In general, the answer to this
question is yes. An owner of a dog, or any animal for that
matter, may be held liable for the injuries that that animal
causes to others. However, the ease with which a plaintiff can
win a "dog-bite" lawsuit differs from jurisdiction to
jurisdiction depending on the legal theory of recovery
available in the plaintiff's location. Some jurisdictions
require the plaintiff to show that the animal owner knew, or
should have known, that the animal was inclined to attack or
bite. In other jurisdictions, the plaintiff may only need to
show negligence on the part of the owner in order to recover
money for his injuries. If a wild animal, such as a lion, bear
or monkey, injures the plaintiff, the animal's owner may be
held accountable for plaintiff's injuries regardless of his
conduct under a theory of strict liability.
Some states have "dog-bite" statutes
designed to address these very matters. Additionally, some
municipalities may also have their own statutes also address
the responsibility of pet owners to answer for the actions of
their pets.
If the plaintiff is an adult, the
owner of an animal may offer as a defense to plaintiff's claim
that the injured party provoked the animal. Where the
plaintiff has been given clear warning that an animal should
not be approached, petted or talked to, and still proceeds
with that action, the owner may be able to avoid
responsibility if the animal thereafter attacks the plaintiff.
This defense is not available, however, if the plaintiff is a
child.
Once the plaintiff has established
that the animal owner is liable for his injuries, the
plaintiff must also establish the amount of his damages. The
plaintiff should introduce evidence, such as doctor and
hospital bills, of how much it has cost him to treat the
injury. In addition, the plaintiff may be able to recover lost
wages if his injury kept him out of work. The plaintiff is
entitled to compensation for any permanent disability cause by
the injury, as well as compensation for his pain and
suffering.
The terms assault and battery are
often erroneously used interchangeably. However, they are not
the same things. An assault can be defined as the threat to
use unlawful force to inflict bodily injury upon another. The
threat, which must be believed to be imminent, must cause
reasonable apprehension in the plaintiff. Therefore, where the
defendant has threatened some use of force, creating an
apprehension on the part of in the plaintiff, an assault has
occurred. The focus, for the purpose of determining whether a
particular act is an assault, must be upon the reasonableness
of the plaintiff's reaction.
If the defendant threatens to use
force against the plaintiff, but clearly states that the use
of force will not be imminent, and will instead occur at some
point in the future, then the plaintiff is unlikely to prevail
on a claim of assault. If the threat is imminent, and the
defendant appears capable and intent on carrying it out, the
plaintiff will likely succeed in proving an assault occurred.
For example, a plaintiff may have difficulty proving an
assault in cases where an individual such as a former spouse
threatens him or her over the phone and thus is not present
and capable of immediately carrying out the threat.
Battery is the intentional and
unpermitted contact with another. A battery, for practical
purposes, is the end product of an assault. A plaintiff in a
battery claim does not need to prove an actual injury, as long
as he proves unlawful and unpermitted contact with himself, or
with his property. For example, plaintiffs have successfully
proven a battery where the defendant jabbed a finger in the
air at the plaintiff or where the defendant grabbed onto the
plaintiff's coat. In addition, it is not necessary for the
contact to be with an object in the possession of the
plaintiff or the plaintiff's body. An unpermitted contact with
property of the plaintiff, located within the plaintiff's
proximity, may also constitute a battery.
Defamation is term that includes both
slander and libel. Generally, slander occurs when the
reputation or good name of someone is damaged as a result of
false statements that are orally made. Libel, on the other
hand, occurs when false statements regarding another are put
in writing.
Whether a particular statement, oral
or written, constitutes defamation in the nature of slander or
libel will depend upon the particular circumstances in
question and the identity of the parties. To prevail in a
defamation lawsuit, a plaintiff must prove that the defendant
made a false and defamatory statement about the plaintiff that
was communicated to a third party. Thus a false and
objectionable statement sent in an e-mail to the plaintiff's
co-worker may be libelous. The plaintiff can usually succeed
by showing the communication was either intentional or at
least negligent. Finally, it is also possible for the
plaintiff to bring a libel suit where the plaintiff himself
repeats the alleged defamatory statement. This is called
self-publication. This can occur, for example, when an
individual applies for a job and has to tell the prospective
employer about something the previous employer said that was
false.
