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Defenses to Negligence

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Note at the outset that Mark, Li, and Knight are all cases ... Joe and Susan are on an outing at a local lakefront park, with Joe's 3 year old son, Mack. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Defenses to Negligence


1
Defenses to Negligence
  • 1. Contributory comparative negligence The
    evaluation of plaintiffs conduct

2
Introductory observations
  • Note at the outset that Mark, Li, and Knight are
    all cases decided by the California Supreme
    Court. Is the focus of the authors approach on
    the evolution of the law in a particular
    jurisdiction, or on the California rules as the
    so-called majority rule in negligence cases?
  • Note the concept of so-called affirmative
    defenses as based upon distinct rules or
    concepts of law, and distinct facts. Affirmative
    defenses allow a defendant in a private civil
    action (tort-accident case) to avoid liability,
    even where the plaintiff has established a prima
    facie case.

3
Mark v. Pacific Gas Electric Co.
  • The accident description
  • Plaintiff was a tenant in a building adjacent to
    a City streetlight maintained by Defendant
    Pacific Gas Electric Company. He was
    electrocuted while attempting to unscrew or
    remove the light bulb from the streetlamp, which
    was located outside his apartment bedroom window
  • PGL was aware of a complaint from one or more of
    the landlords tenants (including plaintiff)
    about glare from the light
  • PGL took steps to reduce the glare, but was
    aware that these steps had been ineffective in
    reducing glare and that plaintiff and his
    roommates were still unsatisfied with the
    condition of the light
  • PGL was also aware that, as a result of an auto
    accident, the light pole had been bent, and that,
    in its bent condition, the pole was 55 inches
    from plaintiffs window and 10 inches from an
    adjacent fire escape
  • PGL was aware that someone had been tampering
    with the light fixture, i.e., that the light bulb
    had been unscrewed on one or more occasions
  • PGL (through its agent) was aware that the
    fixture resembled an ordinary light bulb, and
    that there was no open or obvious indication of
    high voltage.

4
Mark v. Pacific Gas Electric Co.
  • The Courts definition of contributory
    negligence conduct on the part of the
    plaintiff which falls below the standard to which
    he should conform for his own protection, and
    which is a legally contributing cause
    co-operating with the negligence of the defendant
    in bringing about the plaintiffs harm, (at
    Footnote 8 of the Courts opinion, citing
    Restatement)
  • The Courts explanation of the two categories
    of contributory negligence (p. 404)(Two ways of
    evaluating the plaintiffs own conduct, as a
    cause in fact of his injury)
  • Voluntary exposure to the danger arising from
    defendants negligence
  • Other conduct falling below the standard of due
    care, i.e., for an adult, the conduct of a
    reasonable man under like circumstances.

5
Mark v. Pacific Gas Electric Co.
  • Contributory negligence as the issue in the case
    how plaintiffs contributory negligence affects
    his right to civil reparation for the defendants
    negligence (dismissal as a matter of law)
    Consistent with the general rule regarding the
    standard of care, where the evidence on the
    issue of contributory negligence is conflicting,
    and would support a finding either way, the
    question whether plaintiffs conduct fell below
    the conduct expected of a reasonable person under
    similar circumstances is one of fact and not of
    law, and must be decided by the trier of the
    facts.
  • The rule as applied The Court refers to
    illustrative cases in which a plaintiff has been
    held to be contributorily (sic) negligent as a
    matter of law
  • Andrews v. Valley Ice Co. (A construction worker
    who knowingly touched a high voltage power line
    or wire must have known the danger of getting
    near highly charged wires
  • Mosley v. Arden Farms, Inc. (Decedent was warned
    not to touch power lines and knew the danger of
    live wires plaintiff is charged with common
    knowledge regarding the qualities, capacities,
    and characteristics of forceseven if he is in
    fact ignorant of the danger.

6
Mark v. Pacific Gas Electric Co.
  • Issue As to so-called category one
    contributory negligence, there was no evidence
    that plaintiff knew or suspected that the light
    carried a high voltage current, or that he
    otherwise appreciated the risk of injury or death
    (The facts indicate that he had seen his
    roommates remove the bulb from the light on
    several occasions, without incident, and there
    was nothing in the appearance of the light pole
    or bulb to indicate any danger of electrocution)
    the issue on appeal is therefore whether the
    trial court was correct in holding, as a matter
    of law, that plaintiff should have appreciated
    the risk of injury or death when he attempted to
    unscrew the bulb.
  • Held The trial record fails to support the
    conclusion that it is common knowledge that
    ordinary street lights contain high voltage
    current, or that a lay person risks substantial
    injury by attempting to unscrew the light bulb in
    an ordinary street light having the appearance
    and characteristics of the one which caused
    plaintiffs death. At trial, PGL will have the
    opportunity to prove that plaintiff knew or
    should have known of the danger of electrocution.

