situations:

APPLY CAPARO, APART FROM 1) POLICE, 2) PUBLIC BODY / OMISSIONS. Go
straight to relevant sections for these (IF THERE’S NO ESTABLISHED DUTY or
IT’S UNCLEAR).

If not, [INSERT D] owes a duty to [INSERT C] in relation to [INSERT SCENARIO] if (as
per Caparo):

- It is reasonably foreseeable that the defendant’s actions will affect the claimant;

, - There sufficient proximity of relationship between the claimant and defendant;
and
- It is fair, just and reasonable to impose a duty.

Foreseeability

- Not foreseeable in Bourhill v Young
- Facts:
- C heard motorcycle-car collision, saw blood on road, claimed they
suffered shock and a miscarriage
- Held:
- D not liable - motorcyclist did not owe a duty of care to C as C was
not a reasonably foreseeable V of the Motorcyclist's negligence

Proximity of relationship

- A lack of proximity was the reason for C’s failed damages claim in Caparo -
relationship of proximity too distant between outside investors with no
shareholding and shareholders.


Fair, just and reasonable

Whether it is ‘fair, just and reasonable’ to impose a duty of care depends on policy
considerations.
[CHOOSE RELEVANT ONES FROM BELOW]
- ‘Floodgates’ argument
- This could be an argument against imposing a duty on the grounds that
allowing one case to succeed would open the floodgates to many similar
claims.
- Deterrence
- Imposition of a duty of care on a defendant may deter others in the same
situation from acting carelessly.
- Public benefit
- The courts may consider a decision’s benefit to the public (normally in
deterrence cases)
- Resources
- The courts will consider that when C succeeds against D, money passes
from one to another
- Courts consider the existence of insurance
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GDL Notes, Exam Plans & Exam Answers

Hi there! I am a former GDL student at the University of Law sharing my course notes, exam plans, and exam answers. The GDL is pretty intense - I know from experience it can be difficult to learn everything AND optimise your exam technique. This is why I publish my notes and exam plans, which hopefully help you do both at the same time! If you have any questions, I am just a message away :)

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