I. Intentional Torts: Physical and Emotional Harm Battery



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I. Intentional Torts: Physical and Emotional Harm-

  1. Battery- Actual physical contact that is harmful or offensive, resulting from an intention to cause that contact or to put another in apprehension that a harmful or offensive contact is imminent.

    1. Physical Contact, either direct or through another object or force, (weapon, electricity). Force itself need not be caused by D, but contact must be D’s intention. Pulling chair out from under someone sitting down.

      1. Garratt v. Dailey 5 year old boy for removeschair from behind her; fractured hip. Volition to move the chair. Knowledge she would sit makes the act of moving the chair wrongful; wrongful act makes liability.

    2. Harmful or Offensive Contact- Need not cause physical harm.

      1. Jury question whether offensive (unwanted kiss)

      2. Any contact that intentionally interferes with a reasonable sense of personal dignity is offensive.

      3. Fisher v. Carrousel- takes plate and says Negroes not served in the club. The contact, taking the plate, was not offensive; the motive was. Probably more like Intentional Infliction Emotional Distress.

      4. Vosburg v. Putney. Wis 1891: Putney kicks Vosburg just below knee at school, leg becomes infected and useless. If the intended act was unlawful, the intention to commit it must necessarily be unlawful. Wrongdoer is liable for all injuries resulting directly from the wrongful act, whether they could or could not have been foreseen by him. Must be liable for a little first, then liable for whatever happens. (Think-shin rule- bodily integrity, not property). Hadley v. Baxendale, only liable for damages foreseeable by the breacher. More sympathetic, more like contract.

      5. 2nd Restatement 13: Battery: Harmful Contact if:

        1. Acts intending to cause a harmful or offensive contact with the person or a third person or an imminent apprehension of such contact, and

        2. A harmful contact with the person of the other directly or indirectly results.

        3. Intention means the actor desire to cause consequences of his act, or believes the consequences are substantially certain to result. RS 8. Treats Vosburg as intending an offensive contact.

    3. Intent- intent to make prohibited contact, not necessarily to harm. More states now follow the restatement instead of Vosburg: Dual intent rule- must intend the act and intend the harm or offense, intention can be shown by purpose or knowledge.

      1. No need malicious intent or understanding that action is wrong. Vosburg- intention to touch sufficient, though no intended harm or offense.

      2. Either desire to bring such contact or act with substantial certainty that the touching would occur.

        1. White v. U Idaho, Idaho 1990: rejected 2nd restatement. Piano teacher plays on her back. Need not intend either harm or offend.

        2. Wagner v. Utah (Utah 2005): Mentally impaired man committed battery. Need not appreciate that contact will cause harm so long as contact is intended, & harms.

      3. Knowledge of risk of harmful or offensive contact insufficient if no intent to cause it. Risk alone may be negligence

      4. Transferred intent. Talmage v. Smith Mich 1894: Throws stick at trespasser, hits other trespasser in eye. Claimed didn’t see or intend to hurt him. Intention to hit somebody and create an unwarranted injury upon them created the right to recover. Different victim no excuse.

        1. Battery by smoke Shaw v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco (D. Md 1997): second hand smoke: knowledge too generalized to satisfy the intent requirement. Truck driver shares cab with heavy smoker, gets cancer. Secondhand smoke battery rejected for failure of intent. Williamson did not have substantial certainty that smoke would touch any particular non-smoker. General intent.




  1. Intentional infliction of Emotional Distress

  1. Began with innkeepers and carriers with contractual duties of behavior. Extreme outrageousness and severity of P’s distress became the elements of the tort.

  1. Extreme and Outrageous Conduct: Wilkinson v. Downton (QB 1897).

    1. Practical joke: Tells woman her husband in crash, goes get him in a cab. She vomits and weeks of suffering.

    2. Rule: Difficult to imagine such a statement made suddenly and with apparent seriousness would fail to produce grave effects under the circumstances in a normal person, therefore an intention to produce the effect must be inputed, even if the harm is not foreseeable.

