This article seeks to demonstrate three things. First, the orthodox conceptualisation of the tort of public nuisance is flawed, since: (1) it is in violation of basic private law principles related to privity and the actionability of crimes and (2) if taken seriously would mandate that the tort be abolished (as torts protect private not public rights). Second, the rights at the heart of the tort are the privately actionable rights to pass and repass on public highways and to fish in public waters, and that it is plausible that a sophisticated legal system would recognise such rights. Third, a tort reconceptualised in this way can make sense of: (1) the special damage rule that is generally thought arbitrary and (2) the general intuition tha...
In this paper I endorse the basic assumption that informed the Law Commission’s consultation paper o...
Recent years have seen a resurgence of Torts viewed as a purely private legal arrangement: whether d...
From its original function of providing a remedy for the invasion of land rights, the law of nuisanc...
Public nuisance has recently been dusted off as a potential source of legal redress for tobacco use,...
It is forty years since Professor Newark wrote despairingly of nuisance that “the subject as commonl...
In recent years, the highly restrictive attitude taken by English courts to public authority liabili...
This Article advocates for a wider pleading use of the tort of nuisance—this, because of the unresol...
Public nuisance has always been defined in terms of the object of protection – the community, the pu...
The recent litigation that ended in the House of Lords’ decision in Ashley v. Chief Constable of Sus...
In this article, the author suggests that the old common law rule denying that an owner of property ...
The tort action for Breach of Statutory Duty provides an intersection between the goals of private l...
The limitations on a punitive damage award depend on the conception of punitive damages. Is it a pri...
Many scholars have offered theories that purport to explain the whole of the law of torts. At least ...
An article recently published in the Tort Law Review argues that separate torts of trespass to the p...
This Article is a rejoinder to the civil recourse theorist\u27s claim that tort law will be better s...
In this paper I endorse the basic assumption that informed the Law Commission’s consultation paper o...
Recent years have seen a resurgence of Torts viewed as a purely private legal arrangement: whether d...
From its original function of providing a remedy for the invasion of land rights, the law of nuisanc...
Public nuisance has recently been dusted off as a potential source of legal redress for tobacco use,...
It is forty years since Professor Newark wrote despairingly of nuisance that “the subject as commonl...
In recent years, the highly restrictive attitude taken by English courts to public authority liabili...
This Article advocates for a wider pleading use of the tort of nuisance—this, because of the unresol...
Public nuisance has always been defined in terms of the object of protection – the community, the pu...
The recent litigation that ended in the House of Lords’ decision in Ashley v. Chief Constable of Sus...
In this article, the author suggests that the old common law rule denying that an owner of property ...
The tort action for Breach of Statutory Duty provides an intersection between the goals of private l...
The limitations on a punitive damage award depend on the conception of punitive damages. Is it a pri...
Many scholars have offered theories that purport to explain the whole of the law of torts. At least ...
An article recently published in the Tort Law Review argues that separate torts of trespass to the p...
This Article is a rejoinder to the civil recourse theorist\u27s claim that tort law will be better s...
In this paper I endorse the basic assumption that informed the Law Commission’s consultation paper o...
Recent years have seen a resurgence of Torts viewed as a purely private legal arrangement: whether d...
From its original function of providing a remedy for the invasion of land rights, the law of nuisanc...