Evidential Uncertainty in Causation in Negligence

Evidential Uncertainty in Causation in Negligence

Author: Gemma Turton

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing

Published: 2016-05-19

Total Pages: 419

ISBN-13: 1509900330

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This book undertakes an analysis of academic and judicial responses to the problem of evidential uncertainty in causation in negligence. It seeks to bring clarity to what has become a notoriously complex area by adopting a clear approach to the function of the doctrine of causation within a corrective justice-based account of negligence liability. It first explores basic causal models and issues of proof, including the role of statistical and epidemiological evidence, in order to isolate the problem of evidential uncertainty more precisely. Application of Richard Wright's NESS test to a range of English case law shows it to be more comprehensive than the 'but for' test that currently dominates, thereby reducing the need to resort to additional tests, such as the Wardlaw test of material contribution to harm, the scope and meaning of which are uncertain. The book builds on this foundation to explore the solution to a range of problems of evidential uncertainty, focusing on the Fairchild principle and the idea of risk as damage, as well as the notion of loss of a chance in medical negligence which is often seen as analogous with 'increase in risk', in an attempt to bring coherence to this area of the law.


A Critical Analysis of the Current Approach of the Courts and Academics to the Problem of Evidential Uncertainty in Causation in Tort Law

A Critical Analysis of the Current Approach of the Courts and Academics to the Problem of Evidential Uncertainty in Causation in Tort Law

Author: Gemma Turton

Publisher:

Published: 2013

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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The primary aim of this thesis is to identify a coherent legal response to the particular causal problem of the 'evidentiary gap'. In order to do this, it is necessary to understand how the 'evidentiary gap' relates to causation in negligence more generally, so the thesis addresses both the nature and function of the tort of negligence as well as the role played by causation within that tort. It argues that negligence is best understood as a system of corrective justice-based interpersonal responsibility. In this account, causation has a vital role so the test of causation must be philosophically sound. Causation, however, also occupies only a limited role so analysis must draw fully on the doctrines of damage and breach which bracket the causation inquiry, as well as notions of quantification of loss. The NESS test for causation is shown to be preferable to the but-for test because it is conceptually more adequate and therefore able to address causal problems that the but-for test cannot. This thesis rejects claims for proportionate recovery based on the notion of loss of a chance of avoiding physical harm in medical negligence, but proposes limited recovery for loss of a chance as an independent form of damage arising because of unique considerations of interpersonal responsibility in the doctor-patient relationship in cases of misdiagnosis/ mistreatment of existing illness. It is argued that the Fairchild test of material contribution to risk of harm in cases of evidentiary gap is not consistent with corrective justice, and that this cannot be resolved by reconceptualising the gist of the action as the risk of harm. The Fairchild exception lacks coherence because of its instrumentalist basis, so should not be applied outside of the mesothelioma context.


Evidential Uncertainty in Causation in Negligence

Evidential Uncertainty in Causation in Negligence

Author: Gemma Turton

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing

Published: 2016-05-19

Total Pages: 264

ISBN-13: 1509900322

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This book undertakes an analysis of academic and judicial responses to the problem of evidential uncertainty in causation in negligence. It seeks to bring clarity to what has become a notoriously complex area by adopting a clear approach to the function of the doctrine of causation within a corrective justice-based account of negligence liability. It first explores basic causal models and issues of proof, including the role of statistical and epidemiological evidence, in order to isolate the problem of evidential uncertainty more precisely. Application of Richard Wright's NESS test to a range of English case law shows it to be more comprehensive than the 'but for' test that currently dominates, thereby reducing the need to resort to additional tests, such as the Wardlaw test of material contribution to harm, the scope and meaning of which are uncertain. The book builds on this foundation to explore the solution to a range of problems of evidential uncertainty, focusing on the Fairchild principle and the idea of risk as damage, as well as the notion of loss of a chance in medical negligence which is often seen as analogous with 'increase in risk', in an attempt to bring coherence to this area of the law.


Tort Liability Under Uncertainty

Tort Liability Under Uncertainty

Author: Ariel Porat

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA

Published: 2001

Total Pages: 236

ISBN-13: 9780198267973

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Providing a comprehensive and principled account of the uncertainty problem that arises in tort litigation, this text critically examines the existing doctrinal solutions of the problem, as evolved in England, United States, Canada & Israel.


Causation in European Tort Law

Causation in European Tort Law

Author: Marta Infantino

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2017-12-28

Total Pages: 785

ISBN-13: 1108418368

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This book takes an original and comparative approach to issues of causation in tort law across many European legal systems.


Proof of Causation in Tort Law

Proof of Causation in Tort Law

Author: Sandy Steel

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2015-09-11

Total Pages: 461

ISBN-13: 1107049105

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A clear, critical analysis of proof of causation in the law of tort in England, France and Germany.


Causation in Negligence

Causation in Negligence

Author: Sarah Green

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing

Published: 2015-01-15

Total Pages: 295

ISBN-13: 1782255214

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The principal objective of this book is simple: to provide a timely and effective means of navigating the current maze of case law on causation, in order that the solutions to causal problems might more easily be reached and the law relating to them more easily understood. The need for this has been increasingly evident in recent judgments dealing with causal issues: in particular, it seems to be ever harder to distinguish between the different 'categories' of causation and, consequently, to identify the legal test to be applied on any given set of facts. Causation in Negligence will make such identification easier, both by clarifying the parameters of each category and mapping the current key cases accordingly, and by providing one basic means of analysis which will make the resolution of even the thorniest of causal issues a straightforward process. The causal inquiry in negligence seems to have become a highly complicated and confused area of the law. As this book demonstrates, this is unnecessary and easily remedied.


Uncertain Causation in Medical Liability

Uncertain Causation in Medical Liability

Author: Lara Khoury

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing

Published: 2006-07-18

Total Pages: 304

ISBN-13: 184731273X

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'Proving' the cause of the plaintiff's injury in personal injury litigation often entails significant challenges, particularly when science cannot identify the cause of a biological phenomenon or when the nature of this cause is debatable. This problem is frequently encountered in medical malpractice cases, where the limitations of scientific knowledge are still extensive. Yet judges must decide cases, however uncertain the evidence with regard to proof of causation. Reluctant to leave patients without compensation, courts have in some cases challenged their traditional approach to causation through recourse to such techniques as reliance on factual presumptions and inferences, the concept of loss of chance, and reversal of the burden of proof. This book analyses and criticises the use of these various techniques by the courts of England, Australia, Canada, France, and the civilian Canadian province of Quebec in confronting evidentiary causal difficulties caused by the uncertainties of medical science.


Uncertain Causation in Tort Law

Uncertain Causation in Tort Law

Author: Miquel Martín-Casals

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2015-11-19

Total Pages: 351

ISBN-13: 1316425487

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This discussion of causal uncertainty in tort liability adopts a comparative approach in order to highlight the important normative, epistemological and procedural implications of the various proposed solutions. Occupying a middle ground between the legal perspective and the philosophical views that are at stake when it comes to the resolution of tort law cases in a context of causal uncertainty, the arguments will be of great interest to legal scholars, legal philosophers and advanced tort law students.