With the ever expanding reach of the action of negligence, other tortious actions are often forgotten. A recent decision of the High Court and a decision of the Queensland Court of Appeal demonstrate that older actions in torts still have relevance in modern society
Rights-based approaches to tort law have been prominent in recent years in theoretical discussions o...
Several thousand sales slips, mistakenly printed to bear plaintiff\u27s telephone number, were suppl...
"Australian Torts Law provides clear and accessible explanation and analysis of tort law in Australi...
Considers whether the Court of Appeal ruling in Cocking v Eacott has altered the scope of a landlord...
This thesis discusses issues affecting contemporary nuisance law from an historical standpoint. It i...
In this article, the author suggests that the old common law rule denying that an owner of property ...
This article reviews the liability of occupiers for injuries suffered by trespassers on their land. ...
The recent decision of the Supreme Court in Lawrence v Fen Tigers 1 is significant, not least for th...
It is forty years since Professor Newark wrote despairingly of nuisance that “the subject as commonl...
Commentators have long characterized the law of nuisance as a muddled and confusing doctrine, limite...
In ‘The Wagon Mound’1 the Privy Council had to consider claims in public nuisance and negligence ari...
In the 1959 Oregon decision of Martin v. Reynolds Metals Co., the supreme court of that state re-inv...
An article recently published in the Tort Law Review argues that separate torts of trespass to the p...
The Queensland Court of Appeal recently heard a case that raised the defence of volenti non fit inju...
When confronted with a case involving a child plaintiff, attorneys and the courts should recognize ...
Rights-based approaches to tort law have been prominent in recent years in theoretical discussions o...
Several thousand sales slips, mistakenly printed to bear plaintiff\u27s telephone number, were suppl...
"Australian Torts Law provides clear and accessible explanation and analysis of tort law in Australi...
Considers whether the Court of Appeal ruling in Cocking v Eacott has altered the scope of a landlord...
This thesis discusses issues affecting contemporary nuisance law from an historical standpoint. It i...
In this article, the author suggests that the old common law rule denying that an owner of property ...
This article reviews the liability of occupiers for injuries suffered by trespassers on their land. ...
The recent decision of the Supreme Court in Lawrence v Fen Tigers 1 is significant, not least for th...
It is forty years since Professor Newark wrote despairingly of nuisance that “the subject as commonl...
Commentators have long characterized the law of nuisance as a muddled and confusing doctrine, limite...
In ‘The Wagon Mound’1 the Privy Council had to consider claims in public nuisance and negligence ari...
In the 1959 Oregon decision of Martin v. Reynolds Metals Co., the supreme court of that state re-inv...
An article recently published in the Tort Law Review argues that separate torts of trespass to the p...
The Queensland Court of Appeal recently heard a case that raised the defence of volenti non fit inju...
When confronted with a case involving a child plaintiff, attorneys and the courts should recognize ...
Rights-based approaches to tort law have been prominent in recent years in theoretical discussions o...
Several thousand sales slips, mistakenly printed to bear plaintiff\u27s telephone number, were suppl...
"Australian Torts Law provides clear and accessible explanation and analysis of tort law in Australi...