This article explores the peculiarities of the tort of misfeasance in a public office from the perspective of two popular, contemporary theories of tort law: the rights-based theory of Robert Stevens, and the corrective justice theory of Ernest Weinrib. It identifies four significant problems of fit for these theories: viz, the fact that this tort does not protect a clearly defined private law right; the fact that its touchstones of liability include concepts that are highly unusual in tort law (such as malice, recklessness and bad faith); the fact that it confounds the private/public law dichotomy envisaged by both authors, and the fact that it is both animated by, and makes ready use of, public policy considerations. It is nonetheless arg...
This Article embraces neither the narrow nor broad conceptualization of a public official employed c...
The aim of the thesis is to examine the liability of public authority's within the context of the pu...
This Article is a rejoinder to the civil recourse theorist\u27s claim that tort law will be better s...
Recently the Federal Court of Australia found that a Commonwealth Minister had committed the tort of...
In recent years, the highly restrictive attitude taken by English courts to public authority liabili...
The authors draw on two notable cases, Akenzua v. Secretary of State for the Home Department, and Pa...
Case law on tort liability of public officers and employees is much more interesting than one might ...
Examines the extent to which an overlap exists between the legal categories of public law and tort. ...
Many scholars have offered theories that purport to explain the whole of the law of torts. At least ...
In this paper I endorse the basic assumption that informed the Law Commission’s consultation paper o...
Most legal scholarship on tort focuses primarily on judicial decisions, but this represents only a l...
Although the legislature has made significant inroads into tort law, tort theorists have focused the...
The thesis of this Article is that while the modern plaintiffs\u27 bar serves a crucial regulatory f...
Although the legislature has made significant inroads into tort law, tort theorists have focused the...
Between the 1970s and the end of the 1990s, the House of Lords and the Court of Appeal attempted to ...
This Article embraces neither the narrow nor broad conceptualization of a public official employed c...
The aim of the thesis is to examine the liability of public authority's within the context of the pu...
This Article is a rejoinder to the civil recourse theorist\u27s claim that tort law will be better s...
Recently the Federal Court of Australia found that a Commonwealth Minister had committed the tort of...
In recent years, the highly restrictive attitude taken by English courts to public authority liabili...
The authors draw on two notable cases, Akenzua v. Secretary of State for the Home Department, and Pa...
Case law on tort liability of public officers and employees is much more interesting than one might ...
Examines the extent to which an overlap exists between the legal categories of public law and tort. ...
Many scholars have offered theories that purport to explain the whole of the law of torts. At least ...
In this paper I endorse the basic assumption that informed the Law Commission’s consultation paper o...
Most legal scholarship on tort focuses primarily on judicial decisions, but this represents only a l...
Although the legislature has made significant inroads into tort law, tort theorists have focused the...
The thesis of this Article is that while the modern plaintiffs\u27 bar serves a crucial regulatory f...
Although the legislature has made significant inroads into tort law, tort theorists have focused the...
Between the 1970s and the end of the 1990s, the House of Lords and the Court of Appeal attempted to ...
This Article embraces neither the narrow nor broad conceptualization of a public official employed c...
The aim of the thesis is to examine the liability of public authority's within the context of the pu...
This Article is a rejoinder to the civil recourse theorist\u27s claim that tort law will be better s...