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Tort
A violation of a duty imposed by the civil law
intentional torts
Involve harm caused by deliberate action
Defamation
making a false statement about someone - written or verbal
Libel
written defamation
Slander
oral defamation
Element
a fact that a plaintiff must prove to win a lawsuit
Elements in a defamation case
1. Defamatory statement - statement likely to harm another person's reputation 2. Falseness - the statement must be false 3. Communicated - the statement must be communicated to at least one other person other than the plaintiff 4. Injury - plaintiff must generally show some injury
Slander per se
Law is willing to assume injury by defamation without requiring the plaintiff to prove it
Opinion
Plaintiff must demonstrate a false statement in a defamation case. Since opinions cannot be proven true/false, an opinion is generally a valid defense in a defamation case
Actual malice
means that the defendant in a defamation suit knew his/her statement was false or acted with reckless disregard of the truth
False imprisonment
intentional restraint of another person without reasonable cause or consent. Generally a store may detain a customer/worker for alleged shoplifting provided there is a reasonable basis for the suspicion and the detention is done reasonable.
Battery
intentional touching of another person in a way that is harmful or offensive
Assault
an action that causes another person to fear an imminent battery
Fraud
injuring someone by deliberate deception. misrepresentation of a material fact or conditions with knowledge or reckless disregard of their falsity. Intent to induce another to rely on such facts or conditions. Damages occur and causal connection exists.
Intentional infliction of emotional distress
Extreme and outrageous conduct that causes serious emotional harm
compensatory damages
damages/amount of money that is intended to restore the plaintiff to the position he was in before the defendant's conduct caused injury
single recovery principle
requires a court to settle a legal case once and for all, by awarding a lump sum for past and future expenses
punitive damages
damages awarded with intention to punish the defendant for conduct that is extreme and outrageous
tortious interference with a contract
occurs when a defendant deliberately harms a contractual relationship between two other parties. Illegal interference by a 3rd party in a contract concerning 2 other parties
intrusion
intrusion into someone's personal life is a tort if a reasonable person would find it offensive.
commercial exploitation
prohibits the unauthorized use of another person's likeness or voice for business purposes
criminal law
behavior classified as dangerous to society. Prosecuted by the government, whether a victim wants to prosecute or not; money award goes to the government
tort law
based on an obligation imposed by the law with no agreement needed between parties; victim prosecutes and receives compensation or restitution
public personalities
public officials and public figures have a harder time winning a defamation case because they have to prove that the defendant acted with actual malice.
Business Torts
intentional torts that occur almost exclusively in a business setting
Negligence
"unintentional tort". To win a negligence case, the plaintiff must prove that the defendant failed in five areas: 1. Duty of due care 2. Breach 3. Factual Cause 4. Proximate Cause 5. Damages
Duty of due care
if a defendant could have foreseen injury to a particular person, he/she has a duty to him. Each of us has a duty to behave as a reasonable person would under the circumstances.
trespasser
a person on someone else's property without consent.
Lowest Liability of landowners.
Landowner only liable to a trespasser only for intentionally injuring him.
Mid level liability of landowners
trespassing children. If there is some manmade thing on the land that may be reasonably expected to attract children, the landowner is probably liable for any harm,
licensee
a person on property for her own purposes, but with the owner's permission
Higher liability
licensee. a social guest is a typical licensee. A licensee is entitled to a warning of hidden dangers that the owner knows about
Highest liability
invitee. The owner has a duty of reasonable care to an invitee.
invitee
a person who has a right to be on a property because it is a public place or business open to the public
breach of duty
a defendant breaches his duty of due care by failing to behave the way a reasonable person would under similar circumstances
factual cause
the defendant's breach led to the ultimate harm
proximate cuase
refers to a party who contributes to a loss in a way that a reasonable person could anticipate. for the defendant to be liable, the the type of harm must have been reasonably foreseeable.
res ipsa loquitur
"the thing speaks for itself". refers to cases where the facts imply that the defendant's negligence caused the harm. Shifts the burden of proof from plaintiff to defendant. Occurs when (1) the defendant had exclusive control of the thing that caused the harm (2) the harm normally would n…
assumption of risk
a person who voluntarily enters a situation of obvious danger if he/she is injured
contributory negligence
a plaintiff who is even slightly negligent recovers nothing
comparative negligence
a plaintiff may generally recover even if she is partially responsible
strict liability
a high level of liability assumed by people or corporations who engage in activities that are very dangerous
defective products
generally lead to strict liability
ultrahazardous activities
a defendant engaging in such acts is virtually always liable for resulting harm
prosecution
only the government can prosecute a crime and punish someone by sending him/her to prison. Any fines paid go to government, not victim.
restitution
when a guilty defendant must reimburse the victim for the harm suffered.