  1. 2nd Restatment 46: One who by extreme and outrageous conduct intentionally or recklessly causes severe emotional distress to another is subject to liability for such emotional distress, and for bodily harm if bodily harm results to the other.

    1. Where such conduct is directed at third person, liable if intentional or recklessly causes SED to member of third persons immediate family present at time even if no bodily harm results from SED; or

    2. To any other person present at the time if distress results in bodily harm.

    3. Extreme and outrageous conduct: Even tortious or criminal intent not enough if conduct not extreme and outrageous, enough to go beyond all bounds of decency and be regarded as atrocious and utterly intolerable in civilized society. Not mere insults, indignities, threats, annoyances, petty oppressions, or other trivialities.

    4. Extremeness and outrageousness may arise from actor’s knowledge that the other is peculiarly susceptible.

    5. Restatement focuses on D’s conduct, not parasite claim.

  1. Strong arm tactics. State Rubbish v. Siliznoff (Cal. 1952). Cause of action is established when it is shown that one intentionally subjects another to mental suffering incident to serious threats to physical well-being, whether or not threats constitute technical assault. Does not matter that threat of physical harm was not immediate, but only future.

  2. Bill collection. George v. Jordan Marsh Mass 1971: Called late, sent letters threatening legal action, said her credit revoked and liable for late charges. Had heart attack. Attorney protested. Continued until second heart attack. Upheld sufficiency of claim.

  3. Outrageous professional conduct, Rockhill v. Pollard OR 1971: Auto accident, severe injuries. Dr. gave cursory examination and made wait outside in freezing rain until picked up. Later operated on for a depressed skull fracture. Special duty of physician to patient makes actions outrageous to the extreme.

  4. Dead Bodies, Trentadue v. US (10th 2005). Prison failed to return inmate body to kin in proper manner. Nondisclosure of unusual death, blocking autopsy, failed to inform family of battered condition of the body: outrageous conduct that “needlessly and recklessly” intensified ED.

  5. SCOTUS uses constitution to limit IIED to protect free speech. Hustler v. Falwell (1988). Ad said Falwell’s first time was with his mom in an outhouse, said parody in small print. 1st Amend.

  6. Myspace Case- Terms of service makes it unauthorized to create false account. Had authorization to access the computer, just not in the way that myspace wanted her to. Didn’t steal data. Not within purpose of the statute. But she was intending to cause emotional distress.

    1. Sad How do we define outrageousness? RS 46d- average person would exclaim outrageous. Societal norm decided by the jury. Matter of fact, what the average person thinks is sufficiently outrageous. But the criminal prosecution is taking place in a different community, where they have different standards.

  7. Collateral claims. False imprisonment (Chellen), racial insults (Patterson) tack on IED. Judge rejected suit, saying allegations not serious enough. More success in sexual harassment under Title VII than in tort. Environment reasonably perceived as hostile or abusive, no need for psych injury. Harris v. Forklift (1993). Racial and Sexual harassment statutes lowers the bar on IIED, making it much easier to satisfy burden. Some courts will allow what look like title VII claims as IIED. Abusive workplace. Why want IIED? Intentional Torts have:

      1. 1. Higher compensatory damages

      2. 2. Punitive damages more likely.

      3. 3. We hold kids culpable for intentional torts but lower kid std for negligence.

      4. 4. comparative liability can cancel negligence, but not for intentional torts.

      5. 5. Negligence needs some kind of bodily injury or contact. Assault, imprisonment and IIED do not require bodily contact.




  1. Assault- threat of contact. D intends either to cause or threaten battery, and puts the plaintiff in fear or an imminent harmful or offensive contact (a battery)

  1. Only anticipation of contact required. Elements identical to battery except no requirement of actual contact.

  2. Two additional key issue in assault: Imminent & Extra-sensitive plaintiff: ordinarily no assault if wouldn’t be assault of typical person. If D knows of P’s extra-sensitivity, has requisite intent for assault.

