Study for the Bar in Your Car

Torts - Strict Liability


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Get ready for a game-changing episode on the "Study for the Bar in Your Car" podcast! In Episode 9, your AI hosts, Claude and Maude, powered by Angela's comprehensive law school notes, take a thrilling deep dive into the complex world of Strict Liability. This is a critical area for your bar exam preparation, as it fundamentally shifts how the law assigns responsibility, moving beyond the traditional concept of fault.

We tackle crucial distinctions that frequently trip up students:

  • Direct Statutory Liability: Learn how some statutes explicitly create a private right of action for civil liability, making the defendant responsible for specific conduct regardless of care.
  • Negligence Per Se: Discover how violating a statute can prove negligence by setting the standard of care, but doesn't, on its own, create the civil claim. It acts as a powerful shortcut for proving a breach of duty in a negligence case.

Then, we unpack the three major categories where strict liability shines:

1. Liability for Animals

  • Domesticated Animals: Understand the "one free bite rule", which means an owner is strictly liable after they know or have reason to know of an animal's unusual dangerous propensity.
  • Trespassing Livestock: Their owners are generally strictly liable for damages caused.
  • Wild Animals: Keepers are strictly liable for any harm caused by their inherent dangerousness, with no "free bite" given.
  • Key Limitations: We explore how strict liability generally does not apply to trespassers (unless specific hidden dangers or child trespassers are involved under the attractive nuisance doctrine). We also cover private necessity, which excuses a trespass but still requires payment for property damage caused.

2. Abnormally Dangerous Activities

  • This applies to activities that create a high, unavoidable risk of significant harm that cannot be eliminated even with reasonable care. Think explosives, highly toxic chemicals, or large-scale blasting.
  • Crucially, liability is limited to the type of harm that makes the activity abnormally dangerous in the first place, not just any injury that occurs nearby.

3. Products Liability

  • Beyond negligence and misrepresentation theories, this episode focuses on strict products liability. You'll master the four essential elements: a defective product, that is unreasonably dangerous, the defect existed when it left the defendant's control, and it caused the plaintiff's injury.
  • Learn who can be sued – not just manufacturers, but also commercial entities in the supply chain like distributors and retailers.
  • We break down the three types of defects: manufacturing, design (including the risk-utility test), and informational/warning defects.
  • Discover why compliance with safety regulations isn't always a shield, and how foreseeable misuse can still lead to liability.
  • Understand damages, particularly the economic loss rule that often bars recovery for pure financial losses, while personal injury and damage to other property are recoverable.

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Study for the Bar in Your CarBy Angela Rutledge, LLM, LLB