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3 Torts - Intentional Torts - Injuries to Persons
Torts - Ch 6-7
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03/04/2020

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Term
Intentional Tort
Definition
Conduct designed to injure a person or that person's property, as opposed to an injury caused by negligence or resulting from an accident. Intent, Act, result in injury. Tortfeasor must know with substantial certainty that certain harmful consequences would result from the act
Term
Intent
Definition
The resolve or purpose to use a particular means to reach a particular result. How a person wants to do something and what that person wants to get done.
Term
Recklessness
Definition
The tortfeasor knows or reasonably should know that his outlandish or outrageous actions will produce injury.
The knowledge element substitutes for intent.
Term
Crime
Definition
A wrong against the state or society in addition to the actual victim.
Term
Preponderance of the evidence
Definition
Just enough evidence to tip the scales in favor of one party over another party.
Term
Clear and convincing evidence
Definition
More than enough evidence to tip the scales, but less than proof beyond a reasonable doubt. The evidence must be clear and convincing; it should be substantially more likely true than not true.
Term
Crime vs. Intentional Tort
Definition
Civil and Criminal definitions of acts constituting intentional torts are not necessarily the same.
Term
Assault
Definition
The intentional threat, show of force, or movement that reasonably makes a person feel in danger of physical attack or harmful physical conduct.
Term
3 Elements of Assault
Definition
An intentional, (1) imminent threat of or attempt to make (2) unconsented harmful or offensive contact (3) causing a victim to be apprehensive for his physical safety.
Term
Element of Assault: Imminent threat of contact
Definition
Imminent or immediate threat that unconsented contact is about to occur. A likelihood that someone or something unwanted is about to strike
Term
Assault: Freedom from apprehension
Definition
A person's right to control what touches his person.
Term
Element of Assault: Apprehension
Definition
A person reasonably fears for his physical safety in anticipation of being struck by unconsented harmful or distasteful contact. Anxiety must be rational given the perceived threat of contact.
Term
Battery
Definition
The intentional, unconsented touching of another person in an offensive or injurious manner.
Term
3 Elements of Battery
Definition
(1) Intentional, (2) nonconsensual, (3) offensive or injurious physical contact.
Term
Element of Battery: Physical Contact
Definition
Contact is necessary for battery to occur. Contact to body, clothing, an object the victim is carrying, an object in which victim is sitting (chair, car).
Term
Battery: Extensions of the Person
Definition
Clothing, objects held, etc. that if touched, translate into touching the person himself.
Term
Element of Battery: Lack of Consent
Definition
Battery only occurs if the victim did not consent to the physical contact. Expressed or implied. Can be implicit consent, as in joining a sports game. Consent is a defense to a battery claim.
Term
Element of Battery: Harmful or Offensive Contact
Definition
The recipient must find the action distasteful. Judged by the Reasonable Person standard. Would a reasonable person have been insulted by the contact, given the same or similar circumstances?
Term
Battery: Intent
Definition
Tortfeasor must have intended to make harmful or offensive contact with another person.
Term
Transferred Intent
Definition
The principle that if a person intended to hit another but hits a third person instead, he legally intended to hit the third person. A "legal fiction." Allows the third person to sue hitter for intentional tort. Intent is carried by the object set in motion through to whoever the object reaches. Concept protects persons from misdirected physical contacts.
Term
False Imprisonment
Definition
An unlawful restraint or deprivation of a person's liberty (freedom of movement), usually by a public official. When the tortfeasor intentionally confines someone without that person's consent. When someone is held against his will for an unreasonable amount of time.
Term
Reasonable/Unreasonable
Definition
Think Reasonable Person standard. Consensus of a jury as to what is reasonable.
Term
4 Elements of False Imprisonment
Definition
(1) Intentional, (2) nonconsensual (3) confinement of a victim for an appreciable amount of time (4) with no reasonable means of escape.
Term
False Imprisonment: 3 Elements of Confinement
Definition
Confinement entails a (1) nonconsensual (2) restriction of the victim’s freedom of movement (3) of which he is aware or fearful.
Term
Confinement: Physical Barriers Restricting Movement
Definition
The most common method of falsely imprisoning someone. Barrier need only restrict captive's freedom of movement. Locked door, fence, wall, car blocking driveway, body blocking doorway.
