Tort Law, Policy and the High Court of Australia. Tort Law, Policy and the High Court of Australia.

Tort Law, Policy and the High Court of Australia‪.‬

Melbourne University Law Review 2007, August, 31, 2

    • 2,99 €
    • 2,99 €

Publisher Description

[This article concerns the High Court of Australia's use of policy in deciding torts cases, particularly in negligence. It examines the Court's stated position on the use of policy reasoning and compares this with its actual practice. The argument made is that courts should be wary about the use of policy-based reasoning because policy is 'unstable' or incapable of consistent application. Courts are limited in their ability to predict the future consequences of different legal rules for disparate parties. Moreover, reasonable minds will differ as to what policy demands. These matters are illustrated by reference to recent cases concerning wrongful conception and wrongful life. The conclusion is that, in doubtful cases, courts should apply what the author describes as the 'golden rule of negligence': that duties of care are to be recognised where there are substantial factual features linking the parties, creating pathways to harm. The onus should lie upon either defendants or courts themselves to supply convincing policy reasons for departing from this rule. The result is that the High Court arguably decided the wrongful life case of Harriton v Stephens incorrectly; the decision should have been in favour of recovery on the basis of the doctor 's obvious capacity to cause the plaintiff to incur substantial financial costs relating to her disability.] I INTRODUCTION

GENRE
Professional & Technical
RELEASED
2007
1 August
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
50
Pages
PUBLISHER
Melbourne University Law Review
SIZE
299.7
KB

More Books by Melbourne University Law Review

Twilight of the Neanderthals, Or are Bilateral Double Taxation Treaty Networks Sustainable? Twilight of the Neanderthals, Or are Bilateral Double Taxation Treaty Networks Sustainable?
2010
Radio 2UE Sydney Pty. Ltd. V. Burns (EOD); Commonwealth V. Wood; T. Trust Co. Of Australia Ltd. (T/As Stockland Property Management) V. Skiwing Pty. Ltd. (T/As Cafe Tiffany's); Attorney-General (NSW) V. 2UE Sydney Pty. Ltd.: State Tribunals and Chapter III of the Australian Constitution. Radio 2UE Sydney Pty. Ltd. V. Burns (EOD); Commonwealth V. Wood; T. Trust Co. Of Australia Ltd. (T/As Stockland Property Management) V. Skiwing Pty. Ltd. (T/As Cafe Tiffany's); Attorney-General (NSW) V. 2UE Sydney Pty. Ltd.: State Tribunals and Chapter III of the Australian Constitution.
2007
Unjust Enrichment (Book Review) Unjust Enrichment (Book Review)
2004
Hard Lessons: Reflections on Governance and Crime Control in Late Modernity (Book Review) Hard Lessons: Reflections on Governance and Crime Control in Late Modernity (Book Review)
2004
Torts: Cases and Commentary, 5Th Ed (Book Review) Torts: Cases and Commentary, 5Th Ed (Book Review)
2003
Communication Strategies: Understanding the Racial and Religious Tolerance Act 2001 (Vic). Communication Strategies: Understanding the Racial and Religious Tolerance Act 2001 (Vic).
2003