Torts 1 – Barry University Studying for Finals

I did well on my Torts final exam.  These are my study notes.

Download a Copy Here

Intentional Torts….

Intent requires an actor’s (1) purposeful desire of a given outcome or the actor to know with substantial certainty the outcome will occur.

Battery is an act with an intent to touch and intent to harm or offend that results in a touching and harms or offends.

Offensive contact is that contact that offends a reasonable sense of personal dignity.

Assault is an act with intent of a harmful or offensive touching that results in the apprehension of an immediate battery.

False imprisonment is an act with intent that results in confinement to a bounded area where the victim is harmed or aware.

For transferred intent it is enough that the actor intends to produce some effect upon some other person whether or not that person is the plaintiff.

The defendant intends a tort on one person, but commits it on another person.

The defendant intends one tort, but commits another tort.

Property….

Trespass to land is intent to enter land and results in entering land of another. Intent to enter land can be with purpose or substantial certainty.

Conversion of chattels is intent to exercise substantial dominion over chattel and results in an act seriously interfering with plaintiff’s right of possession.

Trespass to chattel is intent to act on chattel that causes interference with chattel and results in dispossession, lost use, or harm to chattel or plaintiff.

Defenses….

Self-defense is a privilege to use reasonable force to defend against unprivileged acts reasonably believed about to be inflicted.

Defense of property is a common law privilege to defend property by reasonable force.

To satisfy the shopkeeper’s privilege there must be a reasonable belief the plaintiff took goods, a proper purpose for detention, and a reasonable manner of detention.

Necessity defenses only apply to property torts…

To satisfy the defense of public necessity where an act is for the public good the defense is absolute.

To satisfy the defense of private necessity where an act is of private benefit, the defense is qualified and the defendant must pay damages.

 

 

Negligence….

Negligence is overt conduct that creates an unreasonable risk of harm that a reasonable person would avoid. CUHRA (Conduct/Unreasonable Harm/Reasonable Avoid)

Risk of harm is unreasonable when (1) a reasonable and prudent person would foresee the harm and (2) would avoid conduct that creates the risk.  FH-AC-CR (Foresee Harm/Avoid conduct/Creates risk)

Reasonable person has the same physical traits as the defendant, average mental ability, and the same knowledge as an average member of the community. (PT/IQ/Knowledge)

To establish the prima facia case for negligence the plaintiff must prove that (1) the defendant owed plaintiff a legal duty; (2) the defendant by behaving negligently, breached the duty; (3) plaintiff suffered damages; (4) Defendants negligence was an actual cause of this damage; and (5) the defendant’s negligence was a proximate cause of this damage.

Duty is the general duty of care a reasonable person under the same circumstances would meet.

Breach of duty occurs when defendant’s conduct falls below the standard of care and thus puts foreseeable plaintiffs at risk. (DC/B-SOC/FPR)

Actual damages are the injuries suffered by the plaintiff.

Actual cause can be shown by the “but-for” test of causation, “But for Defendant’s Negligence Plaintiff would have avoided injury.”

Proximate cause is established by showing the defendant is responsible for the type of harms within the risk and that the plaintiff was within the class of persons at risk.

If an intervening cause is within the scope of the original risk, it is not a superseding cause and original tortfeasor is still liable.  A superseding cause will cut off the original tortfeasor’s liability.

 

Doctrines…..

Negligence per se is the violation of a criminal statue where the statute protects the plaintiff’s class of persons and statute is meant to protect against the type of injury the plaintiff suffered.  Negligence per se is to conclusively establish the first two elements of a cause of action:  the defendant owed the plaintiff a legal duty and defendant breached that duty.

Res Ipsa Loquitor means the fact of an accident raises an inference of negligence to establish a prima facia case. The plaintiff will prove the (1) injury was probably the result of negligence and (2) it was probably the defendant who was negligent.

Under the Rescue Doctrine the rescuer can recover from the defendant whose negligence prompted the rescue attempt if the rescuer had a reasonable belief the victim was in peril.

Under the Last Clear Chance Doctrine courts allow the negligent plaintiff a full recovery when the plaintiff was left in a helpless position by his own negligence and the defendant, who had the last clear chance to avoid injury, negligently inflicted it anyway.

 

 

 

 

Negligence Defenses….

In some cases the defendant may share the liability of negligence with others, either other defendants or the plaintiff.

When the plaintiff may be partially liable plaintiff’s negligence is considered contributory or comparative.  Contributory negligence was the traditional common law defense and would bar a plaintiff from recovery.  Under the modern theory of comparative negligence the plaintiff’s comparative negligence is a defense to willful, wanton and reckless conduct.