  1. False Imprisonment, Elements: Total confinement, Generally P must be consciously aware of confinement, Restraint on P’s freedom must be intentional, but physical force is not necessary if there is a threat of force.



II. Duties-

    1. In negligence, analyizing in terms of duty is question-begging, just the duty to exercise reasonable care to avoid injuring the plaintiff ordinarily exists

    2. Strict liability, speaking of duty is peculiar. Action is acceptable but must pay own way. Duty is to compensate those harmed by the activity.

    3. In other cases analysis of duty is helpful.

      1. Acquire tort jurisdiction stealing from Contract in MacPherson v. Buick product manufacturer owes a duty to those not in privity with it.

      2. Steal from property law in premises liability field in Rowland v. Christian.

  1. No affirmative duty even for easy rescues absent special circumstance or relationship

    1. Buch v. Armory NH 1897. 8 year old P, trespassed in D’s mill, employee told him to leave but didn’t kick him out. On appeal, JNOV for defendant. D not liable for negligence unless owed P a legal duty which D neglected to perform. With purely moral obligations the law does not deal. The duty to do no wrong is a legal duty. The duty to protect against wrong is, generally speaking and excepting certain intimate relations, a moral obligation. No duty to a trespassing child. Landowner is not bound to warn him against hidden or secret dangers arising from his own acts or those of other persons. In short, if they do nothing, he can have no cause of action against them.” Only duty is to not act to harm (Because trespasser). Exception: Attractive Nuisance. But Generally there is no affirmative duty to rescue or act to help anyone else.

    2. Hurley v. Eddingfield Ind 1901. Family physician called for violently ill, paid and told no other doctor available and that patient relied on him. Dr. refused to render aid for no reason. Patient died. Licensing is of permission and not compulsion. No duty like an innkeeper. D wins. State does not require and licensee does not promise to treat all people. Default is owing no duty. Only duty not to intend harm or act willfully or wantonly. Must find a duty:

      1. A family doctor: By being the family doctor, there is a general reliance interest of the community. Market argues that with a monopoly on the family doctor market, responsibility to the community. He is their family doctor and they specifically relied on him.

      2. Court rejected the analogy of innkeeper and common carriers. Innkeeper has duty to those who are already staying with them. But even if someone comes to your door, there is an obligation to serve them. Common carrier- Publicly held out line of transportation. Has monopoly on service, sometimes granted by the government, sometimes sustained by the market (private monopoly).

      3. But Dr’s liberty should not be forced. Would have to be available and can charge a reasonable fee. Sometimes there is no reasonable fee. Individual rights and disincentive for being a doctor.

      4. Dr. has risk of malpractice. Innkeeper assumes very little risk in taking on an additional client. Drs. already have higher standard of care, that extra obligation of negligence pays for the special benefits.

    3. Yania v. Bigan Pa 1959: Neighboring strip mine visits, jumps into cut and drowned. 1 Urged Yania to jump into water, 2 failed to warn of dangerous condition, 3 failing to rescue. Dismissed by judge. No physical impact on his person, only mental cajolery. Not a child, makes own decisions. Three steps: Is there a duty not to dare? After the dare, is there a duty to warn of the risk? Is there a duty to rescue?

      1. Bohlen- U Pa L. Rev. 1908- Mis means faulty or negligent. Misfeasance- commission/active. Nonfeasance- omission/passive.

  2. Critisizing and Defending the No Affirmative Duty Rule

    1. Ames proposes corrective justice/utilitarian approach. Law/Econ/Utilitarian, has liberalizing bent towards extending duties.

