1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910809345103321

Titolo

Essential cases on misconduct / / Benedict Winiger, Ernst Karner, Ken Oliphant (editors) ; contributors, Iza Addrych-Brzezinska [and fifty four others]

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Berlin, [Germany] ; ; Boston, [Massachusetts] : , : De Gruyter, , 2018

©2018

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (1,316 pages)

Collana

Digest of European Tort Law ; ; Volume 3

Classificazione

LAW051000LAW087000

Disciplina

346.403

Soggetti

Torts - Europe

Damages - Europe

Proximate cause (Law) - Europe

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Includes index.

Nota di contenuto

Frontmatter -- Preface -- Overview -- Table of Contents -- Abbreviations -- Questionnaire Structure -- A. Introduction -- 1. General Overview -- B. The Nature of the Misconduct Required -- 2. Forms of Misconduct -- C. The Required Standard of Conduct -- 3. Criteria for Assessment -- 4. The Relevance of Statutory Norms -- 5. The Relevance of Non-Statutory Norms -- D. An Objective or Subjective Standard? -- 6. Special Skill or Expertise -- 7. Inexperience or Lack of Skill -- 8. Age -- 9. Physical Disability -- 10. Mental Disability -- 11. Incapacity due to Drugs or Alcohol -- 12. Incapacity due to Other Transient Factors -- E. Degrees of Misconduct -- 13. Degrees of Misconduct -- F. Grounds of Justification -- 14. Self-Defence and Other Grounds of Justification -- 15. Self-Defence against Non-Misconduct -- G. Other Issues -- 16. Additional Questions -- Contributors -- Publications -- Index

Sommario/riassunto

The various national European legal systems offer a broad range of responses to the question of what can be regarded as wrongful behaviour or fault. The present work systematically examines these two important prerequisites for tortious liability under the combined heading of 'misconduct'. Unlike current textbooks, national casebooks



and monographs, it builds on the experiences gathered in the national legal systems over the past decades and thereby fills a major gap which still exists today. It thus does what the previous volumes in the 'Digest of European Tort Law' series did for other key elements of tort law, namely natural causation and damage. Once again, the publication contains a selection of the most important cases from 28 states across Europe as well as cases handed down by European Union courts; it also highlights cases from earlier periods of legal history. For each case, the facts and the relevant court decision are presented and these are then accompanied by an analytical commentary. In addition, the editors provide comparative analyses of the cases reported and a special report is dedicated to how key decisions would be resolved under model European rules on tort law. The editors believe that the material gathered here may provide guidance for an organic convergence of the national legal systems in Europe. It constitutes the basis of an acquis commun that is infinitely richer (though also much more complex) than the rather bland and abstract concepts contained in national codifications, European legislation and modern model rules.