When a person is injured due to another person’s or entity’s negligence, he or she can recover economic and noneconomic damages that flow from the negligence. Among the elements that the plaintiff suing for negligence will have to prove is that the d...
Under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, assumption of risk is an affirmative defense in the law of torts that a defendant can raise in a negligence action. Assumption of risk refers to a legal doctrine under which an individual is barred from rec...
When an event causes injuries, one of the first questions on most people's minds is one of blame: "Whose fault was it?" All states follow principles of comparative fault. When multiple parties are alleged to be at fault, the jury will allocate respon...
Drunk or impaired driving can have devastating effects on both the driver and other people on the road. A DUI exposes a drunk driver to lawsuits for damages arising out of a victim’s injuries or death. However, the drunk driver may not be insured, or...
A plaintiff suing for negligence will have to prove the defendant’s duty to the plaintiff, the defendant’s breach of duty, actual and proximate cause, and damages. If any of these elements is missing, the defendant will be able to defeat the plaintif...
Joint and several liability is a rule followed in some states, in which two or more parties can be held independently liable for the full amount of a personal injury plaintiff’s damages, regardless of their respective degrees of fault. The parties th...
In ordinary negligence cases, a personal injury plaintiff must prove negligence . He or she will have to show that the defendant's conduct fell below the applicable standard of care and that these actions were the actual and proximate cause of his or...
When a plaintiff is able to prove a defendant’s liability in a personal injury or medical malpractice case, he or she can potentially recover economic and non-economic damages. Economic damages are compensation you receive as a result of monetary los...
Punitive damages are also called exemplary damages. They are awarded both to deter the defendant and others from conduct similar to the conduct that gave rise to the lawsuit, and to punish the defendant. They are often awarded to set a public example...
Strict liability is a theory that imposes legal responsibility for damages or injuries even if the person who was found strictly liable did not act with fault or negligence. This theory usually applies in three types of situations: animal bites (in c...