Introduction | p. vii |
Intentional Torts | |
The Concept of Intent | p. 1 |
The Tort of Battery | p. 5 |
The Tort of Assault | p. 8 |
The Tort of False Imprisonment | p. 11 |
The Tort of Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress | p. 14 |
The Tort of Trespass to Land | p. 18 |
Torts violating Interests in Personal Property | p. 22 |
Defenses to Intentional Torts | |
Consent | p. 25 |
Self-Defense, Defense of Others, and Defense of Property | p. 29 |
Public and Private Necessity | p. 32 |
More Obscure Defenses | p. 36 |
Negligence: An Introduction and the Concept of Duty | |
An Introduction to Negligence | p. 39 |
The Concept of a "Duty of Care" | p. 41 |
The Reasonably Prudent Person Standard of Care | p. 43 |
The Duty of Care of Children | p. 48 |
The Duty of Care of Professionals | p. 50 |
Duties of Possessors of Land (Premises Liability) | p. 55 |
Duties Based on Criminal Statutes | p. 63 |
The No-Duty-To-Rescue Rule | p. 67 |
Duties To Prevent Emotional Harm | p. 70 |
Duties to Guard Against Harm Caused By Third Parties | p. 74 |
Duties Owed to Unborn Children | p. 78 |
Duty of Care of the Government | p. 80 |
Family and Charitable Immunity | p. 83 |
Negligence: The Breach Element | |
The Two Aspects of Proving Breach of Duty | p. 85 |
The Relationship Between Duty and Breach | p. 86 |
Assessing Reasonableness By Considering Custom | p. 87 |
Assessing Reasonableness By Considering Costs and Benefits | p. 89 |
Assessing Reasonableness By Appealing To Jury Intuition | p. 92 |
Res Ipsa Loquitur | p. 94 |
Negligence: Factual Causation | |
The Basic Test-The "But-For" Rule | p. 99 |
The Special Situation of Merged Causes | p. 102 |
Unascertainable Causes | p. 104 |
The "Loss of Chance" Cases | p. 106 |
Negligence: Proximate Cause | |
An Introduction | p. 109 |
Really Silly Ideas For a Proximate Cause Test | p. 112 |
Foreseeability As the Measure of Defendant's Liability | p. 114 |
An Obsolete Rule and Its Rhetorical Legacy | p. 116 |
Why It Gets Fuzzy: Characterizing the Risk | p. 123 |
Negligence: Damages | |
Types of Damages Recoverable | p. 127 |
The "Eggshell Skull" Principle | p. 131 |
Allocation of Damages Between Multiple Defendants | p. 132 |
The Collateral Source Rule | p. 135 |
The Economic Loss Rule | p. 136 |
Defenses to Negligence Claims | |
Historical Evolution of Negligence Defenses | p. 139 |
The Mostly Obsolete Defense of Contributory Negligence | p. 140 |
The Mostly Obsolete Defense of Implied Assumption of the Risk | p. 142 |
Primary Assumption of the Risk | p. 144 |
Comparative Negligence | p. 146 |
Strict Liability For Defective Products | |
Introductory Observations | p. 151 |
Defendant Must Be a Merchant | p. 152 |
The Product Must Be Defective | p. 153 |
The Product Must Not Have Been Altered | p. 157 |
The User was Making a Foreseeable Use of the Product | p. 158 |
Defenses to Strict Products Liability Claims | p. 159 |
Other Strict Liability Claims | |
Abnormally Dangerous Activities | p. 161 |
Keeping Animals | p. 163 |
Dignitary, Economic and Other Torts | |
Defamation | p. 165 |
Defenses to Defamation Claims | p. 170 |
The Public Concern Defamation Scenario | p. 172 |
The Four Privacy Torts | p. 175 |
Nuisance | p. 179 |
Business Torts | p. 181 |
Vicarious Liability and Other Miscellaneous Topics | |
Employer Liability for Employee Torts | p. 187 |
Independent Contractors | p. 190 |
Other Potential Vicarious Liability Scenarios | p. 192 |
Wrongful Death and Survival Statutes | p. 193 |
Loss of Consortium | p. 195 |
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