When the defendant shares liability with other defendants it is either severally liable or joint and severally liableSeveral liability means no tortfeasor is liable for more than his fair share whereas under joint and several liability a plaintiff can enforce against any tortfeasor and other tortfeasors would contribute to the first.

There are four types of assumption of risk: Express or with consent, Traditional implied, and sports risks; primary and secondary.

If proven by the defendant Express assumption of risk is a complete bar to recovery for the plaintiff.  Express assumption of risk is generally contractual and is a viable defense.

Traditional assumption of risk recognized when the plaintiff, knowing of the risk, chose to confront it.  Traditional assumption of risk is a common law doctrine generally discarded in favor of comparative negligence.

In sports there are two doctrines of assumption of risk. The primary assumption of risk states there is no duty where inherent risk exists.  The secondary assumption of risk is limited to avoid reckless acts.

 

Negligence of Landowners…

An invitee is any person on the land for a pecuniary benefit of the landowner or is a public invitee.

A trespasser has no legal right to be on the land and enters the land without the owner’s consent.

A licensee is on the land with permission, but with a limited license to be there.

Under common law a landowner owes to an invitee a duty of care; to a trespasser and licensee a duty to avoid willful, wanton and reckless misconduct; and to a discovered trespasser a duty to warn.

Landowner Doctrines….

By the attractive nuisance doctrine a possessor of land is subject to liability for physical harm to children trespassing thereon and caused by the attractive nuisance and raises the duty to a duty of care.

Under the open and obvious doctrine landowners are not liable for harm caused by any activity or condition whose danger is known or obvious to them, unless the possessor should anticipate the harm despite such knowledge or obviousness.

 

Short Definitions to Memorize…

Negligence – CUHRA

Conduct Unreasonable Harms Reasonable Avoids

Risk of harm – FHACCR

Foreseeable Harms Avoid Conduct Creates Risk

Breach – DC/B-SOC/FPR

Defendants Conduct Below Standard of Care Foreseeable Plaintiffs Risk

Actual Cause – But for

Proximate cause – DR (1) THWR (2) PWCPR

Defendant Responsible Type Harm Within Risk Plaintiffs Within Class Persons Risk

Torts 1 Outlines Barry University – Professor Koons

I have uploaded my notes from my Torts 1 class.  I did well, although I did not book the class I managed to get the second highest grade.

Over view of all of our cases here..

My high level outline I used to study is here.

Outlines:

Intentional Torts

Negligence – Duty

Negligence – Breach

Negligence – Factual Cause

Negligence – Proximate Cause

Faults of the Plaintiff

Assumption of Risk, Property Torts

 

 

Law School – Barry University

Last fall I started law school. There will be much more to come on this topic as I am writing a book about my experiences going back to school as a part time student.

However, this is the first post in a series of posts to put my notes online and help others who may be struggling as 1Ls.

Linux – trying something new

The excitement of a new operating system used to get me enthused.  However, Microsoft crushed that years ago, maybe right after the Rolling Stones sang the introduction to Windows 95.  It’s been a long time since I took time to configure a computer and install an operating system. Welcome to Linux.

I recently became fascinated with the idea of resurrecting an old computer and using Linux to do so. One, I could use the computer that was sitting dormant. Two, it would  give me a chance to finally experiment with this operating system I’ve heard of.  Three, I am curious about playing with the raspberry pi.

The installation of Linux Mint was not too difficult. However I say that only after knowing what I went through to figure out how to successfully install the program.

The hardest part was getting a successful download. I did try to download other versions of Linux with no success.  During the installation, and I am still not sure where I went wrong,  I managed to lose my Windows boot capabilities.  I can see a partition hard drive when the system comes back up but I do not understand why. So my advice is the very very careful during the install.

I am NOT ready to try to do it on another computer for fear of repeating whatever mistake I made. Fortunately though, the data is still there.

The small netbook run much faster and overall I am impressed with Linux. Even more impressive though is that it comes with all the tools I need to run and no additional cost.

Success is NOT Debt

How do you measure success? I believe Americans judge one’s success by the size of their mortgage or house. I want us to break the paradigms of societal norms and judge success by freedom. Imagine being debt free. If not debt free then without being a slave to debt by having a minimal amount that allows control over spending and the ability to go anywhere.

As little as 100 years ago, when my grandfathers were children it was not expected to own a house. Homes were required for farmers, but many people were transient laborers.  For them a bed roll and a horse had more practicality than “bricks and sticks” planted in a single locale. Prior to World War II Americans were far more agrarian and lived on larger lots to homestead. Cities were dense in population and apartments ruled the day. My great grandmother ran a boarding house for coal miners. Boarding houses are now lost to another time.

