The issue of causation is fundamental to every constitutional tort action. Money damages are not recoverable unless the defendant is found to have caused the plaintiff to be deprived of a constitutional right and that deprivation is the cause of some harm. In several recent decisions the Supreme Court has seized upon the language of causation as a means of restricting constitutional tort liability. In Monell v. Department of Social Services, for example, the Court based its rejection of respondeat superior on the implicit meaning of the term causes. The concept of causation in a constitutional tort context thus requires a connection between the defendant and the plaintiff\u27s injury more substantial than defendant\u27s employment of the ...
Critics complain that punitive damages often serve no good purpose. Whatever the merit of this charg...
Tort law depends on three key concepts: causation, responsibility, and fault. However, I argue that ...
This paper discusses the economics of causation in tort law, describing precise implications for pre...
The issue of causation is fundamental to every constitutional tort action. Money damages are not rec...
The cause of action for damages to redress violations of constitutional rights is now firmly establi...
Government officers may harm persons in many ways. When an official inflicts a physical injury, caus...
Constitutional tort law marries the substantive rights granted by the Constitution to the remedial m...
It has been surprisingly difficult to extricate constitutional litigation from torts. In this Articl...
The thesis of this Article is that both the Supreme Court and its critics have failed to identify an...
This essay is about the language used to decide when governments should be held responsible for cons...
Causation is a source of confusion in tort theory, as well as a flash point for the debate between c...
Tort liability in the private realm may be understood as an instrument aimed...at deterrence...[and...
This Note argues for the approach taken by the Sixth Circuit in McKinley: a proper understanding of ...
This Article argues that the Bowers principle is wrong. It examines the issues of doctrine and polic...
Part I describes and critiques the proposals to create no-cause legal regimes applicable to all toxi...
Critics complain that punitive damages often serve no good purpose. Whatever the merit of this charg...
Tort law depends on three key concepts: causation, responsibility, and fault. However, I argue that ...
This paper discusses the economics of causation in tort law, describing precise implications for pre...
The issue of causation is fundamental to every constitutional tort action. Money damages are not rec...
The cause of action for damages to redress violations of constitutional rights is now firmly establi...
Government officers may harm persons in many ways. When an official inflicts a physical injury, caus...
Constitutional tort law marries the substantive rights granted by the Constitution to the remedial m...
It has been surprisingly difficult to extricate constitutional litigation from torts. In this Articl...
The thesis of this Article is that both the Supreme Court and its critics have failed to identify an...
This essay is about the language used to decide when governments should be held responsible for cons...
Causation is a source of confusion in tort theory, as well as a flash point for the debate between c...
Tort liability in the private realm may be understood as an instrument aimed...at deterrence...[and...
This Note argues for the approach taken by the Sixth Circuit in McKinley: a proper understanding of ...
This Article argues that the Bowers principle is wrong. It examines the issues of doctrine and polic...
Part I describes and critiques the proposals to create no-cause legal regimes applicable to all toxi...
Critics complain that punitive damages often serve no good purpose. Whatever the merit of this charg...
Tort law depends on three key concepts: causation, responsibility, and fault. However, I argue that ...
This paper discusses the economics of causation in tort law, describing precise implications for pre...