Term
Confinement: Express or Implied Threats of Force
Definition
No physical barrier necessary. Confinement is achieved through expressed intimidation, threats of physical or emotional violence against victim, family, or property. Fear of physical or emotional injury. Explicit or implied threats. "Otherwise, I will..."
Term
Confinement (No): Captive's Consent to Confinement
Definition
False Imprisonment cannot occur if the victim consents to the captivity. Awareness and acceptance of the confinement. Agreement to stay.
Term
False Imprisonment: Intent to Confine
Definition
Tortfeasor must intend to confine the victim (not accidental lock-in). Intent can be express or implied.
Term
False Imprisonment: Appreciable Time Period
Definition
Appreciable length of time depends on the circumstances of the case. Unreasonable under the circumstances. Seconds in a burning building. Hours in a shoplifting investigation.
Term
False Imprisonment: No Reasonable Means of Escape
Definition
Confinement must be complete. Lack of route that a reasonable person would use to flee in a given set of circumstances.
Term
Shopkeeper's Privilege
Definition
A shopkeeper is allowed to detain a suspected shoplifter on store property for a reasonable period of time, so long as he has cause to believe that the person detained in fact committed, or attempted to commit, theft of store property.
Term
Sexual Harrassment
Definition
Unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual favors, and other verbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature, when this conduct affects an individual's employment, unreasonably interferes with an individual's work performance, or creates an intimidating, hostile, or offensive work environment.
Term
Tortious Interference with Reasonable Expectations of Inheritance
Definition
Intentionally interfering by fraud, duress, or other wrongful means with another person's right to receive an inheritance that the person would otherwise have received.
Term
5 Elements of Tortious Interference with Reasonable Expectations of Inheritance
Definition
(1) Intentional (2) wrongful interference by a third party with (2) a victim’s expectation of receiving an inheritance, (4) without which the inheritance would reasonably certainly have been received, (5) resulting in damages.
Term
Patient Dumping
Definition
Denial of treatment to emergency patients or women in labor, or transferring them to another hospital while in an unstable condition.
Term
Spoliation of Evidence
Definition
Deliberate withholding, hiding, or destruction of evidence relevant to a legal proceeding.
Term
Emotional Distress
Definition
Mental Anguish. May be as limited as the immediate feelings during an injury or as broad as prolonged grief, shame, humiliation, despair, etc.
Term
Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress
Definition
Outrageous conduct which is intended to cause severe emotional anguish in the victim, and actually causes such emotional suffering as a result of the tortfeasor's actions.
Term
3 Elements of Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress
Definition
(1) Outrageous conduct by the tortfeasor (2) intended to cause severe mental anguish in the victim (3) which actually causes suffering of severe mental anguish. (intent, act, cause/result in injury)
Term
Outrageous Conduct
Definition
Would an reasonable person of ordinary sensibilities suffer substantial emotional distress as a result of such actions? Shock to the conscience. Exclaim "outrageous!"
Term
Result of Actual Emotional Distress (Test for Anguish)
Definition
Would a reasonable person of ordinary sensibilities experience severe mental anguish as a result? Accompanying physical symptoms are a sign, but not necessary to prove. Trier of Fact determines.
Term
Reckless Infliction of Emotional Distress
Definition
The tortfeasor knew, or reasonably should have known, that the outrageous conduct would cause emotional distress. Wanton disregard for the (possible/foreseeable) injury to the victim.
Term
Fraud
Definition
Making false statements to entice someone to give up something of value. Any kind of trickery used to cheat another of money or property
Term
Misrepresentation
Definition
Knowingly making false statements or purposefully behaving in a way to deceive someone. (No economic gain motive necessary, to distinguish from fraud)
Term
5 Elements of Fraud
Definition
(1) Intentional deception by making a (2) knowingly false statement of material fact (3) in order to entice a victim to give up something of value, (4) where the victim justifiably relies on the misrepresentation and (5) is thus injured.
Term
Innocent Misrepresentation
Definition
A false statement not known to be false
Term
Negligent Misrepresentation
Definition
A false statement that the speaker should have known was false.
Term
Fraudulent Misrepresentation
Definition
False statement that is known by the speaker to be false and is meant to be misleading.
Term
False Statement Intended to Deceive (1st element of Fraud)
Definition
Making material (significant, important) false statement designed to deceive the victim
Term
Knowledge of Falsity of Information (2nd Element of Fraud)
Definition
Tortfeasor must have or should have known that the information was false.
