Tort - Correct Answer civil wrong that causes harm to person or property; must be verifiable harm
Negligence - Correct Answer duty, failure of the defendant to conform (breach), injury (damages)
Tort reform - Correct Answer proposed changes in civil justice system that would reduce tort...
SPEA-V 184 Exam 3 Answered Correctly
Tort - Correct Answer civil wrong that causes harm to person or property; must be
verifiable harm
Negligence - Correct Answer duty, failure of the defendant to conform (breach), injury
(damages)
Tort reform - Correct Answer proposed changes in civil justice system that would
reduce tort litigation or damages; procedural limits on ability to file claims and cap
damages
Compensatory damages - Correct Answer plaintiff with the monetary amount
necessary to replace what was lost and nothing more
Punitive damages - Correct Answer defendant's conduct is found especially
reprehensible; punish defendant's conduct and deter, plaintiffs do not keep punitive
damages
Strict liability - Correct Answer liability without fault, developed in cases of persons who
gained personal benefit from unsafe and dangerous situations; ultra-hazardous or
abnormally dangerous
Gross negligence - Correct Answer voluntary disregard of the need to use reasonable
care, likely to cause foreseeable injury; can result in award of punitive damages
Negligence per se - Correct Answer violation of statute designed to protect the public;
main basis of liability; standard of care is set by statute
Escola v. Coca Cola - Correct Answer Justice Traynor's Concurrence: Manufacture
has liability when a product is placed on the market knowing it will be used without
inspection
Palsgraf v. Long Island Railroad - Correct Answer Cannot be held liable for actions
that cannot be held reasonably foreseen
Case-in-fact - Correct Answer But-for test, not used in the modern legal system
Proximate cause - Correct Answer relationship between the negligent act and the
infliction of damages, which requires an unbroken chain of events
Foreseeability - Correct Answer could be reasonably predicted
Schafer v. Hoffman - Correct Answer Schafer cannot escape liability because of
Hoffman's pre-existing condition at the time of the accident; Eggshell Plaintiff Rule
, Respondent Superior - Correct Answer Common-law doctrine that states a party is
liable for the actions of its agents
Contributory negligence - Correct Answer plaintiff injured by their own negligence and
injuries party would not be entitled to collect any damages
Comparative pure - Correct Answer Plaintiff's negligence will reduce recovery based
on percentage determined by the court
Modified - Correct Answer each party is responsible based on their percentage
Assumption of the risk - Correct Answer avoid liability because the plaintiff voluntarily
consented to encounter a known danger created by the defendant's negligence
Gross negligence and intention acts - Correct Answer cannot waive responsibility for
gross negligence
Res ispa loquitor - Correct Answer the thing speaks for itself; evidence is in control of
the defendant
Product liability - Correct Answer an extension of strict liability
Contract - Correct Answer promise or set of promises for the breach of which is
protected by the law; provides a remedy or the performance
Contract must have: - Correct Answer Capacity, two or more individuals, acceptance,
consideration, and lawful purpose
Legal Capacity - Correct Answer adult in controlling state or state defined in the
contract; must be adjudicated "incompetent" to not enter into contract though up to the
person lacking capacity to affirm or disavow the contract
Assent or acceptance - Correct Answer measured by an objective standard; third party
perceive the parties to agree and be legally bound
Not considered assent if: - Correct Answer - contracts made in joke or jest
- negotiations before the creation of the actual contract
- promises of future gifts in exchange for another promise
- promises for what someone is already legally obligated to do
Johnson v. Capital City Ford - Correct Answer Newspaper ads are not intended as
offers, but invitations to come and bargain; specific performance = defense of legal
remedy must appear
1-1-2-2 Criminal Law Statute - Correct Answer Crimes shall be defined, and
punishment therefor fixed by statutes of this state and not otherwise
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