Before beginning a libel or slander
lawsuit, the plaintiff must determine whether or not the
objectionable statement is true. No matter how damaging,
insensitive, rude or inappropriate a statement may be, the
plaintiff will lose his claim if the statement is true.
The "public" plaintiff has additional
hurdles to overcome to recover for libel or slander. An
example of a public figure is a politician. Along with
establishing all of the regular elements of the tort, a
plaintiff who is a public figure must also show that the
defendant knew the false statement was false, or at least
acted with reckless disregard as to its truthfulness.
Newspapers may escape liability for libel when they merely
report false statements as long as the paper had no particular
reason to doubt the statement at the time it was printed.
Finally, the plaintiff often has to
prove economic harm in order to recover on a defamation suit.
Therefore, the plaintiff may need to be able to demonstrate a
loss of business as a result of the defamation in order to
establish his right to the recovery of money. However, some
types of statements are so damaging that the plaintiff does
not have to prove any economic loss. These statements tend to
be those that accuse the plaintiff of sexual impropriety or
criminal conduct.
Yes. The average member of the public
is entitled to privacy protections, although the strength of
those protections will vary depending upon the particular
factual circumstances.
Generally, there are four different
actions that an injured plaintiff can allege to recover for an
unlawful invasion of his privacy. The first concerns the
unlawful appropriation of another's image. The plaintiff could
make this claim, for example, if the defendant, an owner of a
car dealership, uses plaintiff's picture in a commercial or
advertisement without permission.
The second type of wrongful invasion
of privacy is in the nature of intrusion. If the plaintiff can
prove that the defendant intruded into his solitude,
seclusion, or private life in a manner that would be
considered highly offensive to a reasonable person, the
plaintiff is entitled to recover damages from the defendant.
The issue of what actions are considered highly offensive
depends greatly upon the factual circumstances under
examination.
The third type of a privacy claim is
the public disclosure of private facts. This cause of action
requires that facts having no link to a legitimate public
concern be disseminated by the defendant resulting in
embarrassment, humiliation, or offense to the plaintiff.
Whether the public has a legitimate concern in otherwise
private facts about the plaintiff is always dependent upon the
particular circumstances. For example, the public may have a
legitimate interest in knowing that a local surgeon has the
AIDS virus, which is an otherwise private matter, due to the
potential health risks involved with that condition. In
comparison, however, the public may not have a valid interest
in knowing the HIV status of the local cabdriver, as there is
no threat to the public health or safety in that situation.
A fourth type of privacy right is the
right to be free from being placed in a false light in the
public eye. This cause of action is very similar to a
defamation action. In short, the plaintiff alleges that a
communication about the plaintiff was made by defendant, it is
untrue, and it was made to the public. The main difference
between this cause of action and defamation is that for the
invasion of privacy tort, the communication need not be
defamatory, it need only be false and highly offensive to a
reasonable person.
Under ordinary personal injury law,
an injured person must claim that the defendant should pay for
his injuries because of some fault on defendant's part. Even
when the plaintiff is successful, there is often times a long
wait between the injury and the ultimate payment of money. To
solve this problem, many states have enacted "no-fault"
automobile insurance systems that seek to provide compensation
to individuals injured in automobile accidents without regard
to fault. Many of these systems are considered to be
first-party insurance systems, which means that individuals
who are injured in automobile accidents make a claim for
recovery against their own insurance carrier, rather than the
insurance carrier of one of the other party's involved in the
accident.
Many no-fault automobile systems
require that every driver obtain a minimum level of insurance
before being allowed to operate a motor vehicle. This purpose
of this requirement is to limit situations in which an
individual is injured in an automobile accident and does not
have insurance to assist in compensating for the injuries. If
an injured party's insurance company has paid out a claim
under the no-fault clause in the insurance policy, it can then
recover at least a portion of the payment from the defendant's
insurance company. In states where insurance coverage is not
required, the injured party's insurance company can still
bring a traditional personal injury law suit against the
defendant to recover any payments it made pursuant to no-fault
coverage.
