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Torts II
South Texas College of Law Houston
Bauman, John H.

Bauman Torts I Fall 2013

Outline

I. Intentional torts: FITTED CAB

a. Why are most cases brought? Liability insurance

b. To establish prima facie case for intentional tort liability – prove 3 elements:

i. Act by D

ii. Intent and

iii. Causation

c. Intent:

i. Act with the purpose of causing contact

ii. Knowledge substantially certain to occur -Garrett v. Daily

1.) false imprisonment

a. intent to confine someone against their will and the other is conscious or harmed by it. Elements:

i. Intent to confine п, п in fact completely confined

ii. Action

iii. Causation- P is aware of the confinement or suffers actual injury from the confinement

b. confinement – direct restraint of P or his physical liberty w/o adequate legal justification

c. Problem: were they confined? That is the issue…

d. Teich Miller- you must ASK to leave. Can’t assume, but ask or else there is no FI.

e. П has burden of proving the Δ confined her

2.) trespass to land

a. intent to enter land owned by someone else or cause a third person or thing to enter the land and fails to remove it

b. actual damages are not necessary because enforces boundary policies…theory is so that ppl aren’t intruding into other land

c. Amphitheater: smoke isn’t a trespass to land because it’s not a tangible invasion. Ownership is from anything below or above it

d. Traditional view: an actor commits trespass to land when he intentionally enters or causes an entry onto the land of another.

i. Entry can be made above or below through the surface of the land

ii. Ex. shooting a gun over your land to duck hunt

iii. Actual harm to the land is not required

1. vindicates owners exclusive possession- that’s what trespass is supposed to protect: there is injury in right of exclusive possession when ppl come onto your land

e. Modern New rule: intangible forces can be evasive but must violate legally interest of the п. More than a ray of light.

i. Trespass interferes with the owner’s right to exclusive possession

ii. Trespass can occur by means of a physical invasion of microscopic particles if the result is in interference with the right of exclusive possession.

iii. When invasion involves microscopic particles, the п must show actual damage to the property.

f. Bradley: intent isn’t hostile intent; it is enough to bring about a result: bringing foot over property line. A good nature practical joke can be trespass. Enter to land can be indirect or direct, damages must be actual and substantial.

g. Can’t use “mistake/good faith” as a defense to trespass

3.) trespass to chattels

a. intentional act

b. Prima facie case:

i. Δ interferes with п right of possession

ii. Intent to perform the act- mistake is no defense, but intending to do the act of interference is sufficient

iii. Causation, and

iv. Damages

c. using or intermeddling with another person’s chattel

i. dispossess (I don’t have it anymore) the other of his chattel

ii. chattel is impaired

iii. possessor is deprive of use of substantial time

iv. bodily harm is thereby caused to a person in which S has a legally protected interest

d. CompuServe: intermeddling: intentional bring physical contact with the chattel; п can get cause of action without showing substantial interference with its right to possession of that chattel.

e. Taking away of or damage to tangible personal property

f. Usually used when the interference or damage is not serious enough to amount to conversion

g. Actual damage to or loss of use chattel required

h. Damages: value of loss of use or cost of damages to the chattel

4.) emotional distress

a. extreme and outrageous conduct,

i. Intent: Conduct must be intentional to cause severe emotional harm: intentional or reckless.

ii. causation

iii. damages- severe emotional distress

b. Intentionally causes severe emotional distress or with recklessness regarding the infliction of such distress and severe emotional distress results.