7
Mark v. Pacific Gas Electric Co.
  • Violation of statute The Court recognized
    plaintiffs admission that he violated a City
    ordinance making it unlawful to extinguish any
    public light and the codification of the general
    rule (revisited here) that violation of a public
    statute is negligence, where the plaintiff is
    within the protected class contemplated by the
    statute, and the risk which caused plaintiffs
    injury or death is the kind of risk the statute
    was enacted to prevent. However, the statutory
    language relied upon by PGL, when read in para
    materiae with the remaining language of Section
    585, suggests that the statute was not intended
    to deal with the risk of death by electrocution
  • This finding eliminates the need to evaluate
    plaintiffs conduct in the context of the
    statute

8
Commentary
  • How do contributory negligence concepts operate
  • When the injured person is a child?
  • When the injured person is mentally impaired?
  • When the injured person is physically disabled?
  • When defendant acts with intent, or reckless
    disregard for plaintiffs safety?
  • When plaintiff has failed to take advance
    precautions to minimize the extent of injuries
    from an accident? (e.g., What is the so-called
    seat belt defense?)

9
Li v. Yellow Cab Co.
  • Li is the second case to judicially discontinue
    the recognition of contributory negligence as a
    bar to recovery of civil reparation from
    defendant, and to recognize comparative
    negligence as a partial defense to liability
    in negligence cases, following the statutory
    abrogation of contributory negligence in 25
    states by 1973 (now 46 states).
  • See Hoffman v. Jones, 280 So.2d 431 (1973).

10
Li v. Yellow Cab Co.
  • The judicial and academic criticism of the
    contributory negligence doctrine
  • It is an all or nothing approach
  • It fails to distribute legal responsibility in
    accord with the fault premise which is the basis
    for American tort lawby failing to distribute
    responsibility in proportion to fault

11
Li v. Yellow Cab Co.
  • Reasons for and against the adoption of
    comparative negligence as the analytical
    approach to the evaluation of plaintiffs conduct
    in determining defendants liability in
    negligence cases
  • The problems inherent in administering such a
    concept in cases involving multiple parties
  • The difficulty inherent in fact-finding The
    risk that juries would administer the rule by
    resorting to quotient verdicts
  • The significance of related common law concepts,
    including the so-called last clear chance
    doctrine and the doctrine of assumption of risk.

12
Li v. Yellow Cab Co.
  • The Li Courts resolution of the arguments
    against the adoption of comparative negligence as
    an analytical approach to negligence liability
  • Jury guidelines and special verdict forms can
    assist juries in focusing on the determination of
    the extent to which defendants, and plaintiffs
    conduct have contributed to the accident, and the
    allocation of responsibility for plaintiffs
    injuries as expressed in damages
  • When the concept of comparative negligence and
    its relation to a fault premise is understood,
    the need for the last clear chance doctrine
    disappears
  • Similarly, where plaintiff has unreasonably
    undertaken a specific, known risk created by
    defendants negligence, his conduct known
    previously as assumption of risk is, in reality
    a form of negligence (conduct by the plaintiff
    falling below the negligence standard of care).
    In such cases, the prior doctrine of assumption
    of risk may be merged into the general scheme of
    assessment of liability in comparison to fault.

13
Li v. Yellow Cab Co.
  • The analytical paradigm (The forms of
    comparative negligence)
  • The so-called pure form (diminished recovery)
  • Modified comparative negligence (majority rule)
  • May result in plaintiffs loss of entitlement to
    any recovery
  • Is arguably inconsistent with the fault
    principle, but may be consistent with the idea of
    comparative causation and burden of proof.

14
Commentary
  • Note the separation of powers argument
    addressed by the Court on the issue of the
    appropriateness of judicial conversion of the
    rule of contributory negligence.
  • Note the subsequent reconsideration of the
    doctrine of assumption of risk and the
    clarification of the analytical paradigm
    announced in Li.