Numerous types of benefits are
available under most no-fault systems. Examples of the types
of benefits available include coverage of medical and hospital
expenses for injuries sustained in the accident, payment of
lost wages, and payment, where applicable, of funeral
expenses. These types of losses are generally considered to be
economic in nature. Basic no-fault plans typically do not pay
money for claims such as pain and suffering, loss of
consortium, and permanent disability. However, individuals who
purchase higher levels of insurance coverage may also be able
to purchase additional types of coverage, such as coverage for
these non-economic losses.
The total amount of benefits that may
be recovered will vary by jurisdiction. Some states have
no-fault systems that contain a cap on damages. Other systems
do not have such a cap in place. Some systems also have a
threshold of no-fault benefits that must be met before tort
damages may be sought. No-fault plans can be complex and
confusing, and it is therefore a good idea to carefully
examine the particular requirements and limitations of any
plan, and to seek the counsel of an experienced attorney, if
necessary, to ensure proper application of the plan benefits.
An owner of property has a duty to
protect members of the public from injury that may occur upon
the property. When a person is injured, he may be able to
recover money for his injuries if he can prove that the
property owner failed to meet that duty. The hurdle plaintiffs
face is that the nature and extent of the property owner's
duty will vary depending upon the facts of the situation and
the jurisdiction in question.
Some states focus upon, solely, the
status of the injured visitor to the property. These states
divide the potential status into three separate categories:
invitee, licensee, and trespasser. An invitee is someone who
has been invited onto the land because he will confer some
advantage to the property owner, such as a store patron. An
owner of property is required to exercise reasonable care for
the safety of the invitee. A licensee is someone who enters
upon the land for his own purpose, and is present at the
consent, but not the invitation, of the owner. For example, a
door-to-door salesman who enters the property and stays to
chat with the owner about the product that he is selling is a
licensee. The owner's duty to a licensee is only to warn of
hidden dangers. For example, if the owner knew the front step
was rotten and did not warn the salesman, the salesman may be
able to recover if he thereafter falls through the step and
injures himself. Finally, a trespasser is an individual who
enters onto the property without the knowledge or consent of
the owner and who remains there without any right or
permission. Trespassers have difficulty suing property owners
because property owners' duty towards trespassers is not to
place traps and hazards on their property. In some cases, the
owner must also warn trespassers of the hazards if they are
unlikely to be discovered by the trespasser and could cause
serious injury or death.
Other states focus upon the condition
of the property and the activities of both the visitor and
owner, rather than considering only the status of the visitor.
In these states, a uniform standard that requires the owner of
the property to exercise reasonable care to ensure the safety
of invitees and licensees is generally applied. The plaintiff
must prove that the duty of care has not been met through an
examination of the circumstances surrounding his entry on the
property, the use to which the property is put, the
foreseeability of his injury, and the reasonableness of
placing a warning or repairing the condition. Obviously,
whether reasonable care has been rendered depends greatly upon
the particular circumstances.
The property owner's duty of care
toward children is greater than the duty owed to adults. Even
if the children are trespassers or engage in dangerous
behavior, the property owner must still take precautions to
prevent foreseeable harm to children. The classic example of a
property owner's greater duty of care to children arises in
the context of backyard swimming pools. Owners must fence,
gate, and lock their pools in a manner that keeps children out
and if they fail to do so, they will be found liable for
injuries to children, even if the children were trespassers
that were warned to stay off the property.
Generally speaking, an owner of
property may not use deadly force to defend the property.
Society values human life and bodily integrity much higher
than property. Therefore, the life, health and safety of an
individual, even an intruder, is considered to be more
valuable than the china or stereo which that individual is
trying to steal.
An owner is not prohibited, however,
from invoking self-help methods in defending property from
another. An owner of property is entitled to use reasonable
force to prevent someone, or something, from entering onto her
property or to remove something from her property. What, under
normal circumstances, may constitute a battery, assault, or
other intentional tort, will not be considered unlawful in
situations where it is performed as a reasonable use of
self-help in defense of property. However, the use of force
calculated to do great bodily harm, or cause death, is not
permitted.
