Lawof Torts
Lawof Torts
Lawof Torts
Section 2(m) of Limitation Act, 1963: "Tort means a civil wrong which
is not exclusively a breach of contract or breach of trust.“
Salmond's Definition of Tort and its
shortcomings
Sir John Salmond: "Tort as a civil wrong for which the remedy is
common law action for unliquidated damages and which is not
exclusively the breach of contract or the breach of trust or other
merely equitable obligation.“
• Every person has an absolute right to his property, to the immunity of his
person, and to his liberty, and an infringement of this right is actionable
per se.
• The Privy Council has observed that "there may be, where a right is
interfered with, injuria sine damno sufficient to found an action: but no
action can be maintained where there is neither damnum nor injuria" .
(Kali Kissen Tagore v. Jodoo Lal Mullick, (1879) 5 CLR 97 (101))
Injuria Sine Damno
Ashby v. White, (1703) 2 Ld. Raym.938
Refusal to register vote.
The defendant, a returning officer, wrongfully refused to register a
duly tendered vote of the plaintiff, a legally qualified voter, at a
parliamentary election and the candidate for whom the vote was
tendered was elected, and no loss was suffered by the rejection of
the vote.
Held- Defendant Liable.
An action for damages will also lie if a citizen is deprived of his right
to vote by a law which is unconstitutional law by reason of offending
right to equality.
CONTD……
Marzetti v. Williams, (1830) 1 B&Ad 415.
An action will lie against a banker, having sufficient funds in his hands
belonging to a customer, for refusing to honour his cheque, although
the customer did not thereby sustain any actual loss or damage.
CONTD……
HELD: The court held that the detention was illegal and qualified as
false imprisonment.
Damnum Sine Injuria
• In cases of damnum sine injuria, i.e., actual and substantial loss without
infringement of any legal right, no action lies.
• In a suit for damages based on a tort the plaintiff cannot succeed merely
on the ground of damage unless he can show that the damage was
caused by violation of a legal right of his.
Damnum Sine Injuria
District Board, Manbhum v. S. Sarkar, AIR 1955 Pat 432
(Patna High Court)
When a statute confers upon a corporation a power to be exercised
for the public good, the exercise of power is not generally
discretionary but imperative.
No action lies against a District Board for the planting of trees by the
side of a road even if a tree through unknown causes falls and
damages the house of the plaintiff, unless it is proved that the District
Board did not use due care and diligence.
Damnum Sine Injuria
Acton v. Blundell, (1843) 12 M&W 324
a landowner in carrying on mining operations on his land in the usual
manner drained away the water from the land of another owner
through which water flowed in a subterraneous course to his well,
and it was held that the latter had no right to maintain an act ion.
The plaintiffs house was called "Ashford Lodge" for sixty years, and
the adjoining house belonging to the defendant was called "Ashford
Villa" for forty years.
The defendant altered the name of his house to that of the plaintiffs
house. The plaintiffs alleged that this act of the defendant had
caused them great inconvenience and annoyance, and had materially
diminished the value of their property.
It was held that defendant had not violated any legal right of the
plaintiffs.
Damnum Sine Injuria
Butt v. Imperial Gas Co., (1866) 2 LR Ch App 158.
Obstruction to view of shop.
The defendant built two pacca walls on his land on two sides of his
house as a result of which water flowing through a lane belonging to
the defendant and situated between the defendants and plaintiffs
houses damaged the walls of the plaintiff.
The plaintiff had not acquired any right of easement.
It was held that the defendant by building the wall on his land had
not in any way violated the plaintiffs right, that this was a case of
damnum sine injuria and that, therefore, no right of act ion accrued
to the plaintiff.
Damnum Sine Injuria
Vishnu Dutt Sharma v. Board of High School and Intermediate
Examination, AIR 1981 All 46 .
In a suit for damages it was held that the suit was not maintainable as
the misconstruction of the regulations did not amount to a tort.
CONSTITUENTS OF TORT:
C. LEGAL REMEDY
• The law of torts is said to be a development of the maxim ubi jus
ibi remedium (For every wrong, the law provides a remedy.).
Voluntary acts may involve liability and the Involuntary acts may not.