15
Defenses to Negligence
  • 2. Assumption of risk
  • The evaluation of plaintiffs conduct, continued
  • The partial merger of assumption of risk and
    comparative negligence concepts

16
Murphy v. Steeplechase Amusement Co. The
original definition
  • The plaintiff, a visitor to SACs amusement park,
    fell and sustained a fractured kneecap when he
    stepped onto the moving belt of an attraction
    known as The Flopper. He knew the purpose of
    the attraction was not to serve as a people mover
    (e.g., a moving sidewalk, escalator, etc.), but
    was to provide a sporting experience which
    challenged participants to keep their balance
    without falling. This knowledge notwithstanding,
    plaintiff alleged negligence, claiming that the
    belt was out of order, in that it was operated
    at an unreasonable speed, and was not designed
    with a railing, guard or other device to prevent
    a fall.
  • In its most efficient sense, the Murphy Courts
    opinion explains that where the particular risk
    (hazard) that causes plaintiffs injury is a fall
    and that is the very risk that was invited and
    foreseen by participants, the law recognizes no
    liability based upon fault (p. 420)
  • Murphy deals with what may be described as
    primary risk, the risk of injury inherent in the
    activity in question and which cannot be
    eliminated (cf. the movement of the passenger
    train, which cannot be eliminated even by the
    most careful operation the increased risk of
    falling while ice skating at an ice skating rink,
    as contrasted with walking on a sidewalk or
    natural pathway). Cf. If the risk, and injury
    were attributable to defendants failure to
    maintain the padded area of The Flopper,
    causing plaintiff to fall onto a wood
    undersurface, the risk in question would not be
    the risk that was invited, and plaintiff would
    not be subject to the defense but plaintiff did
    not allege such a breach of the defendants duty
    to maintain the padded area, and witnesses
    contradicted any such suggestion at trial.

17
Restatement of the rule
  • Where plaintiff is subjectively aware of, (has
    actual knowledge of, in fact) and fully
    appreciates, the particular risk that caused his
    injury, and has voluntarily chosen to encounter
    that risk, he is not entitled to recover for
    defendants alleged negligence (breach of duty)
  • Illustration Joe and Susan are on an outing at
    a local lakefront park, with Joes 3 year old
    son, Mack. Joe is standing on a small pier which
    extends into the water, and Susan is standing,
    thigh-deep, in the water immediately adjacent to
    one side of the pier, holding Mack. Mack
    expresses his fear of the water, and Joe, wanting
    to encourage him, says Watch Mack, the water is
    fun and dives off the end of the pier. Joe
    strikes his head on the bottom of the lakes
    edge, and sustains permanent spinal injuries.
    Note the argument that Joe is subject to the
    doctrine of assumption of risk, citing Murphy and
    the Restatement but evaluate the argument for
    recovery if all three were standing on the pier,
    and saw only a piece of driftwood extending above
    the surface of the water.

18
Voluntary exposure to risk as a necessary element
of the defense
  • The requirement of free and voluntary choice
    whether to encounter or avoid risk (Note 1, pp.
    422-23)
  • McDermott v. Platte County (Where P slips on Ds
    icy parking lot while attempting to enter
    exhibition hall, she may avoid doctrine where D
    has locked a more convenient entry door)
  • Jimenez v. Morgan Drive Away, Inc. (Where
    mechanical emergency forces P to park his truck
    on highway emergency shoulder, he is not subject
    to assertion of doctrine by a truck driver whose
    truck collides with Ps car, injuring P).

19
Assumption of risk where defendant breaches a
duty to plaintiff
  • Woodall v. Wayne Steffner Productions
  • Plaintiff does not assume the risk of defendants
    negligence where he has no reason to anticipate
    defendants negligent act or omission (Cf.
    Inherent risk of activity vs. risk created by
    defendants breach of duty)
  • Express assumption of risk (contract)
  • Strict construction
  • Public policy (Implication of public interest,
    unfair advantage or coercion)

20
Knight v. Jewett The partial merger of
assumption of risk and comparative negligence a
clarification of Li v. Yellow Cab
  • Following Li
  • Primary assumption of risk remains a complete
    defense to liability In those instances where
    defendant has no duty to protect plaintiff from a
    particular risk, that no duty conclusion may be
    expressed as plaintiffs assumption of the risk
    (the moving train, the batted ball in the
    baseball park, etc.)
  • Secondary assumption of risk plaintiffs
    encountering of a risk created by defendants
    breach of a duty of reasonable care does not
    relieve the defendant of liability for his
    negligence, but is evaluated as conduct which
    should diminish plaintiffs recovery under
    principles of comparative fault or comparative
    causation.
  • Such rules are consistent with the definition of
    contributory negligence in California (see Mark,
    supra, p. 404), and with Lis basic holding that
    when both parties are partially at fault for
    an injury, a rule which places all of the loss on
    one of the parties is inherently inequitable.
    (p. 434). Lis comparative fault principles
    reject the theory that a plaintiff essentially
    consents to defendants breach of duty, and
    instead embrace the concept of equitable
    apportionment or allocation of loss according to
    fault (See the courts reasoning at p. 437).
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