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Applied Law Unit 1 notes

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2 sides of A4 notes for Applied Law Unit 1 controlled assessment. Includes negligence, duty of care, relevant cases and legal principles.

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  • April 28, 2023
  • 2
  • 2022/2023
  • Class notes
  • Adam
  • All classes
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3 elements to negligence:
Is there a duty of care owed? (Bolton v Stone – risk was small, precautions were taken) Was there a
breach of duty? Damage caused?
Caparo test determines whether a duty of care exists through: Proximity: relationship; Foreseeability: was
the harm suffered reasonably foreseeable; Fair, just & reasonable: is it fair to impose a duty of care?
Robinson: Caparo does not have to be strictly applied in every case. Bournhill v Young: third party can only
sue if they suffered harm.
Thin skull rule: must take your victim as you find them.
Res Ipsa loquitur: (Scott v London Docks 1865 – D could not explain why he was not negligent)
 Damage was under the sole control of the D.
 Incident could only happen if someone was negligent.
 No other reason for incident to occur.

Causation and remoteness:
Nettleship v Weston (learner driver – standard of care is of reasonably competent driver). Causation and
remoteness. No factual causation if there’s an intervening act. But for test: defendant’s actions must be
direct cause of claimant’s harm in order to be liable.

Development of duty of care:
Blythe v Birmingham Waterworks (damaged water pipe): duty of care started to develop.
Donoghue v Stevenson (snail): modern law developed.

Factors which vary the standard:
Characteristics of claimant including learner: Paris v Stepney (Paris had a blind eye, employer knew risk
therefore breached his duty)
Practicality: Was there effort to prevent harm? Latimer v AEC (sawdust to prevent slipping – not breached
duty as all precautions taken)
Emergencies: Does the benefit outweigh the risk? Watt v Hertfordshire Council (breach less likely when
dealing with emergencies)

Damages:
General damages: loss of future earnings, future medical expenses, loss of ability to perform tasks.
Special damages are calculated: loss of earnings, medical costs.
Courts check to see if D can pay before court.

Sources of advice:
Solicitors, barristers, citizens advice (free charity), law centres (free volunteers), trade union membership
(monthly payment)

Sources of funding:
Pro bono (free volunteers), state funding (low income or benefits), insurance, own resources (savings if
more than £3000).
Damages are usually paid in lump sum or structured settlement.

Tracks:
Small claims track: £10,000 or less, County Court, no costs
Fast track: between £10,000 and £25,000, up to £50,000 for PI, County Court, limited fixed costs
Multi-track: £25,000 or more, County or High Court, costs.

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