c. causal connection btw wrongful conduct and emotional distress

d. Transferred intent doesn’t work here: Caldor v. Bowen- severity is measured by intensity and duration. Need more than cursing or insult. Court will be harder if you take advantage of someone’s vulnerability

e. Nickel: you just have to have severe emotional distress- court wont take it easy if it’s the boss

f. Damages – how to prove severe emotional distress? Physical symptoms – something not seen before: Relationship. Missing work, inability to sleep, weight fluctuation. etc. severe enough to make client see Dr. (may note symptoms non—pro missed/ if not. D might say P didn’t care enough to see Dr.. or ran up damages by failing to see Dr. One shot at getting compensation)

g. The “mere insult” is NOT outrageous conduct

5.) Conversion

a. Conversion is where you borrow and steal- wrongful exercise of dominion over the personal property of another (taking, substantial use, altering, destroying, selling and buying)…must be tangible

b. Prima facie case:

i. Δ interfering with п right of possession in the chattel that is serious enough in nature or consequence to warrant that the Δ pay full value of chattel

ii. Intent to perform the act bringing about the interference with п right of possession

iii. Causation

c. Damages: Δ must pay п the full value of the property at the time of conversion.

d. Wiseman- tow truck case- conversion: is where you borrow and steal- exercise the dominion- you don’t have to intent to own it.

e. What act constitutes so serious to make actor pay full value? P.56

i. Wrongful acquisition (theft)

ii. Wrongful transfer (misdelivering)

iii. Wrongful detention (refusing to return to owner)

iv. Substantially changing

v. Severely damaging or destroying

vi. Misusing the chattel

f. How to satisfy the element of conversion:

i. Took something that belonged to someone else. What act constituted the conversion? Towing the truck (Wiseman v. Schaffer- stolen truck, towed)

ii. This act of dominion of truck leads to loss of truck.

iii. Δ isn’t excused- he intentionally meddled with the truck- real owner didn’t give him permission to do so.

g. Multiple factor test: different from notion of elements of a cause of action- in order to have COA for battery, must have….etc…but for multiple factor test- no one factor by

pose of the criminal statute

c. three important examples:

i. statutory rape- if 14 consents to sex with 25, it’s still a crime even though she consents- bars her from bringing civil action for battery

ii. illegal prize fighting

iii. voluntary euthanasia

b. Self-defense:

i. Use reasonable force against someone else

ii. if you reasonably believe that you are under attack

iii. Roberts: ct will consider if he’s an aggressor

iv. Self-defense is based on the reasonable appearance of need for defense

v. Excessive force results in the loss of the privilege

c. Defense of others

i. If you have others, you have both defense… talk about both

ii. majority rule/ officious intermeddler may use reasonably necessary force to defend another only when the other could have used force to protect himself- no defense if mistaken. Modern trend – allows force when actor reasonably believes the aided person had right to self -defense.

d. Defense of property

i. Katco v. Browning: booby trap- can’t use deadly force to repel the threat to land

ii. Cannot do by mechanical means if you cant do it by person

iii. Doctrine: recapturing chattel (hot pursuit)→ a Δ can peaceably enter another’s property to take back his chattel

iv. Shopkeeper’s privilege: reasonable person standard. Can detain for a reasonable time to investigate for a suspicion of a wrongdoing. Merchant’s privilege to detain individuals for reasonable investigation they reasonably believe to have taken chattel unlawfully/shoplifted goods. Policy: privilege is necessary for the protection of a shopkeeper against the dilemma in which he would otherwise find himself in when lie reasonably believes that a shoplifter has taken his goods.

v. 3 elements:

1. timing (happening right now)

2. reasonable belief

3. boundaries of defense privileges

vi. Reasonable mistake is allowed as to property owner’s right to use force in defense of property

e. Necessity:

i. Public- absolute privilege: usually involved pro-government. Act for the public good. If interference w/land or chattels of another is necessary to prevent disaster to community, no compensation to be paid by person doing damage. (ex. shoot rabid dog; Mayor orders house torn down for fire break)

ii. Private- qualified privilege: Δ still has to pay for damages to the land. Doesn’t matter if Δ is cautious or prudent. Act solely to benefit any person or protect any property from destruction or serious injury. Owner of property may not resist exercise of privilege of private necessity. (ex. tie boat to dock in storm)