Legal Duty. What is it and why do we care about it? This article will explain.
This article will explore the basic concept and role
of legal duty. “Duty” is a term of art
within the law. Its use is pervasive and it provides a floor or minimum level of
legally acceptable behavior within a given set of circumstances. It is a method
of imposing a legal obligation upon a person to behave in some manner.
Injury occurs on a regular basis through accident,
neglect, and even through intent. Not all injury is compensable under the law. It
is only when a legal duty arises and has been breached that a person is
entitled to legal reparations for that injury. Duty provides the very basic
threshold of inquiry into the question of liability. Thus, the question of when
a legal duty is owed has occupied courts for some time.
The seminal U.S. case on the matter is Palsgraf v.
Long Island Railroad Co. [i] The facts of the case are instructive on the
question of duty. A passenger, hurrying
to catch a train, was carrying a plain paper package which contained fireworks.
The contents of the package were unknown to all but the passenger and there was
nothing about the packaging that would have alerted a person as to its contents.
A train employee reached down to pull the passenger
up and onto the moving train at the same time that another train employee
pushed the passenger onto the train from the platform. The package fell from
the passenger’s hands and exploded when it hit the rails. The shock from the
explosion knocked scales down at the other end of the platform. The scaled injured
Mrs. Helen Palsgraf. Mrs. Palsgraf sued the railroad, claiming her injury
resulted from the negligent acts of the railroad employees. There was no
question but that the actions of the train employees were against regulation.
It was prohibited to help a passenger onto a moving train. The question was
whether the railroad could be held legally responsible for Mrs. Palsgraf’s
injuries.
In discussing the question of whether a duty arose
sufficient to find liability, Judge Cardozo focused on the issue of
foreseeability, stating that given the manner in which the package was wrapped,
it was impossible for the guards to have known that it was dangerous. Nor could
the guards have known that the package would have caused an explosion. There was a lack of any type of notice given
them regarding the package’s contents.
Without a perception that a person’s actions can
harm someone, there can be no duty towards that person, and therefore no
negligence under which to impose liability.[ii] Thus,
it was not foreseeable that the guards’ actions would have or could have caused
harm to Mrs. Palsgraf. The railroad was not legally liable for her injuries.
This concept of foreseeability can be seen as a
mechanism for limiting liability for actions. Without it, liability could be
unlimited in scope and the most attenuated of persons could be held liable for
actions far beyond their ken. Fairness dictates that a reasonable limitation be
in place to prevent such an outcome.
Foreseeability can also be seen as a method of
assigning acceptable risk. The reason we consider some actions to be negligent
at law is because they create risks of injury. If it is reasonably foreseeable
that a person may be injured by an action a person may take, generally
speaking, a duty of reasonable care toward that person arises. If it is not
reasonably foreseeable that an injury to that person may arise, no legal duty
arises.
Since Palsgraf, the question of duty has been both
expanded and limited by further case law in the United States. Legal duty
provides the underpinning for most tort causes of action in the United States
for everything from simple negligence to breach of fiduciary duties and obligations,
giving rise to a host of compensable injuries at law. In determining those cases in which a legal
duty arises, we as a society speak to those values we hold to be important.
In fact, a society’s norms and values may be best understood
by the duties and obligations it imposes upon its populace. Little or no duty
exists between strangers. As soon as relationship, or privity, is formed, duty
is heightened. The closer the relationship and the more intense the bond of
trust within that relationship, the higher the legal duty owed. The average
person may have no duty to save a stranger on a street. However, a husband and
wife have a much higher duty of care toward each other. Society has decreed that relationship, trust
and duty and foreseeability are intimately linked. We are our brothers’
keepers, sometimes.
Fascinating. I have had previous positions where I was obligated to carry a cpr kit. When we stop to revive someone we accept the responsibility of possible harm to ourselves not knowing what diseases that person could possibly have and then if by performing cpr that they may have their ribs cracked...
ReplyDeleteThe Good Samaritan law. We are not legally obligated to help someone in trouble, but cannot leave them in a worse position if we do! Thanks for visiting this little blog of mine!
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