Intentional Torts - Prima Facie Case
Elements:
Transferred Intent
Intent may transferred between victims and only the following intentional torts:
Causation (Intentional Torts)
If defendant’s conduct was a substantial factor in brining about the injury
Battery
Elements
Note: Damages not required. Nominal damages may be recovered if actual damages are not proved. Punitive damages are available if malicious.
Assault
Elements
Notes: Apprehension is only knowledge or understanding, not fear; Words alone insufficient, must be coupled with conduct. Damages not required (nominal damages available if no actual damages proved; punitive damages if malicious)
False Imprisonment
Elements
Notes: Bounded Area need not be physically bounded; also requires that plaintiff have no reasonable means of escape that plaintiff could reasonably discover; plaintiff must know of the confinement; Damages not required
Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress
Elements:
Notes: Must prove actual damages (severe emotional distress); but damages need not be physical (e.g., a showing of distress if you want)
Extreme and Outrageous Conduct (Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress)
Extreme and Outrageous Conduct transcends all bounds of decency in a civil society. Conduct that is not normally outrageous may become so if:
Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress to a Bystander
When the defendant causes physical harm to a third person and the plaintiff experiences severe emotional distress as a result of it, the plaintiff can recover by showing either the prima facie case for IIED or that (1) she was present when the injury occured; (2) she is a close relative of the injured person; and (3) that the defendant knew facts (1) and (2).
Trespass to Land
Elements:
Notes: Physical Invasion by anything tangible; Intent need only be to enter on the land (no requirement to know that land belonged to another); No showing of Damage required. This cause of action belongs to any possessor of land.
Trespass to Chattels
Elements
Notes: Damages can be either in damaging or depriving a right of possession; Remedy is the cost of repair or rental.
Conversion
Elements
Notes: Mistake as to ownership is no defense (only intent to do the act is required); Damages - Fair Market Value
What are the Intentional Torts?
Intentional Torts (7)
*Transferred Intent Rule Applicable
(D) Requires damages
What are the defenses to Intentional Torts?
Defenses (5)
Protective Privileges
Self-Defense, Defense of Others, Defense of Property
Consider:
Notes: Majority Rule: No duty to retreat; but, modern trend imposes a duty to retreat before using deadly force if this can be done safely (unless in the home); may not use deadly force in defense of property
Privilege of Arrest (and Shopkeeper’s Privilege)
Defense to Intentional Torts (defense to false imprisonment)
Necessity
Defense to Intentional Torts (trespass to land, trespass to chattels, conversion)
A person may interfere with the real or personal property of another when it is reasonably necessary to avoid threatened injury from a natural or other force and when the threatened injury is substantially more serious than the invasion that is undertaken to avert it.
Discipline
Defense to Intentional Torts
A parent or teacher may use reasonable force in disciplining children.
Defamation (w/o first amendment implication)
Elements:
Notes: Defamatory language is language tending to adversely affect one’s reputation; Inducement and Innuendo (pleading additional facts to show defamation where a statement is not defamatory on its face); Colloquium (extrinsic evidence to show that statement refers to the plaintiff); Publication can be intentional or negligent. Damages may be presumed in cases of libel or slander per se. If damages cannot be presumed (slander cases), the Plaintiff must show special pecuniary damages.
When may Defamation Damages by presumed?
In cases of libel (written or printed, radio or television) or slander per se.
Slander per se:
Defamation (where First Amendment is implicated)
When the defamation involves a matter of public concern the plaintiff must also show:
Notes: Fault depends on the plaintiff’s status:
Defenses to Defamation
Also consider mitigating factors (not a defense but may reduce damages)
Invasion to the Right of Privacy
Four Branches
Defendant’s conduct must be a proximate cause of the invasion.
These are personal rights (cannot be brought by family members and do not survive death); special damages need not be proven (emotional distress and mental anguish are sufficient)
Intentional Misrepresentation (Fraud, Deceit)
Elements
Notes: There is no general duty to disclose unless (1) fiduciary relationship; or (2) sale of real property when sellor knows plaintiff cannot reasonably discover defect