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Exam (elaborations)

Tort Law New Exam Questions And 100% Verified Detailed Answers Latest Update (A+)

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Tort Law New Exam Questions And 100% Verified Detailed Answers Latest Update (A+)...

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Institution
Tort Law
Course
Tort Law

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Uploaded on
November 22, 2024
Number of pages
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Written in
2024/2025
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Tort Law New Exam Questions And 100% Verified Detailed
Answers Latest Update (A+)


What does claimant have to do? - ANSWER • Prepare the claim and the initial evidence

• Suggest the amount of damages



• Who is claimant?

• Who is defendant? - ANSWER • An injured victim of wrongdoing. They bring an action
to recover compensation for their loss/damage

• The person/business responsible for the loss/damage



What is a 'tort'? Where does the term originate from? - ANSWER • A civil wrong

• French word for "wrong"



What is a remedy? What are the two types of it? - ANSWER 1) An order made by a court
to enforce/satisfy a tort claim

2) • Damages - the payment of money as compensation for the loss/damage suffered

• Injunction - a court order addressed to the defendant to stop doing something



What does the judge decide? - ANSWER • The liability

• The amount of damages

• If the winning party is entitled to the payment of their legal costs by losing party



What can appeal be made against? - ANSWER • Liability

• Amount of damages awarded



What if claimant is underaged? - ANSWER Parent/litigation friend takes the action on

,their behalf



What is a standard of proof? Who is it on? - ANSWER • On the balance of probabilities

• On the claimant



What are defences available? - ANSWER • Dispute the case

• Suggest the claimant wholly or partly caused their own injury



What is the main point of tort law? - ANSWER "Person has certain interests which others
have the obligation to respect"



What are the protected interests? - ANSWER • Personal harm

• Physical

• Reputational harm (defamation: libel/slander)

• Personal freedom

• Harm to property

• Harm to financial interests



What are the main aims of tort law? - ANSWER • To provide compensation to injured
victims

• To achieve and provide justice for an injured victim

• It is morally fair that an injury causer should be required to pay for the suffering
caused, penalising a defendant

• Loss distribution - greater liablity should be imposed on businesses/companies whose
activities cause physical injury and damage

• To achieve policy aims of improving standards



• What is the compensation culture?

• What has the Compensation Act 2006 changed? - ANSWER • Attitude to sue for even

, the most trivial reasons/where only minor injury/damage has been caused

• It became an offence to run an unauthorised claims management company



What is the difference between tort law and contract law? - ANSWER • Contract law -
previously entered contract

• Tort law - no formal relationship before the accident



What is a negligence? What must be proved? - ANSWER • An act or a failure to act which
causes injury to another person/damage to their property

• Duty of care + breach of duty + damage caused



What was the Donoghue v Stevenson (1932)? What has it established? - ANSWER •
Brewers of beer were held to be liable in causing injury (snail in a bottle)

• The neighbour principle - the person to whom the defendant owes a duty of care. It is
anyone who could be injured by your act/omission



What is incremental? - ANSWER Development of the law through cases



What is the Caparo v Dickman (1990) case? What has it established? - ANSWER
Economic loss = injury/damage



What is a three-part (Caparo test)? Give case examples. - ANSWER 1) An update of the
neighbour principle

2) • Harm is reasonably foreseeable (Kent v Griffiths 2000 - the ambulance could foresee
that the claimant could have been injured if they arrive late)

• Proximity of relationship Bourhill v Young 1943 - the dead motorcyclist owed no duty of
care to the claimant who suffered trauma+stillborn as a result of seeing the motorcyclist
dead in the accident

• Fair, just and reasonable to impose a duty Hill v Chief Constable of West Yorkshire
1990: the police don't owe a duty of care to the general public with whom they had no
previous dealing no way of knowing who the victim might be worse policing if claim is
successful

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