MENTAL ELEMENTS
A voluntary act, except in those cases where the liability is strict, has
to be accompanied with requisite mental element, i.e., malice,
intention, negligence or motive to make it an actionable tort
assuming that other necessary ingredients of the tort are present.
MENTAL ELEMENTS
Malice
Case
West Bengal State Electricity ... vs Dilip Kumar Ray on 24 November,
2006 (2006)
(1)Intentional doing of a wrongful act:
"Malice in law“:
A knocks down a perfect stranger on the road, without any excuse, without
knowing who it is
1. Improper motive
When an act is done with ill-
But when an act is done wrongfully
will motive towards an
and without reasonable and
individual then it is called probable cause , it is called Malice-
Malice –in –fact or express in-law or implied malice. In malice-
malice . in-law, the act done must be
wrongful or legal right must be
violated.
| | |
(a (infringement (there must be at least
breach of private legal 1 out of 4 remedies
of legal right of recognised by law i.e.
duty) another damages,injunction,
person) specific restitution of
property and self help.)
Personal Capacity & Limitations
• Who are competent to be plaintiff /defendant(party):
• Every person is competent to be party to suit.
• The wife can sue the husband for any tort committed
by him against her and the husband can sue the wife
for any tort committed by her against him.
PERSONAL CAPACITY: CORPORATION
• A Corporation is a legal person.
• NEXT SLIDE
• In Campbell v. Paddington Corporation, (1911) 1 KB 869 : 104 LT 394
• In that case the plaintiff was in possession of a house in London from the
windows of which there was an uninterrupted view of part of a certain
main thoroughfare along which it was announced that a public
procession was to pass.
• The plaintiff rented out certain seats on the first and second floors of
the house in order to see the procession.
• The defendants, a Metropolitan Borough in pursuance of a resolution of
their Council to that effect caused a stand to be constructed as regards a
certain highway in which the plaintiff’s house was situated to enable the
members of the Council and their friends to view the procession.
• On account of this obstruction, the prospective lessees refused to come
to observe the procession from the plaintiff’s house.
• The plaintiff filed a suit for recovery of damages.
• It was held in that case that the Metropolitan Borough was not entitled to
construct a stand as it was not compatible for the purpose for which it
was meant.
• The stand built by the borough was held to be a nuisance and the plaintiff
was found to be entitled to recover the profit which but for the
defendants’ act she might have made by letting seats as damages.
• Suits against Corporations
Tiruveriamuthu Pillai Alias B.T. vs The Municipal
Council, AIR 1961 Mad 230
• Plaintiff's dog was killed by the employee of a
Municipal Council in the course of the discharge of his
function of killing stray dogs in the Municipal town
expressly authorized by the Council.
• In an action by the plaintiff for damages against the
Council for the loss of the dog, held, that the Council
was liable for the unlawful act of having brought about
the killing of the plaintiff's dog and the fact that the
Council acted in excess of its statutory powers was not
a defence to the action but was only an aggravating
circumstance.
• Foreign corporations .
• A foreign corporation (i.e., a corporation created by the
law of any foreign country) may sue and be sued for a tort,
like any other corporation.
• A multinational corporation having subsidiaries in different
countries and owning controlling shares in the subsidiaries
may be held liable for a tort committed by a subsidiary
company by piercing the veil of incorporation on the reason
that the parent company constitutes the directing mind and
will of the subsidiary company.
• It is on this basis that Union Carbide Corporation (UCC), a
multinational registered in USA, was held liable by Madhya
Pradesh High Court for the Bhopal gas disaster which
resulted from leakage of poisonous gas from a plant owned
by Union Carbide India Ltd. (UCIL), which is a subsidiary of
UCC. (Union Carbide Corporation v. Union of India, 1988 )
PERSONAL CAPACITY:
PUBLIC AUTHORITY RESPONSIBLE FOR
MAINTANANCE OF PUBLIC ROAD
• Earlier, Under the common law public bodies charged
with the duty of keeping public roads and bridges in
repair and liable to an indictment for breach of this
duty, were nevertheless not liable to an action for
damages at the suit of a person who had suffered
injury from their failure to keep the roads and bridges
in proper repair.
• So the Crown was not liable in tort at common law for wrongs
committed by its servants in the course of employment not even
for wrongs expressly authorised by it.