You just need to run through all the tests.fuzzy said:Ok, soooo, if we're meant to talk abt whether this authority owes any duty to the depressed guy then are we meant to talk about nervous shock? and if so, how??
i totally agreedNewbie said:arghits too hard
yeah.stamos said:you also have to look up yr rogets and put in wicked awesome words like posit
shit i should start it instead of reading about how easy/hard it is on bos
Huh? Hang on, that's funny...are you saying that there can be two diff duties at the same time?Lazarus said:You just need to run through all the tests.
The authority is the subject of the statutory authority tests, and the plaintiffs are the subject of the nervous shock tests.
(They're both needed to establish a duty, but keep them separate.)
that got a laugh even though i forget what exigencies meansNick said:yeah.
its down there on the toolbar though, in all its exigencies
i don't know what it means eitherstamos said:that got a laugh even though i forget what exigencies means
No - I didn't mean to imply that there were multiple simultaneous duties.fuzzy said:Huh? Hang on, that's funny...are you saying that there can be two diff duties at the same time?
Actually, I don't really get the nervous shock thing. Nervous shock is just one of the categories of negligence....right? So is it suppose to have its own duty test, like a test for a duty under nervous shock? And what exactly is this test? What happens to proximity? Where does the 'sudden sensory perception' thing go?
Sorry about all these questions. But I'm SO CONFUSED! ARGHH! I'm not called 'fuzzy' for nothing you know!
help me please!
This seems like a very wierd description...Lazarus said:You can think of it like this... the nervous shock tests are used to establish that each plaintiff was sufficiently proximate, and the statutority authority tests are used to establish that the defendant was sufficiently proximate. There can only be a duty between the two parties where both of them are proximate.
That is so much clearerLazarus said:That's very helpful of you, Brent.
Okay.
The 'core test' used to establish a duty of care in a generic negligence action is the criterion of reasonable foreseeability. It must be reasonably foreseeable that a particular class of persons could suffer some sort of harm as the result of some sort of negligence on the part of the defendant. The plaintiff must be a member of that class.
However, certain actions which are of a specific nature attract further tests. In such actions, these additional criteria must also be satisfied before a duty can be established. For example, a claim for damages resulting from nervous shock imposes tests which, among other things, require that the mental harm suffered be a form of psychiatric illness. A claim against a statutory authority might require a determination that the alleged negligent act of the authority be within the operational sphere and hence justiciable.
These auxiliary tests supplement the core test of reasonable foreseeability. If the action involves both nervous shock and a statutory authority, both sets of tests must be satisfied before a duty can be established.