NEGLIGENCE

in law, especially tort law, the breach of an obligation (duty) to act with care, or the failure to act as a reasonable and prudent person would under similar circumstances. For a plaintiff to recover damages, this action or failure must be the "proximate cause" of an injury, and actual loss must occur. Among possible defenses to a negligence action are that the plaintiff assumed the risk of injury (e.g., of being hit by a batted ball at a baseball game), or that the plaintiff brought on the injury by his or her own negligence. Most negligent acts are inadvertent; between them and fully intentional acts lie forms of conduct variously termed willful, wanton, or reckless. Deliberate judgments that are dangerously careless (e.g., faulty building design) may, however, be considered acts of negligence.

The obligation to act with care may arise out of a relationship established by contract, as in the duty assumed by a common carrier (e.g., a railroad) in preserving goods and passengers from damage or injury. But the law also supposes that all persons in the ordinary course of conduct have a duty to avoid inflicting injuries on others. In all noncontractual situations this duty is to act as a "reasonable, prudent person" would act. Injury that results despite such conduct or from circumstances beyond human control (see, e.g., act of God) is not compensable, although the doctrine of strict liability makes those engaged in certain trades and services liable despite non-negligent conduct.

It is usually the function of a jury to determine whether negligence occurred, and the obligation of the plaintiff to demonstrate the defendant's negligence by a preponderance of the evidence. On the other hand, in cases where due care must have been absent (e.g., where a drink bottled at the defendant's plant contains a dead mouse), the judge may apply the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur [Lat.,=the thing speaks for itself] and rule that there was negligence as a matter of law; this obliges the defendant to demonstrate the absence of negligence. In cases where both parties share responsibility for negligence, the law allows reduced damages based on the doctrine of comparative negligence. Thus, a driver who ignored a red light might not recover fully for an injury caused by another driver who was speeding through the intersection; responsibility might instead be assigned, for instance, as belonging 70% to the speeder and 30% to the ignorer of the traffic signal, whose damages for injury would be limited by subtraction from a full recovery.

Negligence law has been of great importance to consumer groups, who have won huge awards of actual and punitive damages, especially from the manufacturers of various goods. In the 1990s business groups and their congressional allies have pushed for federalization of U.S. negligence law, with statutory limitation of forms of damages, arguing that almost all commerce is now interstate and that the threat of large damage awards has been inhibiting American enterprise. Opponents respond that negligence has historically been one of few legal actions useful to the relatively powerless in American society, and that business has not suffered as it claims.

At common law, the right to recover for negligence belonged to the injured party only; his or her death terminated a lawsuit, and heirs might not recover. Today, all jurisdictions have statutes permitting heirs to bring suit for wrongful death and for injuries to the deceased. Negligence claims are the chief source of modern civil litigation. Most cases arise from vehicular traffic accidents; the widespread adoption of no-fault insurance may, however, reduce the role of negligence law in the future. Besides its civil aspects, negligence may also be an aspect of a criminal prosecution, if it results in manslaughter or if it is a serious breach of a public duty (e.g., carelessness by the engineer of a train). In medical, psychotherapeutic, legal, and other professional relationships, negligence, which is measured against generally accepted knowledge and practice standards, is called malpractice.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Negligence  - 12471 results

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...Ronnie and Jesse: A Political Odyssey OFFICIAL NEGLIGENCE OFFICIAL NEGLIGENCE How Rodney King and the Riots Changed...simply has to be some allowance for the official negligence of the city which allowed this to take place...
...1. Torts. 2. Liability Law 3. Negligence. I. Fleming, John G. II. Cane, Peter...Aspects of Negligence 3. The Right of...5. The Staggering March of Negligence 97 Tony Weir...
...practice (such as responsibility, fault, negligence, due care, and duty to repair) to be...Anglo-American jurisdictions is dominated by negligence liability, with pockets of strict liability...moral focus, for the legal notion of negligence itself departs sharply from the ordinary...
...liability law: nominate torts and negligence 254-293 281...2 Liability based on negligence 274-288 297 a Negligence as an innominate tort 274 297...
...2. General Principles of Negligence 69 3. Special Forms of Negligence 238...2 GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF NEGLIGENCE 1 The Elements...
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journal articles on: Negligence  - 2741 results