Immediately following World War II came the invention of “suburbia”. Starting in Levittown, New York anyone could buy the new American dream – a house.  I refer to these early, 1,000 square foot structures as apartment with thick walls: grass.  Denser than rural areas, but more spacious, a new living arrangement was sold to the American people. Fueled by a rapid shift in post war production to automobiles the time required to travel distances were shortened significantly.  Families could escape urban lifestyle and commuter to work.

It was in the 1950 we began training future generations to believe happiness was measured by their subdivision, brick facade, and picket fence. Along the way our parents stole freedom from us. We could only be judged successful when we had a job, married, and bought a house. Not buying a house, and quietly enslaving ourselves to 30 years of payments three times the amount of the original principal, meant we were failures. Once purchased a cycle of accumulation was required; consumerism built through the fifties and sixties by a never ending flow of cheap, meaningless merchandise from countries never heard of.

The 1990s brought us “McMansions” – homes of epic proportion. With 4 and 5 bedrooms, game rooms, media rooms and excessively large bathrooms accelerated by easy money financing anyone could look like a Vanderbilt. Again, judgment of failure fell upon those failing to keep up with the Jones’.  Furthermore, Americans found need for storage units to keep all of their stuff: the trinkets bought at stores like Garden Ridge and Pier 1.  My personal opinion, two stores that supply absolutely nothing anyone needs, but distribute trinkets made through near forced labor.

In 2008 financial mayhem fell across our country and housing sales stopped. To this day the National Association of Realtors reports we have bottomed out and housing is recovering. Fortunately, data exposes lies and their story has yet to come true.  In February 2013, five years into the Great Recession, housing sales totaled 131,000 for the entire month when backing out investor and foreclosure sales.  It is again now I ask again, “does debt or a mortgage determine one’s success?” Of course, success is personal.  Judged by others though it continues as an expectation; we must own homes to meet society’s norms. My wife and I are pushing back.

We recently moved to Florida to be near my kids after being forced away in 2009. We had planned to buy a house until we started looking. It was appalling what our money would buy: shoddy construction for $300k, homes ten feet from the neighbor’s for $275k, and a piece of dirt for $70k, or an effective $280k per acre. Why, because the Fed’s $85billion per month quantitative easing feeds a desire for cheap money. Lastly, what if something changes? In other words job opportunities, job loss, society degradation, illness, or any other reason. Why would we want to be anchored to 5,000 square feet of Volusia County Florida?

So how do we gain freedom? Break the mortgage race:  if debt is required don’t commit to dirt. I’ve seen too many people pass opportunities during the Great Recession because they were connected to a house, not a “home” with their family. A house is just the container, a home is the programming delivered inside. Thus, a compromise to take our home where we want to go can bring the best situation.  For now LeeAnn and I are foregoing bricks and sticks containers for one with mobility. We will see in six months how it feels and whether we moved far. Regardless, knowing we can brings peace.

Wireless Networking for RVs

Wireless Networking for RV

Living full time in an RV brings many challenges.  The toughest is how to connect to the internet.  Options exist and I am not going to go into those in much details as there are several links to describe this such as the excellent Mobile Internet Options article on Technomads. The obvious solutions like phones, air cards, and hot spots provide a method to get the information highway.  However, bandwidth and cost go together so they do not necessarily work, or should be reserved for times where there are no other options.

Wi-Fi is the holy grail of bandwidth and freedom – if you don’t have to pay for it.  So, I went seeking solutions and came

TP Link

across this series of articles on Dick Eastman’s RV site:

How to Build a Long-Range Wi-Fi System – Part #1

How to Build a Long-Range Wi-Fi System – Part #2

How to Build a Long-Range Wi-Fi System – Part #3

Follow-up: How to Build a Long-Range Wi-Fi System: Configuring the Outdoor Access Point

This can be done! However, it takes a little know how, research, and simplification.

