Landmark Cases in the Law of Tort

Landmark Cases in the Law of Tort (2010) is a book edited by Charles Mitchell and Paul Mitchell, which outlines the key cases in English tort law.

Content

The cases discussed are,

  • R v Pease (1832) MARK WILDE AND CHARLOTTE SMITH
  • Buron v Denman (1848) CHARLES MITCHELL AND LESLIE

URANO

  • George v Skivington (1869) DAVID IBBETSON
  • Daniel v Metropolitan Railway Company (1871) MICHAEL LOBBAN
  • Woodley v Metropolitan District Railway Company (1877) STEVE BANKS
  • Cavalier v Pope (1906) RICHARD BAKER AND JONATHAN GARTON
  • Hedley Byrne & Co Ltd v Heller & Partners Ltd (1963) PAUL MITCHELL
  • Goldman v Hargrave (1967) MARK LUNNEY
  • Tate & Lyle Food & Distribution Ltd v Greater London Council (1983) JW NEYERS

Smith v Littlewoods Organisation Ltd (1985) ELSPETH REID

gollark: You *can* not die if you're alive.
gollark: Just be alive, then you can not die.
gollark: Because I can make ridiculously overengineered weapons and/or bunkers.
gollark: The only combat thing I'm vaguely good at is modded Minecraft.
gollark: I have my laptop's internal mikerofone, which has fan noise issues.

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.