      1. Macaulay, surgeon need not go from Calcutta to Meerut to do operation. Refusing to impose rescue duty takes nothing away from victim, but merely refuses to confer a benefit. But innocent acts create danger, like when a hunter’s arrow accidentally hits someone, who falls face first into puddle. Hard to draw the line between duty to throw rope from bridge or save baby from train tracks and Dr. going to Meerut.

      2. Proposed rule: if death or great bodily harm follows as a consequence of inaction when little or no inconvenience to self, criminal and civil sanctions. Hunter at original common law would be guilty, so disallow defense of non-negligence because failed to act to help save him. Preserve no common law duty to rescue, But take easy cases. Save the baby on the RR track. If impending grave danger/bodily harm (impending prevents forced donation to charity) that will result from inaction/non-illegal action, (played some role that increased risks) or (the result has to actually occur) & you really could have saved them with little or no inconvenience to self.

    2. Epstein Strict Liability 1973. Duty of easy rescue, no place to draw the line. Even if we take easy cases, slippery slope. Hard to stop it. $10 to save a hungry person’s life, seems easy enough. Indian Doctor would have to travel if someone willing to pay. But if payment was enough, no legal duty would be required.

    3. Posner’s Critique of Epstein- Tort theory can be viewed as a device for vindicating the principle that underlie freedom of contract. Would create a mutually protective environment.

    4. Binder and Feminist Theory: Caring, responsibility, interconnectedness, and cooperation. Mistake to focus on balance between two individuals. Person dying affects lots of people.

    5. Note 1: Common law lack of duty to rescue justified because hard to decide who has the duty, liability might reduce altruism which is generally sufficient already, deters from positions abile to help, failed assistance brings liability

  3. Alternatives to No Rescue Duty Rule:

    1. Note 2: Rescue by restitution? Give payments to those who effect a rescue. Eliminates multiple causation problems and minimizes legal interference. But who pays and how much?

    2. Note 3: Legislating Good Samaritan: Insulate rescuer from liability for ordinary negligence or imposing affirmative duty with fine. Only gross conduct or willful. Emergency room exception read in by court.

      1. Swenson v. Waseca Mutual Minnestora 2002: Helping injured to hospital, gets hit by trucker and injured dies. Exempted from negligence liability for helping.

      2. Vermont Statute 2006- Grave physical harm help without danger to self or important duties, give reasonable assistance. $100.

      3. 65X die from trying to rescue than die for failure to try non-risky rescue. If accepting as a duty, why just $100. Why not proportional to the damage? Sets price on help, those wealthy enough don’t have to help. Symbolic, but may just create a social norm. Social redress, a way to work out moral legitimacy.

    3. Note 4: Public entity duty to rescue. Riss v. NY 1968: Police ignored reports of threats. No duty of care on the city, separation of powers. No constitutional duty of municipal rescue. DeShaney v. Winnebago 1989 SCOTUS: 14th due process no claim when social service failed to protect small child they knew were being beaten and who was permanently disabled after they returned him to his father. Clause confers “no affirmative right to government aid,” even when necessary to secure protected life, liberty, or property interests.

      1. KH v. Morgan 7th Cir. 1990: Posner found duty when state handed over child in state custody to known child abuser. Morgan distinguishes Stockberger, when state has actual knowledge, like state acted recklessly. Less worried about negligence. If takes on obligations and performs recklessly, should be held accountable.

      2. Currier v. Doran 10th Cir 2001 held Deshaney didn’t apply because removed from mother and placed with father, Deshaney replaced whence removed. State was but-for cause in Currier, not in DeShaney. Currier v. Doran, maybe reckless, maybe misfeasance.

      3. Public Duties 578: sometimes have opposite effect of leading state to scale back on social services when we impose liability on the state. Private actors work the same way, they avoid positions of potential rescue.

