Reckless: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
1,223 bytes added ,  27 October 2020
no edit summary
(Created page with "In the law of tort, to be aware of a risk, and to run it nonetheless. {{Liability ladder}}")
 
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
In the law of [[tort]], to be aware of a risk, and to run it nonetheless.
{{g}}In the law of [[tort]], to be aware of a risk, and to run it nonetheless. Of the intentional states, one of the more culpable. Unlike its weedier bedfellows [[negligence]] and [[gross negligence]], not commonly incorporated, even by analogy, into a [[contract]]ual framework.


Where the [[Inadvertence|inadvertent]] is blameless; neither knowing the risk she runs, nor being reasonably expected to be able to anticipate it, and the [[Negligence|negligent]] has some civil, civic responsibility for what befalls, on the premise that since a hypothetical fellow plucked from the pews of the sacred [[Man on the Clapham Omnibus|Clapham omnibus]] would have seen it, so should he, even though in point of fact he did not; the [[reckless]] sees the risk, all right, and decides to plough on and take it, notwithstanding, that she might have no particular wish or expectation that a calumny should befall anyone least of all the plaintiff. The intender, on the other hand, does what he does as a matter of cold-blooded, contemptuous [[Calculated|calculation]].<ref>This use of the word “calculation” might upset some tort lawyers, for in legal terms to be “[[calculated]]” means expected to happen as a matter of probability, rather than mendacious design. Odd, really.</ref>
===In brief===
{{Liability ladder}}
{{Liability ladder}}

Navigation menu