One narrow limitation upon the use of
deadly force is authorized. Where an intruder threatens
personal safety, as well as a threat to property, or where the
intruder is committing a forcible felony, deadly force may be
appropriate. For example, if a robber enters a home and, while
stealing items, attempts to rape the homeowner, the owner may
be justified in shooting the robber. However, an owner who
witnesses a neighborhood child stealing a bicycle from his
garage, without any threat of bodily harm, is not justified in
shooting that child.
Most individuals who are injured at
work are prohibited from filing ordinary personal injury
lawsuits against their employers. Instead, injured workers are
generally required to file a claim under the state's workers
compensation procedure. An injured railroad worker must bring
a claim for benefits under the Federal Employer's Liability
Act (FELA) for compensation for his injuries. FELA is similar
to many state workers' compensation systems with the exception
that a railroad employee must be able to prove some level of
employer negligence in order to make a recovery. In
comparison, most state systems are based upon no-fault
theories of recovery where neither the negligence of the
employer or the employee is examined. In practice, it is
generally not difficult for an injured railroad employee to
prove that the employer was, at least to some degree,
negligent.
Laws, rules, and regulations require
a railroad to furnish a reasonably safe workplace for the
benefit and protection of its employees. In keeping with this
requirement, a railroad has a duty to inspect and discover
defects that may result in injury. In some circumstances, this
may include the duty to uncover defects that should be obvious
to a railroad employee. A railroad also has a duty to warn its
employees of any hazardous or unsafe conditions of which it is
aware, or should be aware.
A railroad is also required to take
other steps to ensure the safety of its workers, including
providing adequate training and supervision, appropriate tools
and safe equipment, and enforcing only reasonable work quotas.
The FELA claimant can usually show that at least one of the
required regulations has not been met, thereby establishing
the employer's negligence.
A slip and fall action is a type of
personal injury lawsuit filed by a plaintiff who has been
injured by a slip and fall, usually on the defendant's
property. Examples of very common slip and fall plaintiffs
include the grocery store patron who slips on a spill or a
piece of food laying on the floor, and falls, causing injury
to himself; and a hotel guest who slips in the shower and
injures her back in the process.
The plaintiff in slip and fall cases
must usually show that the owner of the property had notice or
knowledge of the condition, and failed to clean it up and
rectify it within a reasonable amount of time. If the
plaintiff slipped on a grape that had been lying on the floor
for two hours, and the manager of the store had walked past it
and inspected it five times before asking someone to clean it
up, liability is likely.
If the plaintiff has knowingly
encountered a hazard, then he or she may have trouble holding
the defendant liable. For example, if a hotel guest squirts
baby oil onto the floor of the shower; steps into the shower
and attempts to do the jitterbug; and then falls and breaks an
ankle, liability on the part of the hotel is highly
questionable. However, if the cleaning staff in the hotel
repeatedly tells management that the non-skid treads in the
bathtub for room 212 are missing and the hotel fails to
replace them, the hotel will probably be liable for damages to
a guest who is injured.
No. Generally, most states that
recognize a wrongful death cause of action limit the pool of
potential plaintiffs. Some states limit this group to the
deceased's primary beneficiaries, defined as the surviving
spouse and the deceased's children. Other states allow the
parents of the deceased individual to bring a wrongful death
claim. In addition to these individuals, some states recognize
the rights of any dependent, whether closely related or not,
to bring a wrongful death claim provided the person actually a
depended on the deceased for economic support. To those
jurisdiction, it apparently makes little to no sense to allow
the second cousin once removed of the deceased, who saw him
once every five years at a family reunion, to recover for the
loss of the deceased's future earning potential.
Some states require any recovery
gained in a wrongful death action to be divided amongst the
deceased's heirs at law or to be distributed to the deceased's
heirs at law as it would be in any normal probate proceeding.
In these situations, distant relatives may receive some
"trickle down" of damages, even though they were not
financially dependent upon the deceased during his life.