Burden of proof for criminal case
government must prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt
beyond a reasonable doubt
the very high burden of proof in a criminal trial, demanding much more certainty than required in a civil trial
right to a jury
criminal defendant has a right to a trial by jury for any charge that could result in a sentence of six months or longer
felony
serious crime, for which a defendant can be sentence to one year or more in prison
misdemeanor
a less serious crime, often punishable by less than a year in a county jail
intent crime
a crime that requires that the defendant to be found guilt of committing a criminal act with criminal intent
actus reus
"guilty act" - the actual performance of a criminal act
mens rea
"even intent" - the possession of the requisite state of mind to commit a prohibited act
criminal procedure
the process of investigating, interrogating, and trying a criminal defendant
state of mind
a defendant is not guilty of a crime if she was forced to commit it. she is not guilty if she acted under duress
gathering evidence
Fourth amendment prohibits the government from making illegal searches and seizures. As a general rule, the police must obtain a warrant before conducting a search.
warrant
Fifth amendment says that if a search is needed, police take an affidavit to a judge, who issues a warrant, giving permission to search a particular place, looking for particular evidence. Need probably cause.
probable cause
it is likely that evidence of a crime will be found in the place to be searched
exclusionary rule
evidence obtained illegally may not be used at trial
self-incrimination
the Fifth amendment provides that the prosecution may not use coercion to force a confession from a suspect. the suspect may refuse to answer any questions that could be used to convict him.
Miranda Rights
Sixth amendment guarantees the right to a lawyer at all important stages of the criminal process. Government must appoint a lawyer to represent, free of charge, to anyone who can't afford one.
indictment
government's formal charge that the defendant has committed a crime and must stand trial
grand jury
group of ordinary citizens that decides whether there is probably cause the defendant committed the crime with which she is charged
arraignment
the indictment is read to the suspect, who then pleads guilty or not guilty to the charges
nolo contendre
the accused agrees to the imposition of a penalty but does not admit guilt
plea bargaining
an agreement in which the defendant pleads guilty to a reduced charge, and the prosecution recommends to the judge a relatively lenient sentence
trial and appeal
no plea bargain, case goes to trial. prosecution must convince jury beyond a reasonable doubt. defendant may appeal
double jeopardy
a criminal defendant may be prosecuted only once for a particular criminal offense
Punishment
Eighth Amendment prohibits cruel and unusual punishment
Patriot Act
passed in response to 9/11. designed to give law enforcement officials greater power to investigate and prevent potential terrorist assaults.
4 crimes that harm business
larceny, fraud, embezzlement, arson
larceny
the trespassory taking of personal property with the intent to steal it
fraud
deception for the purpose of taking money or property from someone
theft of honest services
prohibits public and private employees from taking bribes or kickbacks
arson
malicious use of fire or explosives to destroy property
embezzlement
fraudulent conversion of someone else's property already in the defendant's possession
Rachkteer Influenced and Corrupt Organization Act (RICO)
creates both civil and criminal law liabilities. A powerful Federal statute, originally aimed at organized crime, that prohibits using two or more racketeering acts to accomplish any of these goals: (1) investing in or acquiring legitimate businesses with criminal money (2) maintaining or…
racketeering acts
any of a long list of specified crimes, such as embezzlement, arson, mail fraud, and wire fraud.
money laundering
using proceeds of criminal acts either to promote crime or conceal the source of money
Federal sentencing guidelines
the detailed rules that judges must follow when sentencing defendants convicted of federal crimes
compliance program
a plan to prevent and detect criminal conduct at all levels of a company
patent
grant by the government permitting the inventor exclusive use of an invention for 20 years from the date of filing. not available for laws of nature, scientific principles, or mathematical formulas or algorithms. Only for tangible applications of an idea
nature of intellectual property
little economic value unless it is used by many. Typically expensive to produce, but cheap to transmit, giving more profit to those who do less work.
requirements for a patent
Novel, nonobvious, and useful
novel
must not be (1) known or already used in this country (2) has been described in a publication here or overseas or (3) otherwise available to the public
nonobvious
not patentable if it is obvious to a person with ordinary skill
useful
need not necessarily be commercially valuable, but must have some current use
utility patent
protects inventions and significant improvements on inventions including: mechanical, electrical, chemical, process, machine, composition of matter
design patent
protects the appearance but not the function of an item
plant patent
protects a newly created plant provided the inventor can reproduce it asexually
Priority between two inventors
first person to file a patent application has priority after 2013. prior to 2013, first person to invent and use the product had patent
patent troll
someone who buys a portfolio of patents for the purpose of making patent infringement claims
prior sale
must apply for a patent within one year of selling the product
provisional patent application
shorter cheaper way to file for a patent temporarily, only lasts one year
Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property
requires each member country to grant citizens of other member countries the same rights under patent laws that its own citizens enjoy
Duration of patent
patents are valid for 20 years from the date of filing the application. design patents are only good for 14 years
infringement
to prove a violation, the plaintiff must present evidence that the work was original and that either: the infringer actually copied the work, or the infringer had access to the original and the two works are substantially similar
copyright
holder of a copyright owns the particular expression of an idea, but not the underlying idea or method of operation. a work is automatically copyrighted once it is in tangible form
duration of copyright
valid until 70 years after the death of the work's last living author. if owned by corporation, the copyright lasts 95 years from publication or 120 years from creation
first sale doctrine
permits a person who owns a lawfully made copy of a copyrighted work to sell or otherwise dispose of that copt. Cannot make a copy and sell or give it away.