TP Link mounted at rear of RV

TP Link mounted at rear of RV

Mounting my access point was easy.  I bought the access point from Amazon as described in the column and mounted it on my RV using a 10 foot piece of conduit with tie straps.  Not the best for moving around, but it did accomplish the immediate need.

the way to think through how this will work is as follows:

 

[RV Park Internet] -> [TP Link on a mast (primary router)] -> [Your wireless acccess point (slave)]

You must know the network SSID for the open network you are connecting to.  I use my phone or computer to find this

Next – for first time configuration of the TP Link, plug in a cable as described in the prior articles.  The things you MUST KNOW:

  • Make sure you set the TP Link to “AP Client Mode”
  • Change the IP address of the TP Link to 192.168.1.1 from 192.168.1.254
    • this setting is under “LAN”, not “WAN”
  • Under “WAN” I made no changes
  • Doing a survey will find the best connection
    • You don’t have to enter the SSID name because a survey will find it
    • You can move the antenna to the 12, 3, 6, 9 O’Clock positions and survey again to find better signals
  • Each time you use the TP Link you will need to correctly enter the SSID of the wireless network to which you are connecting
  • IMPORTANT!!
    • Enable DHCP
    • Set the address range to start at 192.168.1.3
      • This will be one above the range for the slave router

Now we must setup the slave. Disconnect the TP Link after making all changes, rebooting, and verifying you can connect to the internet with your laptop connected.  After disconnecting, connect your wireless access point secondary (slave) router with a cable to your

Lynksys Setup Screen

Lynksys Setup Screen

computer. I will assume you have correctly configured wireless access and passwords.  Type the IP address and log in.  Make sure to make the following changes:

  • Under internet setup you want automatic DHCP — this is because the TP Link will ASSIGN the IP addresses
  • Under network setup where you can set an IP address for the router change the value to 192.168.1.2
  • Under DHCP Server Setting, select “DISABLED” this is because the TP Link will be our Router
  • Save the settings

The last step is where I went awry for a while, so here we go:

  1. Unplug power to everything (clean start)
  2. Unplug the ethernet cables from the computer
  3. Take the LAN cable from the TP Link primary and plug it into a LAN port on the slave
    1. DO NOT plug it into the WAN port
    2. I recommend position 1 but it does not matter
  4. Plug an ethernet cable into position 2 of the LAN of the Slave
  5. Plug the ethernet cable from the slave into your computer
  6. Plug in the TP Link power cable
  7. Wait 30 seconds (let it connect)
  8. Plug in power to your Slave router
  9. Reboot your computer

When the computer comes back on everything should work.

I recommend this site for more troubleshooting help

Professional Development

What are you reading these days?  Where do you get your news?  How do you continue to improve yourself?

I work to read books and learn everyday.  I recently wrote in this blog how I use an e-reader to gain time and read more books.  Previously I have written about using Google Reader to subscribe to RSS news feeds from blogs.  This is essentially where 100% of my news contact and outside world comes from.  Lately, I have been working on more professional development and tried Coursera – an online, free access tool to take college classes.

I want to share some outstanding links to help give professional development ideas to you:

This one was on the Under30CEO.com web site.  It is a list of outstanding blogs to follow:

24 Awesome Blogs and Twitter Accounts Every Entrepreneur Should Follow

Similarly, this one was on the same web site and is a list of free courses everyone should consider.

20 Free Entrepreneurship Courses Online to Check Out

you have a choice today, and depending on how you use your time it could be wasted watching television (especially the wasteful world of pro sports) or you could take 30-45 minutes of “tube time” and learn.

Good luck moving forward!

RV – Living: More to Share (3)

It was another great day in the RV today. Everything went better than expected and the weather was perfect.  I have felt time slow down, allowing me to be more productive.  As a family we are far more engaged with each other, especially with no television.  Sharing

This week at Clark Family Camground

This week at Clark Family Camground

180 square feet pushes our relationships closer, or sometimes to the brink of bickering.  However, we have all gotten along with no issues.

I think most people wonder is, “what’s daily life like versus in an RV versus a full size home?”  There are changes: no yard, no garage, no closets, no dishwasher, minimal hot water, and small space.  On the other hand, everything has a place and efficiency, combined with conservationism, rules the day.  I also find myself outside much more due to the weather and, more importantly, a need for some space.  RVs come in all sizes: from 10 foot scamps, pop-ups, to Class C’s and Fifth-wheels.  Each vehicle has its own mission.  Regardless, RV life is about a lifestyle.

What’s different and the same versus a house?  We have heat and air conditioning.  We have running water, a toilet, and a shower – probably no worse than found in a cheap European motel.  However, I limit my use.  For instance I use the bathroom in the morning to brush my teeth because it’s better to use the public restrooms.  The shower pressure is higher and there is an unlimited supply of hot water.  If it’s raining, I’ll shower in the RV, otherwise a walk in the cool, crisp morning is rewarded with a better shower experience.   The bathroom is somewhat similar; the onboard lav is best for
Bathroomsmall, liquid jobs whereas a walk to the public facilities for “the big jobs” is much more rewarding.

