Introduction Intentional Torts Privileges Policy issues Negligence Damages Vicarious liability Strict liability Products liability Index of tort cases Tort cases
| |
 |
Intent
 |
Desire and knowledge with substantial certainty for contact to
occur
|
 |
Intent is subjective
|
 |
Harm does not need to be intended, only that the wrongful
contact be intended
|
 |
Wrongdoer is liable for all resulting injuries whether
foreseeable or not
|
|
 |
Harmful or offensive contact
 |
Harmful contact
 |
Causing pain, bodily damage
|
 |
RS (2nd) 7: Harm is existence of loss or detriment in fact
of any kind to a person resulting from any cause
|
|
 |
Offensive contact
 |
Objective Standard: whether it would be offensive to a
"Reasonable Person" of ordinary sensibilities or to a
"reasonable sense of dignity"
 |
unwarranted by social usages prevalent at time and place
at which offensive contact is inflicted
|
|
 |
Courts are undecided when another person knows another to be
extremely sensitive
|
 |
Contact is offensive is P has not expressly consented to it
|
|
|
 |
Causation
 |
Direct contact
|
 |
D sets in motion a force which brings about harmful or offensive
contact
 |
place poison, dig a pit, pull a chair
|
|
 |
Caused by contact to P's body or to anything that is closely
identified with P's body
|
|
 |
Consequences
 |
Eggshell Skull: you take the victim as you found him
|
 |
Physical harm not necessary for recovery
|
 |
RS (2nd) 16 Character of intent
 |
D is liable for P's injuries resulting from act done with
intention of inflicting offensive, but not harmful contact, or
of putting P in apprehension or either harmful or offensive
contact and such act causes bodily contact.
|
 |
Transferred Intent: D is liable to P if act is done with
intention of affecting 3rd person, but causes harmful contact to
P
|
|
|
 |
Cases
|

Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress
 |
Intent
 |
Broader mental state than battery: larger range of reactions to
certain acts
|
 |
P intends to cause ED
|
 |
P knew with substantial certainty that ED would occur
|
 |
P acted with reckless disregard for high probability that ED
would occur
|
 |
Transferred intent not generally allowed
 |
Would open floodgate of litigation
|
 |
Exceptions:
 |
Witness suffers bodily harm from watching a beating,
even if not family
|
 |
If immediate family, P can recover, even if P suffers no
bodily harm
|
|
|
|
 |
Extreme and Outrageous Conduct
 |
Conduct so outrageous in character, and so extreme in degree to go
beyond all bounds of decency, and to be regarded as atrocious, and
utterly intolerable in a civilized community (Jones v. Clinton)
|
 |
D not liable for insults, indignities, threats, annoyances, petty
oppressions or hurting P's feelings.
 |
Not sufficiently outrageous by themselves
|
 |
Do not cause severe ED in P or ordinary sensitivity
|
 |
Would limit free speech
|
|
 |
Known sensitivity
 |
D is liable if D knows P is more susceptible to ED than ordinary
person and uses extreme and outrageous conduct to inflict ED and
succeeds.
|
|
 |
Common carriers
 |
Public utilities, hotels, but not businesses, held to stricter
standards of conduct
|
 |
May be liable for insults
|
 |
Rationale
 |
Duty to treat public with courtesy, contractual relationship
|
|
|
 |
Other situations/examples
 |
Power or fiduciary relationships, landlords, bill collectors, insurance
adjusters
|
 |
Particularly vulnerable groups: women, children, elderly,
minorities
|
 |
unchangeable circumstances: permanent disabilities: stuttering,
paraplegic
|
|
 |
Bystanders
 |
Physical harm to one causes ED to another because of
relationship
|
 |
Intent and causation are harder to prove:
 |
Present when harm occurred
|
 |
Close relationship
|
 |
D knew P was present and related to injured
|
|
|
|
 |
Causation
|
 |
Severe Emotional Distress
 |
ED so severe that P sought medical aid
|
 |
Physical harm not required, but is a guarantee of severe ED
|
 |
ED so severe that a reasonable person would suffer such distress
|
 |
Does not apply for an unusually sensitive person
|
 |
Punitive damages awarded where D's conduct was improperly motivated
|
|
 |
Cases
|

 |
Intent
 |
D knows with substantial certainty that his actions directly or
indirectly result in physical confinement.
|
|
 |
Cause
 |
D's actions result directly or indirectly in physical
confinement
|
|
 |
Confinement
 |
Physical barriers
 |
P confined in within physical barriers
|
 |
Blocking his path or preventing P from entering is not
enough
|
|
 |
Physical force
 |
Demonstration of physical power, when P believes only
avoidance is submission
|
|
 |
Threats
 |
Direct
 |
D threatens to use force if P tries to escape
|
 |
No FI if P's confinement is due solely to own desire to
clear himself of suspicion
|
|
 |
Indirect
 |
Implied by D's conduct
|
 |
No FI if P voluntarily submits to verbal commands
|
|
 |
FI if D threats others or property if P attempts to escape
|
 |
FI if D threats of future imminent harm
|
|
 |
Failure to provide means of escape
|
|
 |
Conscious Harm
 |
P must be aware of confinement
|
|
 |
Privileges (defenses)
 |
To protect property in custody
|
 |
Merchant: Reasonable detainment of suspected shoplifter
|
|
 |
Cases
|
|