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CRIMINAL LAW OUTLINE -1 - YouTube
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The following outline is given as an overview and introduction to lawsuit lawsuits:

Tort law - defines a legal injury and, therefore, whether a person can be held liable for the injury it causes. Legal injury is not limited to physical injury. They may also include emotional, economic, or reputation injuries as well as breaches of privacy, property, or constitutional rights.

Video Outline of tort law



Type of word

Deliberate harassment

A deliberate tamp - category of lawsuit depicting a civil error resulting from a deliberate action on the part of the tortfeasor (alleged offender).

  • Attacks (tort) - intentionally and voluntarily lead to a reasonable understanding of dangerous or offensive direct contact.
  • Battery (tort) - Brings about harmless contact or offensive offensive with someone or something closely related to the person (such as clothing). This is different from the attack because it requires actual contact.
  • Fake Imprisonment - Someone is intentionally locked away without legal authority.
  • Deliberate Passion of Emotional Pressure - Accidental Behavior that results in extreme emotional distress.
  • Approval - A possible reason for civil or criminal liability under the defense that they should not be liable because action is not taken without their permission.
  • Needs (tort) - Defense needs provide the state or other individual property; usually called only against Trespass's intentional torts to move, enter without permission to land, or conversion (the law). This is stated in Latin as the necessity of inducit privilegium quod jura privata , "The need to induce privileges due to private rights."
  • Martial - Civilians act on their own behalf to engage in violence in order to defend themselves from their own lives or the lives of others, including the use of lethal force. Different from necessity because it is usually a response to immediate danger.

Property compensation

  • The opponent enters the ground - Commits when someone deliberately enters another person's land for no legitimate reason. This can be followed up per se , and thus the party whose land it enters can prosecute even if no actual loss is made.
  • Conversion (the law) - A deliberate tort to a private property where the intentional disturbance by the defendant by chattel removes the same claimant of ownership.
  • Detinue - The act of improper containment, initiated by an individual claiming a greater right to their direct ownership than the current owner or holder.
  • Replevin - Indicates the recovery by a person goods taken illegally from its ownership by legal process.
  • Trover - A form of lawsuit to recover damages due to the wrong private property.

Inappropriate compensation

Unlawful allegations - the specific category of deliberate suits in which the cause of the action is subjected to a particular insult.

  • Defamation - Communication statements that make false claims, expressly or implicitly stated as factual, may damage the reputation of an entity.
  • Invasion of privacy - Unlawful intrusion into the private lives of others for no reason.
  • Trust infringement - Protecting personal information submitted in confidence; usually requiring that information be confidential, communicated confidently, and disclosed to the detriment of the plaintiff.
  • Process abuse - Harmful and deliberate abuse or pervision of routinely issued court proceedings is not justified by the underlying legal action.
  • A malicious prosecution - Similar to the abuse of the process, but including intent, chase without probable cause, and dismissal for the sake of the victim. In some jurisdictions, malicious prosecution is provided for wrong initiation of criminal proceedings, while the use of malicious processes refers to the incorrect initiation of civil proceedings.
  • Alienation of affection - Carried by an abandoned partner to a third party whose partner believes is responsible for marital failure.

Economic compensation

Economic compensation - torts that provide general legal rules on liabilities arising from business transactions such as interference with economic or business relationships and tend to involve pure economic losses. Also called a business suit.

  • Fraud - Make false representations by one party with the intention to push the other party into commission or negligence acts due to the later party being damaged. The first party may or may not benefit from damage caused to a second party. In addition, the first party does not need to collude with someone who really benefits.
  • Painful Interference - One intentionally damages a contractual relationship or other plaintiff's business relationship.
  • Conspiracy (civil) - Agreement between two or more parties to deprive third party legal rights or deceive third parties for illegal purposes.
  • Trade restrictions - Contractual obligations not to trade are illegal agreements on the basis of public policy unless they are reasonable in the interest of both parties and the public at large; this primarily affects the post-termination restriction agreement in the employment contract.

