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Principles of European Tort Law A Critical Examination Ken Oliphant (Cardiff Law School) BIICL, 23 November 2005.

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Presentation on theme: "Principles of European Tort Law A Critical Examination Ken Oliphant (Cardiff Law School) BIICL, 23 November 2005."— Presentation transcript:

1 Principles of European Tort Law A Critical Examination Ken Oliphant (Cardiff Law School) BIICL, 23 November 2005

2 1. Why Principles of European Tort Law? Full harmonisation (a European Civil Code) Other “hard” harmonisation “Soft” harmonisation Development of a distinct EC Tort Law An exercise in comparative law

3 2. Structure of the Principles The Basic Norm The Three Bases of Liability  Fault  Abnormally dangerous activities (strict liability)  Auxiliaries (vicarious liability) The Other General Conditions of Liability  Damage  Causation Defences, remedies, etc.

4 Cf. Structure of Study Group’s draft “A person who suffers legally relevant damage has a right to reparation from a person who caused the damage either intentionally or negligently or is otherwise accountable for the causation of the damage.”

5 Comparison with Other Codes: (i) Three-part structure The Principles  Fault  Abnormally dangerous activities  Auxiliaries French Civil Code  Fault (art. 1382)  Liability for things (art. 1384)  Liability for others (art. 1384)

6 Comparison with Other Codes: (ii) Protected interests French law of delict BGB § 823 (1) The Principles No specification of protected interests List of protected interests: covered/not A hierarchy of protected interests, with varying protection

7 3. The Flexible System “Protection of pure economic interests… may [or may not] be more limited in scope.” “an interest may [or may not] receive more extensive protection against intentional harm than in other cases…” “The required standard of conduct… may [or may not] be adjusted when due to age… [etc.] the person cannot be expected to conform to it.”

8 4. Specific principles Negligence Intentional harm Strict liability (abnormally dangerous activities) Vicarious liability (auxiliaries) Causation (inc. proportionate liability) Defences acting to reduce liability The general reduction clause

9 5. Concluding Thoughts: A Common Lawyer’s Perspective The value of the enterprise  Opening the door to the civilian law of tort  (cf. Fairchild)  A common and neutral framework to make sense of other legal systems The value of these principles  “The best” selected ahead of “the rest”  Reflecting accumulated practical experience  Specific proposals an aid to the further development of the common law


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