Causation is an important concept in negligence law in which plaintiff would have to prove that the injury suffered by him was the factual and legal results of the defendant's breach of duty. Without successfully proving the effective and unbroken link of causation, claim of negligence will necessarily fail
In the common law provinces of Canada, it is generally recognized that a plaintiff in a products lia...
Duty of care cannot be used anymore as the touchstone to differentiate negligence from strict liabil...
This note suggests a model to unify, in a simple information-based framework, the notion of negligen...
grantor: University of TorontoIt is fundamental for liability in negligence law that a pl...
Negligence is not a ground of liability unless it causes injury or damage to some interest which the...
In proving negligence, one of the elements which the plaintiff must prove is that the damage suffere...
Any plaintiff seeking to recover in tort must prove that the defendant has breached the duty of care...
Causation is a concept of enormous importance in the law. In just the last two years, the United Sta...
All causes of action in tort, like all causes of action generally, are constituted by elements or in...
Under the civil liability legislation enacted in most Australian jurisdictions, factual causation wi...
Several elements must be shown to be fulfilled for a court to hold that negligence has occurred, and...
In order to make out a prima facie case in Missouri in an action based upon a negligent tort of the ...
This article argues that there is nothing overly confusing about the law ofcausation in negligence. ...
The decision in the Bailey v. Ministry of Defence case raises some interesting issues in relation to...
Resurfice Corp. v. Hanke, [2007] 1 S.C.R. 333, 2007 SCC 7, creates a new causation doctrine in Canad...
In the common law provinces of Canada, it is generally recognized that a plaintiff in a products lia...
Duty of care cannot be used anymore as the touchstone to differentiate negligence from strict liabil...
This note suggests a model to unify, in a simple information-based framework, the notion of negligen...
grantor: University of TorontoIt is fundamental for liability in negligence law that a pl...
Negligence is not a ground of liability unless it causes injury or damage to some interest which the...
In proving negligence, one of the elements which the plaintiff must prove is that the damage suffere...
Any plaintiff seeking to recover in tort must prove that the defendant has breached the duty of care...
Causation is a concept of enormous importance in the law. In just the last two years, the United Sta...
All causes of action in tort, like all causes of action generally, are constituted by elements or in...
Under the civil liability legislation enacted in most Australian jurisdictions, factual causation wi...
Several elements must be shown to be fulfilled for a court to hold that negligence has occurred, and...
In order to make out a prima facie case in Missouri in an action based upon a negligent tort of the ...
This article argues that there is nothing overly confusing about the law ofcausation in negligence. ...
The decision in the Bailey v. Ministry of Defence case raises some interesting issues in relation to...
Resurfice Corp. v. Hanke, [2007] 1 S.C.R. 333, 2007 SCC 7, creates a new causation doctrine in Canad...
In the common law provinces of Canada, it is generally recognized that a plaintiff in a products lia...
Duty of care cannot be used anymore as the touchstone to differentiate negligence from strict liabil...
This note suggests a model to unify, in a simple information-based framework, the notion of negligen...