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Contributory negligence

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Tort law II
Part of the common law series
Negligent torts
Negligence  · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
Duty of care  · Standard of care
Proximate cause  · Res ipsa loquitur
Calculus of negligence  · Eggshell skull
Vicarious liability  · Attractive nuisance doctrine>Attractive nuisance
Rescue doctrine  · Duty to rescue
Comparative responsibility
Duties owed to visitors to property
Trespassers  · Licensees  · Invitees
Defenses to negligence
Contributory negligence
Comparative negligence
Assumption of risk  · Intervening cause
Strict liability
Ultrahazardous activity
Products liability
Nuisance
Other areas of the common law
Contract law  · Property law
Wills and trusts
Criminal law  · Evidence

Contributory negligence is a common law defence to a claim or action in tort. It applies to a situation where a plaintiff or claimant has, through their own negligence, caused or contributed to the injury they suffered from a tort. An example might be a situation in which a pedestrian crosses a road carelessly and is hit by a driver who is also driving carelessly.

Scope of the Defence

At common law, contributory negligence was an absolute defence. If a defendant successfully raised the defence, he would be able to avoid liability for the tort completely. This could lead to injustice where the negligence of a plaintiff or claimant was slight. The defence of contributory negligence would prevent them from recovering any damages at all.

Most jurisdictions in the United States have abolished the doctrine altogether (only Virginia, [Maryland], Alabama, North Carolina, and D.C. are still contributory negligence districts), instead adopting a comparative negligence standard that simply reduces the damages to be awarded by an amount reflecting the degree to which the plaintiff's negligence contributed to the injury.

Some jurisdictions have altered the common law so that contributory negligence is only a partial defence, meaning that a defendant avoids only part of their liability. For example, in England and Wales, the Law Reform (Contributory Negligence) Act 1945 had this effect. In practice this has a similar effect to the doctrine of comparative negligence (see Acts of the claimant).

Burden of Proof

In some jurisdictions the defendant has to prove the negligence of the plaintiff or claimant; in others the burden is on the plaintiff or claimant to disprove their own negligence. The tortfeasor may still be held liable if he had the last clear chance to prevent the injury.

Applicability

Contributory negligence is rarely available as a defence to all torts. For example in England and Wales it is not a defence to the torts of conversion or trespass to goods.

Culture

Contributory negligence was the title and subject of a circa 1982 poem by Attila the Stockbroker, a UK performance poet, protesting at a mere fine given to a rapist, after the high court judge determined that the women concerned in some way provoked or contributed to the rape.

 


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