Fault in tort law: Moral justification and mathematical explication

The article has two main objectives: (1) to reveal why the fault principle is considered to be morally superior to no-fault liability in primitive law; and (2) to find out the essence of fault in modern tort law and then to express the concept of fault in the most precise manner possible, namely thr...

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Main Author: Богдан Петрович Карнаух
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Yaroslav Mudryi National Law University 2018-06-01
Series:Проблеми Законності
Subjects:
Online Access:http://plaw.nlu.edu.ua/article/view/126813
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spelling doaj-deaedf4057404d13be0d885513edd2532020-11-25T02:13:34ZengYaroslav Mudryi National Law UniversityПроблеми Законності2224-92812414-990X2018-06-010141546410.21564/2414-990x.141.126813126813Fault in tort law: Moral justification and mathematical explicationБогдан Петрович Карнаух0Yaroslav Mudryi National Law UniversityThe article has two main objectives: (1) to reveal why the fault principle is considered to be morally superior to no-fault liability in primitive law; and (2) to find out the essence of fault in modern tort law and then to express the concept of fault in the most precise manner possible, namely through math formula. It is argued that the very existence of law is contingent on freedom of human’s will. It is the human’s freedom that allows to judge human’s actions. Thus, provided that we consider tort law as a set of rules prohibiting infliction of damage and establishing liability therefor, it is fair to state that fault is a precondition of tort liability specifically because freedom is a precondition of the very law’s operation. Therefore, while establishing fault the court investigates whether the tortfeasor was free at the moment of infliction of damage. Fault denotes that formally wrongful act was committed freely. Since establishing fault is conducted after the wrongful act has been committed (it is conducted within judicial proceedings, which constitute backward-looking research), the inference follows that fault is an ex post conclusion of freedom. However, sometimes all the elements of the free-choice situation being present, the tortfeasor nevertheless cannot be deemed to be at fault. This is the case, where the tortfeasor could have avoided inflicting damage, but at excessively heavy cost. Thus, it is not enough if among the available alternatives there is one harmless; in addition, the harmless option has to be reasonable. Otherwise choosing this harmless option cannot be expected.http://plaw.nlu.edu.ua/article/view/126813tortfaultfault-based liabilitynegligencestrict liability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Богдан Петрович Карнаух
spellingShingle Богдан Петрович Карнаух
Fault in tort law: Moral justification and mathematical explication
Проблеми Законності
tort
fault
fault-based liability
negligence
strict liability
author_facet Богдан Петрович Карнаух
author_sort Богдан Петрович Карнаух
title Fault in tort law: Moral justification and mathematical explication
title_short Fault in tort law: Moral justification and mathematical explication
title_full Fault in tort law: Moral justification and mathematical explication
title_fullStr Fault in tort law: Moral justification and mathematical explication
title_full_unstemmed Fault in tort law: Moral justification and mathematical explication
title_sort fault in tort law: moral justification and mathematical explication
publisher Yaroslav Mudryi National Law University
series Проблеми Законності
issn 2224-9281
2414-990X
publishDate 2018-06-01
description The article has two main objectives: (1) to reveal why the fault principle is considered to be morally superior to no-fault liability in primitive law; and (2) to find out the essence of fault in modern tort law and then to express the concept of fault in the most precise manner possible, namely through math formula. It is argued that the very existence of law is contingent on freedom of human’s will. It is the human’s freedom that allows to judge human’s actions. Thus, provided that we consider tort law as a set of rules prohibiting infliction of damage and establishing liability therefor, it is fair to state that fault is a precondition of tort liability specifically because freedom is a precondition of the very law’s operation. Therefore, while establishing fault the court investigates whether the tortfeasor was free at the moment of infliction of damage. Fault denotes that formally wrongful act was committed freely. Since establishing fault is conducted after the wrongful act has been committed (it is conducted within judicial proceedings, which constitute backward-looking research), the inference follows that fault is an ex post conclusion of freedom. However, sometimes all the elements of the free-choice situation being present, the tortfeasor nevertheless cannot be deemed to be at fault. This is the case, where the tortfeasor could have avoided inflicting damage, but at excessively heavy cost. Thus, it is not enough if among the available alternatives there is one harmless; in addition, the harmless option has to be reasonable. Otherwise choosing this harmless option cannot be expected.
topic tort
fault
fault-based liability
negligence
strict liability
url http://plaw.nlu.edu.ua/article/view/126813
work_keys_str_mv AT bogdanpetrovičkarnauh faultintortlawmoraljustificationandmathematicalexplication
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