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008 160316s2005 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9780273686781
040 _c.
082 _a346.030000
_bMCB
100 _aMcBride Nicholas J
245 _aTort law
250 _a2nd
260 _aBangalore
_bPearson Education Ltd.
_c2005
300 _a707p
_clviii
365 _b Gratis
505 _aCONTENTS Acknowledgments Preface The McBride and Bagshaw Website Table of Cases Table of Statutes, Statutory Instruments and Conventions PART I. THE PROVINCE OF TORT LAW 1. What is a Tort? 2. An Overview of Tort Law 3. Tort Law and its Critics PART II. TORTS NEGLIGENCE 4. Established Duty Situations I: The Legacy of Donoghue v Stevenson 5. Established Duty Situations II: The Principle in Hedley Byrne and Associated Principles 6. Established Duty Situations III: Situations Giving Rise to a Duty to Act 7. Established Duty Situations IV: Statuses Giving Rise to a Duty to Act 8. The Caparo Test 9. Breach of Duty TORTS INVOLVING THE INFLICTION OF CERTAIN KINDS OF HARM 10. Assault and Battery 11 . False Imprisonment 12. Defamation 13. Harassment 14. Invasion of Privacy 15. Conversion 16. Trespass to Goods 17. Trespass to Land 18. Private Nuisance 19. Inducing a Breach of Contract TORTS INVOLVING THE INTENTIONAL INFLICTION OF HARM 20. Using Unlawful Means to Harm Another 21. The Tort in Quinn v Leathem Contents TORTS INVOLVING THE DECEPTION OF OTHERS 22. Deceit 23. Malicious Falsehood 24. Passing Off TORTS INVOLVING THE MISUSE OF POWER 25. Malicious Prosecution and Analogous Torts 26. Misfeasance in Public Office TORTS INVOLVING THE BREACH OF A STATUTORY DUTY OWED TO ANOTHER 27. Basic Principles 28. Some Examples PART III. REMEDIES COMPENSATORY DAMAGES: BASIC PRINCIPLES 29. Limits on the Right to Sue 30. Causation 31. Actionability 32. Quantification of Loss 33. Reduction in Liability COMPENSATORY DAMAGES: THIRD PARTIES 34. Liability to Third Parties 35. Vicarious Liability NON-COMPENSATORY DAMAGES 36. Nominal Damages 37. Aggravated Damages 38. Exemplary Damages 39. Restitutionary Damages 40. Damages for Conversion REMEDIES DESIGNED TO PREVENT SOMEONE COMMITTINC A TORT 41. Injunction 42. Specific Restitution of Goods PART IV. ALTERNATIVE SOURCES OF COMPENSATl INTRODUCTION 43. The Human Rights Act 1998 44. Liability for Dangerous Things 45. The Consumer Protection Act 1987 46. Public Nuisance 47. Loss Compensation Schemes Bibliography Index
650 _a1. Tort Law
700 _aBagshaw Roderick
_a
942 _2ddc
_cBK