RV parks supply water, cable, and internet.  On the downside there can be difficulty picking up wireless internet.  I have solved the problem via a hotspot on my phone.  These are bills eliminated from daily life.  Many RVers have satellite dishes.  However, to us television is a time waster and has no value other than entertainment to watch a family movie or documentary. Thus, we are best served by Hulu+ and Netflix.

One of the most enjoyable parts of the RV lifestyle is being outdoors.  We take walks and James rides his bike.  It is fun to walk the RV Park observing how others live.  What you do see here is a lot of friendly people.  Almost everyone has some lights hung outside, lawn chairs, canopies, and grills.

Yesterday I met our neighbors when asked if we were from Texas (we have Texas tags on our car).  I explained we were relocating.  She then asked how long we planned to stay.  The honest answer was, “I don’t know.”  I did explain we are moving to New Smyrna Beach’s Sugar Mill Ruins on Sunday.  She then shared they sold everything when they retired and went full-time. From Columbus, Ohio they come to Florida for the winters. Several years later they have bought a small house as a home base, but she prefers the RV life.

As I have answered questions from friends this week I have heard both laughter and curiosity. The common question is, “why live in our RV rather than move to a hotel or apartment?” My short answer, “Because we can.”  LeeAnn and I over the last four years have had numerous adventures: selling everything, moving to our cabin in Georgia, living in an apartment in Dallas, and now trying the RV life.  Each adventure is one most people talk about – we are executing.

RV – Living has started (2)

We are here!  Today is day 4 of life in the RV.  A week ago today we were moving, the crew carried all of our furniture down three flights of stairs and loaded the Penske truck.  Thursday, Friday, and Saturday were spent making the 1179 mile drive from DallasLittle Boy, Big Truck to Port Orange, FL.  The only issue was the lack of a key for the truck when I picked it up Thursday morning.  Of course, a short Dallas hail storm and severe rain came through while loading too.

Saturday afternoon we unloaded the truck with help from my kids: Haley, Marcella, and Jack.  We are happy to be united again as a family.  It is amazing it has been four years since we were together.  Finally, we are reunited and can spend time as a family.  Saturday and Sunday night we had to stay in Orlando due to lack of space availability in the Daytona Beach area (the Daytona 500 was underway).

Truck drivers - asleepMonday morning was a scramble – breakfast, pack, get to the storage unit to get clothes for my travels, and finally get to the RV.  We moved the RV from Sugar Mill Campground in New Smyrna Beach to the Clark Family Campground in Orange City, FL.  Since another event in Daytona is underway there remains no space…  We quickly setup and I unpacked a few items.  The only concern was making sure the power was running and the water was hooked up.  Disgustingly, I discovered the sewer hose had dry rotted and used duct tape to make some fast, instant repairs.  With confidence from LeeAnn all was OK we hit the road to go get the Jeep (in NSB) and I had to get to Miami.

Now the fun started…Monday night I got a call that the power was not working. LeeAnn did her best to explain what was going on: rain, sizzling, smoke, lights flickering, alarms going off, A/C not working.  We tried to troubleshoot the problem but from 300 miles away it was impossible.  She unplugged the outside power and went to bed — of course her phone was dead and I now had no way to get a hold of her.  The next morning all was OK and the power worked magically when plugged in.  go figure.

Checking the weather I knew crazy horrible storms were headed her way and called to let her know.  Finally around 1p she texted it was raining hard — and the roof was leaking!!!  A pot on the couch took care of that problem.I-95, the final approach

Tuesday night I got back from Miami and we settled in.  We truly settled, discussing how comfortable and relaxing the RV is.  We have had the “Beast” for four years and love it.  The mattresses have all been replaced, we painted and renovated the inside with new upholstery and floors.  It is like home and having it this long truly adds to the familiarity.  James has also taken to sleeping up top on the full size bed — which is where we want him.

Our conversations turned toward how long we can stay here – a month, three months, a year?  The longer we can stay the more we can put or fiscal house in order – incentivized by the book “America’s Cheapest Family“.  LeeAnn had seen a great link on Yahoo about living on the cheap.  I continue to believe the Great Recession is upon us and the more we can do to remain frugal the better our future.

Yesterday was amazing.  The windows were open, the breeze blowing, and the weather a perfect 74 degrees.  I managed to sit on our bed in the rear and work.  Peacefully, work. LeeAnn and I stored the rest of our belongings and finalized settling in.  The awning is out, lights hung, chairs on the porch.

Sunday is moving day again and we will make our trek back to New Smyrna.  We will be there for a month and can truly start to find a routine.

This morning we turned on the heat and the percolator brewed a perfect cup of coffee.  The boys are up and the sun is shining through the windows.