If more than one plaintiff is
entitled to recover, all plaintiffs will share in the award.
The manner in which the award is divided can be confusing and
will depend upon the laws in the particular jurisdiction where
the matter is brought.
Personal injury actions require, by
their very nature, that someone be injured. The requisite
injury can either by physical or, in some cases, emotional.
The general goal of personal injury actions is to place the
blame for the injury on the party who caused it and to require
them to compensate the injured for the losses sustained.
Not every injured plaintiff is
entitled to recover damages for the injury he or she sustains.
Besides an injury, the plaintiff must establish, through
evidence, that the defendant is legally liable for his or her
injuries. This requires proof of causation both in terms of
actual, factual causation and proximate, or legal causation.
Whether legal causation is established depends on the facts
and circumstances of the particular matter in question. The
defendant can be held liable as a result of either the actions
that are taken, or the actions that are not taken.
Some personal injury actions revolve
around legal causation derived from a concept of intentional
conduct, whereby it is generally held that if one
intentionally harms another, or knows that the conduct which
is engaged in causes a substantial likelihood that harm will
result, liability for the resulting harm will in fact attach.
Other personal injury actions have as their legal causation a
looser concept of fault called negligence. Under a negligence
theory, in comparison, one is liable for the results of
actions, or inaction, where an ordinary person in the same
position should have foreseen that the conduct would create an
unreasonable risk of harm to others. Still other types of
personal injury actions are based on strict liability, a
no-fault system where liability may attach regardless of the
fault of the various parties, including the plaintiff.
In some situations, the defendant's
conduct, while questionable, does not rise to a level that
entitles the plaintiff to a recovery. For example, if a
plaintiff knowingly and willfully chooses to encounter a known
hazard, the law holds that he or she has "assumed the risk of
injury" and therefore the defendant is not liable. This theory
applies for instance in a case where the plaintiff walks on an
obvious build up of snow and ice caused by the defendant
property owner's failure to shovel his sidewalk, falls and
breaks her hip, and is unable to recover for her injuries
because she knew of the hazardous condition and willingly
chose to encounter it. Plaintiffs are denied recovery in other
cases if their subjective belief about a situation does not
match an objective "reasonable person" standard. For instance,
where the defendant approaches the plaintiff and states "I
might poke you in the eye if you wear that red sweater again,"
it is likely that no actionable assault occurred due to the
fact that there was no immediate threat of harm that caused
reasonable apprehension on the part of the plaintiff.
Personal injury law can involve many
different types of claims, theories, and principles. Some of
the more common, or interesting, types of personal injury
actions include:
Animal bites can result in
the animal owner's liability to the person who is bitten or
who is injured while trying to avoid a bite.
Assault and battery are
two intentional torts that involve improper contact with
another, without permission or consent, or the threat of
such contact.
Aviation accidents quite
often result in either serious injury or death. When these
accidents occur, serious questions regarding the liability
of the airline, its employees, or the government may arise.
Defamation and privacy are
two separate causes of action that concern the rights of
individuals to have their names and reputations protected,
and also to have their privacy preserved.
Motor vehicle accidents
raise numerous questions as to the liability of one
participant to another and also raise interesting questions
regarding who should be responsible for covering the losses.
Premises liability
concerns the responsibilities of owners and possessors of
property to safeguard others from dangerous conditions or
hazards on the property and to prevent others from being
injured while on the property.
Property damage causes of
action concern the rights of owners or possessors of
property to protect their property from damage, theft or
intrusion.
Railroad accidents may
result in personal injury or death and subject the railroad
to liability.
Slip and fall cases are
very common causes of action and relate closely to the duty
of an owner or possessor of land to maintain the property in
a safe manner for the benefit of others lawfully entering
upon the land.
Wrongful death actions may
be brought by the dependents or beneficiaries of a deceased
individual against the party whose action or inaction was
causally related to the death.
This publication and the information
included in it are not intended to serve as a substitute for
consultation with an attorney. Specific legal issues, concerns
and conditions always require the advice of appropriate legal
professionals.