fair use doctrine
permits limited use of copyrighted material without permission of the author for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, scholarship, or research
Digital Millennium Copyright Act
makes it illegal to delete copyright information and then distribute the work via the internet. Also illegal to circumvent encryption or scrambling devices
International Copyright Treates
Berne convention requires member countries to provide automatic copyright protection to any works created in another member country
trademark
any combination of words and symbols that a business uses to identify its products or services and distinguish them from others First person to use a mark in a trade owns it
Valid trademarks
Must be distinctive. Cannot be similar to existing mark. Cannot be a generic word, descriptive word, deceptive, or a person's name alone.
Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act
permits both trademark owners and famous people to sue anyone who registers their name as a domain name in "Bad faith"
trade secrets
a formula, device, process, method, or compilation of information that, when used in business, gives the owner and advantage over competitors
Characteristics of a trade secrets
How difficult was the information to obtain? Does it create an economic advantage? Does the company protect it?
Uniform Trade Secrets Act
owner of a secret must take reasonable precaution to protect it. Defendant must have acquired a trade secret through unlawful means
Reverse engineering
competitor who reverse engineers a product can use trade secret but not the trade marked name of the original creator
Economic Espionage Act
a federal statute that makes it a crime for any person to convert a trade secret for his/her own or another's benefit, knowing or intending to cause injury to the owners of the trade secret
Nature of real property
land, buildings, fixtures, and plants
fixtures
object is fixture if a reasonable person would consider the item to be a permanent part of the property.
Freehold estates
owner of a freehold estate has the present right to possess the property and to use it in any lawful way
fee simple absolute
provides owner with greatest control
fee simple defeasible
may terminate upon the occurrence of some event
life estate
an estate for the life of some named person
Concurrent estates
two or more people owning property at the same time
tenancy in common
two or more people won the property, each with the right to convey her interests or pass it down to heirs. No survivorship
joint tenancy
two or more people holding equal interest in a property, with the right of survivorship
Adverse possession
allows someone to take the title to land if she demonstrates possession that is (1) exclusive (2) notorious (3) adverse to all others (4) continuous
Entry and Exclusive possession
user must take physical possession of the land and must be the only one to do so
Open and Notorious possession
user's presence must be visible and generally known in the area, so that the owner is on notice that his title is contested
Claim adverse to owner
user must clearly assert that land is his. Can't ask for permission.
Continuous possession for statutory period
must continuously use land for 20 years, some states 10 years, few 5 years
zoning statues
state laws that permit local communities to regulate building and land use
eminent domain
power of the government to take private property for public use, provided they give fair compensation (fifth amendment)
tenancy by the entirety
husband and wife each own the entire property, and they both have a right of survivorship
community property
property brought to marriage or given to one spouse may remain individually owned, called separate property
condominium
owner of the apartment typically has fee simple absolute in his unit
cooperative
resident generally do not own particular unit.
easement
gives on person the right to enter land belonging to another and make a limited use of it, without taking anything away
profit
gives one person the right to enter land belonging to another and take something away
license
gives the holder temporary permission to enter upon another's property
mortgage
security interest in real property, given to the institution loaning a buyer the money to buy real estate
Seller's obligation concerning property
most states impose an implied warranty of habitability on a builder who sells a new home
implied warranty of habitability
seller of a home must disclose facts that buyer does not know and connect readily observe, if they materially affect the property's value
statement of frauds
requires that the agreement to sell real property must be in writing
recording a deed
means to file deed with the official state registry
landlord-tenant law
owner allows another person temporary, exclusive possession of the property
tenancy for years
any lease for stated, fixed period
periodic tenancy
created for a fixed period and then automatically continues for additional periods until either party notifies the other of termination
tenancy at sufferance
occurs when a tenant remains on the premises, against the wishes of the landlord, after the expiration of a true tenance
Duty to deliver possession
landlord's first important duty to deliver possession of premises at the beginning of the tenancy
quiet enjoyment
all tenants are entitled to quiet enjoyment of the premises, meaning the right to use the property without the interference of the landlord
actual eviction
occurs when the landlord prevents the tenant from possessing the premises
constructive eviction
occurs when the landlord substantially interferes with the tenant's use and enjoyment of the premises
duty to maintain premises
landlord has a duty to deliver the premises in a habitable condition and a continuing duty to maintain the habitable condition

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