Cardozo indeterminacy: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Benjamin Cardozo.jpg|450px|thumb|center|We can’t be categorical about this, but this ''looks'' like Judge B. N. Cardozo. Note how his asymmetrical eyebrow curls given him a permanently wistful look, rather like that adopted by the late Roger Moore throughout his acting career.]]
{{Image|Benjamin Cardozo|jpg|We can’t be categorical about this, but this ''looks'' like Judge B. N. Cardozo. Note how his asymmetrical eyebrow curls given him a permanently wistful look, rather like that adopted by the late Roger Moore throughout his acting career.}}
}}{{d|Cardozo indeterminacy|/kɑːdəʊzəʊ ɪndɪˈtəːmɪnəsi|n|}}
}}{{d|Cardozo indeterminacy|/kɑːdəʊzəʊ ɪndɪˈtəːmɪnəsi|n|}}



Latest revision as of 12:27, 12 March 2023

Myths and legends of the market
The JC’s guide to the foundational mythology of the markets.™


Benjamin Cardozo.jpg
We can’t be categorical about this, but this looks like Judge B. N. Cardozo. Note how his asymmetrical eyebrow curls given him a permanently wistful look, rather like that adopted by the late Roger Moore throughout his acting career.


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Cardozo indeterminacy
/kɑːdəʊzəʊ ɪndɪˈtəːmɪnəsi (n.)

Liability, if awarded — and therefore, generally not awarded —that would be in “an indeterminate amount for an indeterminate time to an indeterminate class” of claimants. Named for US Supreme Court Justice Benjamin N. ~, progenitor of that phrase in Ultramares v Touche.

The great American jurist Benjamin N. Cardozo held[1] that a creditor’s claim in negligence against a debtor’s incontestably negligent auditors failed because the auditors did not owe the company’s creditors a duty of care, there being no sufficiently proximate relationship between them. Articulating a now somewhat outdated shareholder capitalism, Cardozo J held the auditors to owe only the shareholders a duty of care.

Said Cardozo J, in an immortal passage that gave rise to the metajuridical concept of “Cardozo indeterminacy”:

“If liability for negligence exists, a thoughtless slip or blunder, the failure to detect a theft or forgery beneath the cover of deceptive entries, may expose accountants to a liability in an indeterminate amount for an indeterminate time to an indeterminate class. The hazards of a business conducted on these terms are so extreme as to enkindle doubt whether a flaw may not exist in the implication of a duty that exposes to these consequences.”

Ultramares v Touche is one of those rare case that leapt the Atlantic ditch between competing common law systems, having been cited no fewer that 66 times in recent English case law[2] including in no less a fount of authority and lexical wisdom than Hedley Byrne v Heller.

See also

References