Disorders

  • Distractions - Rejection of a quiet pleasure for real property owners. Personal interference is a nonsensical, unreasonable, or unlawful interference with the personal use of others and the enjoyment of his property; while public disturbance is a disruption to the rights of society in general. The test to determine whether a disorder makes sense is whether the severity of the damage is greater than the social benefits of the disorder.

Negligence

Negligence - failure to make reasonable care of a wise person will exercise in such circumstances

  • Duty of care - Liability is imposed on individuals requiring them to comply with reasonable care standards when taking actions that may be detrimental to others.
  • Task Violation - There is no obligation in negligence unless the plaintiff specifies that he owes the obligation by the defendant and that there has been a breach of the duty.
  • Factual Cause - Whether an injury is given or not will occur without a task violation.
  • Legal cause or remoteness - The idea that accountability may be so far removed from the defendant that negligence can not be suspected or prevented by that party.
  • Damage - Placing the value of money on the damage done, following the principle of restitutio di integrum , "recovery to original condition".

Assignment to visitors

  • Attractive disturbance - A landowner may be liable for injury to children who enter without permission to the ground if injuries caused by objects or terrible conditions on land are likely to attract children.

The obligation to the visitor in the law of the lawsuit depends on how the party involved has no land has entered the ground.

  • Trespasser - A person who entered without permission on the property without the permission of the owner. Conversely, the visitor's status as an offender grants certain privileges to the visitor if they are injured due to the property owner's negligence.
  • Licensee - A person residing in another person's property, regardless of the fact that the property is not open to the general public; Historically, emergency workers have been considered licensors.
  • Guests - Someone invited to land by landowner, whether as a guest or for doing business.

Torts strict obligations

  • Product liability - The legal area on which producers, distributors, and sellers of products are responsible for the injury caused by their products. Generally, product responsibility claims are based on design flaws, defects in production, or failure to warn. This topic is closely related to negligence, breach of warranty and consumer protection.
  • Extraordinary activity - A very dangerous activity so that a person engaged in such an activity may be held liable for any injury caused by another person, regardless of whether a reasonable precaution is taken to prevent others from being hurt.

Maps Outline of tort law



Liability, defense, settlement

  • Comparative omissions - Partial defenses that reduce the amount of damage that the claimant can claim based on the plaintiff's own abandonment rate for damage. Most jurisdictions have adopted this doctrine; those not adopting it are Alabama, Maryland, North Carolina, Virginia, and Washington D.C.
  • Negligence of contribution - Defense based on the plaintiff's negligence where the plaintiff's actions caused an event that drew the lawsuit. An example of this is pedestrians crossing the street carelessly and being hit by a driver who carelessly driving.
  • Clear last chance - Doctrine in which a plaintiff can recover from comparative defense and defense denials if they can show that the defendant has a last chance to avoid an accident.
  • The eggshell skull - The doctrine in which an individual is responsible for all consequences resulting from his actions even if the victim suffers from an unusually high level of damage (ie, vulnerability or pre-existing medical condition). This term appears as an example argument that if a person has a skeleton as small as an eggshell, and an attacker does not realize that the condition is about the person in the head and then broke, the responsible party should be responsible for all the damage. resulting from the content.
  • Substitute responsibilities - A form of strict secondary accountability arising from respondances of superiors. The responsibility of the employer for the actions of their subordinates, who underneath, are responsible for the negligent acts committed by their employees during their employment.
  • Non-Latin non-productive injection - Latin for "To the willing, no injury done", this general law doctrine means that if a person willingly puts himself in a position where danger can occur, they can not sue in case of damage. That is, a boxer agrees to be hit, and boxing-related injuries can thus not be acted upon (even if his opponent will hit him with a bar of iron, it will be actionable because he does not know such things will happen)./li>
  • Ex turpi causa non oritur actio - "From a dishonorable cause, action does not appear". In the United States, this legal doctrine is better known as poor hand equity, and prevents criminals from filing claims against other criminals.



See also

  • Legal outline



References




External links

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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