  4. If negligently placed victim in danger, then duty to rescue.

  5. Special relationship to P imposes duty to prevent harm to P’s person or property.

    1. Parents and custodians, Landlord duty to tenant, hotel to guests, club to member, university to students. Common carriers and innkeepers

    2. Prisons and hospitals have charge of person who commit violence against others when released.

  6. Risk Creation Creates Duty

    1. Montgomery v. National Convoy (SC 1938) creation of danger even non-negligently creates duty to warn or even actively rescue. Truck stalled on icy highway without fault. Duty of easy rescue from common law. Original stalling out is not negligent and No affirmative duty to put up flairs in general. A complex act, the first act has no liability, but creates a liability for a second act. If negligent, unreasonable risks, already on the hook. If non –negligent creation of risk, creating an unavoidable risk becomes a + factor creating a duty. Recognized duty because they put out flares and left truck lights on. Duty not fulfilled, did not take precautions reasonably calculated to prevent injury.

      1. Note 1: In Newton v. Ellis KB 1855, worker dug hole in highway and left uncovered at night. Not nonfeasance, did something by omitting to protect the public. Not not putting up a light, but the complex act. Making hole + no light.

    2. 3rd Restatement codified Montgomery: 39: Prior conduct creating risk of physical harm creates duty. Prior conduct, even not tortious, creates continuing risk of physical harm characteristic of the conduct, duty of reasonable care to prevent or minimize harm.

    3. Stockberger- employee at federal prison goes into hypoglycemic shock. Existing relationship, may not be enough on it’s own. + factor, gave him ensure. Just enough sugar to get him on the road. Like intervening, a mini-rescue that failed. Feasance (act) that puts person in the web of liability. Using common law avoids creating a statute by searching for +.

    4. Note 3: Aid begun then undone. Zelenko v. Gimbel NY 1935: P sick in D’s store. Once undertakes the task, duty to use ordinary care in performance. Kept 6 hours in infirmary without medical care. If out of store someone else could have helped him. Segregated plaintiff from where aid could be given and then left alone. By botching the rescue he removes the possibility of other rescues. Even if no duty to rescue and attempts, liable for negligent rescue. Duty assumed by meddling in affairs not its concern. Second RS 324: Duty from taking charge of helpful. No duty but takes charge of helpful to aid or protect self is subject to liability for bodily harm caused to him by failure to exercise reasonable care to secure safety; or discontinuance of aid or protection, if leaves in worse position than when found.

  7. Exceptions: affirmative Duties

    1. Attractive Nuisance

    2. Necessity Soldano v. O’Dnailes, CA 1983. Someone about to be shot, patron runs across street to call police, asks bartender to use phone. Bartender refuses, victim dies. Court said common law violates common decency. Although no duty to rescue, duty to either make call or allow the call to be made. Necessity requires people to let others use their property but their body.

      1. 2nd RS 327: Anyone who knows or has reason to know a third person is giving or ready to give another aid necessary to prevent phsycial harm is tortiously liable if negligently prevents or disable the third person from giving such aid..

      2. Eric J. v. Betty M, CA 1999: Criticized Soldano: equates prevention with interference which refusal to allow non-customer to use the phone. Interference and refusal to allow commandeer of property are different. Interference and prevent require affirmative action. (but if reached for phone and bartender prevented it?)

    3. Gratuitous undertakings by D to benefit or assist P. Not bargained for, so treated under tort law based on significant reliance. Marsalis v. LaSalle LA 1957: P bitten or scratched by Siamese cat while shopping in D’s store. D agreed to keep cat under observation for 4 days for rabies watch, didn’t do anything, cat escaped and gone for a month. Dr. friend administered rabies vaccine after cat disappeared, she had allergic reaction. Rule: Undertakes to care for ill, injured, or helpless person under legal obligation to reasonable care and prudence.

      1. 2nd RS 323: Negligent performance of undertaking to render services. One who gratuitously or for consideration, undertakes to render services which he should recognize as necessary for protection of other’s person or things, is liable for physical harm resulting from failure to exercise reasonable care in undertaking if Failure increases risk of such harm; or Harm is suffered because of reliance on the undertaking.


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