In 2009, the Maine Supreme Judicial Court, sitting as the Law Court, held in Dyer v. Maine Drilling and Blasting, Inc. that strict liability should be applied to abnormally dangerous activities in accordance with the Restatement (Second) of Torts §§ 519-20. In doing so, the court expressly overruled its decision in Reynolds v. W.H. Hinman Co., which had rejected a strict liability approach to blasting cases in favor of a negligence-based standard. In Dyer, a majority of the Law Court vacated the trial court’s grant of summary judgment for Maine Drilling and Blasting, Inc. (Maine Drilling) and held that strict liability should be applied in cases that involve abnormally dangerous activities. The majority explained that policy approaches rega...
Strict liability for environmental contamination has become a fact of life in the past twenty years ...
Strict liability for environmental contamination has become a fact of life in the past twenty years ...
In Baker v. Farrand, the Maine Supreme Judicial Court, sitting as the Law Court, held that for a ser...
In 2009, the Maine Supreme Judicial Court, sitting as the Law Court, held in Dyer v. Maine Drilling ...
Plaintiff brought action for damage to his land caused by concussion and vibration resulting from de...
Plaintiff brought action for damage to his land caused by concussion and vibration resulting from de...
The cornerstone of tort law in our Anglo-American system of jurisprudence is based upon three genera...
Strict liability for ultra-hazardous activities is entirely different from strict products liability...
When more than one person or entity causes injury to another, the multiple tortfeasors are jointly a...
Centuries ago, the noted Irish satirist, Jonathan Swift, made a modest proposal\u27 that the inhabi...
In State v. McPartland, Mallory McPartland challenged her conviction for operating under the influen...
Centuries ago, the noted Irish satirist, Jonathan Swift, made a modest proposal\u27 that the inhabi...
A viable fetus is not a person under the wrongful death act, declared the Maine Law Court in a contr...
My main thesis is that the doctrine of strict liability for abnormally dangerous activity (which I s...
My main thesis is that the doctrine of strict liability for abnormally dangerous activity (which I s...
Strict liability for environmental contamination has become a fact of life in the past twenty years ...
Strict liability for environmental contamination has become a fact of life in the past twenty years ...
In Baker v. Farrand, the Maine Supreme Judicial Court, sitting as the Law Court, held that for a ser...
In 2009, the Maine Supreme Judicial Court, sitting as the Law Court, held in Dyer v. Maine Drilling ...
Plaintiff brought action for damage to his land caused by concussion and vibration resulting from de...
Plaintiff brought action for damage to his land caused by concussion and vibration resulting from de...
The cornerstone of tort law in our Anglo-American system of jurisprudence is based upon three genera...
Strict liability for ultra-hazardous activities is entirely different from strict products liability...
When more than one person or entity causes injury to another, the multiple tortfeasors are jointly a...
Centuries ago, the noted Irish satirist, Jonathan Swift, made a modest proposal\u27 that the inhabi...
In State v. McPartland, Mallory McPartland challenged her conviction for operating under the influen...
Centuries ago, the noted Irish satirist, Jonathan Swift, made a modest proposal\u27 that the inhabi...
A viable fetus is not a person under the wrongful death act, declared the Maine Law Court in a contr...
My main thesis is that the doctrine of strict liability for abnormally dangerous activity (which I s...
My main thesis is that the doctrine of strict liability for abnormally dangerous activity (which I s...
Strict liability for environmental contamination has become a fact of life in the past twenty years ...
Strict liability for environmental contamination has become a fact of life in the past twenty years ...
In Baker v. Farrand, the Maine Supreme Judicial Court, sitting as the Law Court, held that for a ser...