Term
Tortfeasor's Profit from Deception (3rd Element of Fraud)
Definition
False statements are tailored to encourage the victim to surrender something of value to the TF
Term
Justifiable Reliance on the Misrepresentation (4th Element of Fraud)
Definition
The false statement must be a substantial factor in the victim's decision to take action (to give up something of value)
Term
Injury as a Result of Taking Action Because of the Misrepresentation (5th Element of Fraud)
Definition
The victim must prove actual injury as a consequence of misrepresentation
Term
Malicious Prosecution
Definition
A tort committed by bringing charges against someone in order to harm that person and with no legal justification for doing it.
Term
Malicious Prosecution (4 Elements)
Definition
1. Groundless criminal prosecution against someone without probable cause. 2. The complainant's malice in filing the spurious charges. 3. The accused's acquittal from or dismissal of the charges. 4. Injury as a result of the prosecution.
Term
Probable Cause
Definition
A reasonable belief that the accused is guilty of the alleged crime
Term
Malice in Malicious Prosecution
Definition
Ill will. If complainant knew that the accused did not commit the alleged crime, malice is implied. Also, if the complainant is using criminal prosecution to achieve some improper objective.
Term
Abuse of Process
Definition
Civil equivalent of malicious prosecution. TF misuses a legal proceeding against another person to achieve an unlawful objective.
Term
Abuse of Process (3 Elements)
Definition
(1) Misuse of a legal proceeding, or threat of such proceeding (2) to achieve unlawful objectives, (3) resulting in injury to the victim
Term
Invasion of Privacy
Definition
A violation of the right to be left alone. When someone publicly exploits another person's private affairs in an unreasonably intrusive manner.
Term
Four Types of Invasion of Privacy
Definition
1. Appropriation. 2. Unreasonable Intrusion. 3. Public Disclosure of Private Facts. 4. False Light in the Public Eye
Term
Appropriation (Invasion of Privacy)
Definition
When the TF uses a person's name or likeness without permission to gain some benefit.
Term
Unreasonable Intrusion (Invasion of Privacy)
Definition
TF engages in an excessive and highly offensive invasion upon another person's seclusion or solitude. (illegal search of belongings, intentional eavesdropping, incessant phone calls, searching someone's mail, unauthorized access to someone's bank account, etc.)
Term
Public Disclosure of Private Facts (Invasion of Privacy)
Definition
TF communicates purely private information about a person to the public without permission, and a reasonable person would find this disclosure extremely objectionable. (Public figures are generally not covered by this)
Term
False Light in the Public Eye (Invasion of Privacy)
Definition
TF publicly attributes to an individual false opinions, statements, or actions.
Term
Defamation
Definition
Transmission to others of FALSE statements that harm the reputation, business, or property rights of a person (Spoken=Slander) (Written=LIBel)
Term
Libel
Definition
Publicly communicated FALSE written statements that injure a person's reputation, business, or property rights
Term
Slander
Definition
S for Spoken. The speaking of false words that injure another's reputation, business, or property rights.
Term
4 Elements of Defamation
Definition
1. Written or oral statement (2) that is false, (3) communicated to a third party, and (4) actually harms the victim's reputation in the community
Term
Harm to Reputation in the COMMUNITY (4th Element of Defamation)
Definition
A significant number of persons acquainted or familiar with the victim. Neighborhood, locality, or other grouping of persons.
Term
Harm to Reputation (in Defamation Cases)
Definition
Harm to reputation may be through ridicule, humiliation, or subjection of the victim to contempt or hatred among his peers.
Term
Public Figures not usually covered by Defamation
Definition
Public figures usually have greater access to the media (than private individuals) to refute untrue charges. Only successful if actual malice can be proven.
Term
Slander Per Se
Definition
Some words are in themselves defamatory, so injury need not be proved (words that imply criminal conduct, harmful to one's business, having a communicable disease)
Term
Truth as an Absolute Defense (Defamation)
Definition
If statement made by TF is true, then there has been no defamation. Truth = if a reasonable person would decide that the statement was justified given the facts.
Term
Privilege as an Absolute Defense (Defamation)
Definition
Statements made by attorneys, judges, legislators (even in open court) are privileged and cannot be grounds for a defamation charge. (Public policy rationale -- otherwise they'd be silenced)
Term
3 Elements of Public Disclosure of Private Facts
Definition
(1) Highly offensive (2) publication of private facts (3) not of legitimate public concern.
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