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...We dont need no evidence! Proof of negligence in private plaintiff defamation suits...strict liability. Most states chose negligence as the standard of care for defamation...these same cases, the application of the negligence standard at times has been perilously...
Auditor Negligence Liability to Third Parties Revisited by...primarily through the growth of the law of negligence (Feinman 2003). However, jurisdictions vary on the scope of negligence liability for accountants. There are three...
Negligence and Waivers. by D. Matt Lovett In August 1999...suit against Mount Snow, USAC, and NORBA for "gross negligence, willful and wanton acts and omissions in the design...put one party to a contract at the mercy of anothers negligence regardless of whether the skier is a recreational skier...
Malpractice Negligence: Parents Voluntary Conception of Child Will...Physician of Liability for Pre-conception Negligence-lynch V. Scheininger by Ryan Engle Malpractice Negligence: Parents Voluntary Conception of Child Will...
Negligence and Sovereign Immunity. by George R. Schaefer...determined the conduct is gross or if willful and wanton negligence has occurred. District Courts Decision The District...plaintiffs daughters death was caused by the defendants negligence, ruled that immunity had not been waived under the New...
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magazine articles on: Negligence  - 1317 results

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Taxpayers, Preparers, and the Negligence Penalty by Peter Barton For 1989...of 1989 (RRA) raised the rate of the negligence penalty from 5% to 20%. This 300% rate...approach taxpayers can use to avoid the negligence penalty is to prove good faith reliance...
Negligence. by Teresa Anderson Negligence. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has held that an injured seaman can pursue his negligence case against his employer. The court ruled that the...
Negligence. by Teresa Anderson According to a decision...liable for a criminal act that occurs due to the companys negligence. The case adds Louisiana to a growing list of states...Minneapolis, this issue is critical to damage awards in negligence cases. Many states including Kansas, Minnesota, Montana...
Negligence. by Teresa Anderson NEGLIGENCE. A federal appeals court has ruled that a bank is not...face. Locke survived the attack and sued the bank for negligence. Her lawyers argued that the bank knew that the branch...
Negligence. by Teresa Anderson NEGLIGENCE. In a California appellate case, the court has ruled...the owner of the mobile home park, George Olsher, for negligence in allowing the known gang members to live in the park...
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newspaper articles on: Negligence  - 5438 results

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Clinical Negligence: Claimant. Hay Kilner has an...member of the Law Societys Clinical Negligence Panel and also an assessor for the...Alison Ainsley heads the clinical negligence and personal injury department at Mincoffs...
Clinical Negligence: Claimant. HAY Kilner is one...member of the Law Societys clinical negligence panel and also an assessor for the...approved onto the Law Societys clinical negligence panel. Samuel Phillips Law Firms Barry...
Legal Finance: Clinical Negligence Bill Will Harm Claimants. Byline...a new law dealing with clinical negligence will have serious implications...lawyer. Clare Langford, a clinical negligence solicitor at Black Country law...
Wake Up to Claims of Negligence; Mounting Pressure on Businesses...Advisers Being Sued for Professional Negligence. Sarah Trendell-Smyth Looks at This...explanation for the rise in the number of negligence actions stems from the need for...
...Pounds Sterling22 Million Claim over Negligence; Screen Test: Guy Hands Is among 75...outcome of arare pounds sterling22 million negligence claim against a leading tax barrister...accountancy firm were then accused of negligence by about75 of the investorsincluding...
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encyclopedia articles on: Negligence  - 26 results

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NEGLIGENCE in law, especially tort law, the breach of an...actual loss must occur. Among possible defenses to a negligence action are that the plaintiff assumed the risk of injury...the plaintiff brought on the injury by his or her own negligence. Most negligent acts are inadvertent; between them and...
...reasonably competent foremen and superintendents. The employer is liable for an employees acts of negligence, for the employers own gross negligence, and for extraordinary risks of work. In most cases the employer is not liable for accidents occurring...
...defective roof) may be foreseen and avoided by the exercise of human care; failure to take the necessary precautions constitutes negligence , and the party injured in the accident may be entitled to damages. An act of God, however, is so extraordinary and devoid...
...and that which is unintentional. In the early 19th cent., negligence was distinguished as a separate tort, and it has come to...include several classes of torts, such as automobile accidents, negligence, product liability, and medical malpractice . In some areas...
...homicide is excusable if it is the result of an accident that occurred during a lawful act and that did not amount to criminal negligence . Justifiable homicides are intentional killings done in accordance with legal obligation, or in circumstances where the law...
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