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Causation in English law

Causation in English law concerns the legal tests of remoteness, causation and foreseeability in the tort of negligence. It is also relevant for English criminal law and English contract law.

In the English law of negligence, causation proves a direct link between the defendant’s negligence and the claimant’s loss and damage. For these purposes, liability in negligence is established when there is a breach of the duty of care owed by the defendant to the claimant that causes loss and damage, and it is reasonable that the defendant should compensate the claimant for that loss and damage.

Public policy edit

Policy at this level is less than ordre public, but nevertheless significant. The policy is to give bound to the scope of people who can claim damages, how much they can claim, and within what timeframe.

The claimant must prove that the breach of the duty of care caused actionable damage. The test for these purposes is a balance between proximity and remoteness:

  • that there was a factual link between what the defendant did or failed to do, and the loss and damage sustained by the claimant, and
  • that it was reasonably foreseeable at the relevant time that this behaviour would cause loss and damage of that type.

To clarify the nature of the judicial process, in Lamb v Camden LBC (1981) QB 625, Lord Denning said:

"The truth is that all these three – duty, remoteness and causation – are all devices by which the courts limit the range of liability for negligence . . . All these devices are useful in their way. But ultimately it is a question of policy for the judges to decide."

In other words, the court's main task is to do justice as between these parties in their present situation. For this purpose, a weighing evaluative process is required, rather than a clear-cut rule of law. For example, in Meah v McCreamer and others (No. 2) (1986) 1 AER 943, the claimant suffered head injuries and brain damage as a result of the defendant's negligent driving, which led to a personality disorder. Four years later, he sexually assaulted and raped three women. The illegal nature of his conduct was not raised at the civil trial, and the claimant was held entitled to damages to compensate him for being imprisoned following his conviction. In separate proceedings, the three women assaulted obtained a judgment for compensation, so he sought indemnification from the negligent driver and his insurers for the amounts he had been ordered to pay. This was not a claim for his own personal injuries nor direct financial loss, but indirect loss. The three women could not have sued the driver directly because they were not foreseeable and so no duty of care was owed to them. The question was whether a person convicted of a crime was entitled to be indemnified against the consequences of that crime. Woolf J. held that the action would be dismissed on two grounds. First, the damages were too remote to be recoverable and, if such actions were to be allowed, it would leave insurers open to indefinite liability for an indefinite duration. Secondly, as a matter of policy, defendants should not have a right to be indemnified against the consequences of their crimes. In Clunis v Camden and Islington Health Authority (1998) QB 978 the claimant had been discharged from hospital where he had been detained under s3 Mental Health Act 1983. He was to receive aftercare services in the community under s117 Act 1983, but his mental condition deteriorated and, two months later, he fatally stabbed a stranger at a London Underground station. He pleaded guilty to manslaughter on the ground of diminished responsibility and was ordered to be detained in a secure hospital. Subsequently, he brought an action against his local health authority for negligence. The health authority applied to strike out the claim as disclosing no cause of action on two grounds. First, that the claim arose out of the health authority's statutory obligations under s117 Act 1983 and those obligations did not give rise to a common law duty of care. Secondly, that the claim was based on the plaintiff's own criminal act. In the Court of Appeal, the health authority's appeal was allowed on both grounds.

The factual test of causation edit

The basic test for establishing causation is the "but-for" test in which the defendant will be liable only if the claimant’s damage would not have occurred "but for" his negligence. Alternatively, the defendant will not be liable if the damage would, or could on the balance of probabilities, have occurred anyway, regardless of his or her negligence. To understand this, a distinction has to be made between cause and a precondition for the events. Lord Hoffmann in South Australia Asset Management Corp v York Montague Ltd[1] gave a classic example.

"A mountaineer about to undertake a difficult climb is concerned about the fitness of his knee. He goes to a doctor who negligently makes a superficial examination and pronounces the knee fit. The climber goes on the expedition, which he would not have undertaken if the doctor had told him the true state of his knee. He suffers an injury which is an entirely foreseeable consequence of mountaineering but has nothing to do with his knee."

The doctor's negligence does result in the mountaineer running a risk which he otherwise would not have done, but this is insufficient to incur liability. The purpose of the doctor's duty to take care is to protect the mountaineer against injuries caused by the failure of the knee, not rock falls. Even though the injury might be reasonably foreseeable, the doctor is not liable. In The Empire Jamaica (1955) 1 AER 452, the owners sent their ship to sea without properly licensed officers. The pilot fell asleep, and a collision occurred. Though the pilot was negligent at the time, he was generally competent. Thus the question for the courts was: were the owners liable for the collision because they sent their ship to sea without properly licensed officers? Or was the factual precondition superseded by the question as to the competence of the pilot? There is no question that sending the ship to sea is "a cause" of the collision. The legal question is whether it is "the cause". This is a question that the courts treat as objective, addressed by evidence and argument. Hart and Honoré (1985) describe the process for establishing legal causation as constructing a parallel series of events (counterfactual situation), and comment: "the parallel series is constructed by asking what the course of events would have been had the defendant acted lawfully." Thus, the owners were not liable. Although they sent the ship to sea without licensed officers (what actually transpired) rather than with licensed officers (the lawful course), the cause of collision was failing to navigate a safe passage. As to the pilot, his lack of licence did not bear on his general competence. The significant factor was the pilot's negligence at the time, and the pilot's lack of license made no difference there. Had the pilot been licensed, he would have been no less likely to sleep. The license would not have awoken him. The owners were, therefore, exonerated on grounds that whether or not the pilot held a license made no difference to the real cause, which was not the pilot's general level of competence, but rather his negligence at the time.

Similarly, in Christopher Andrews v Barnett Waddingham LLP and RAJ Waddingham (2006) EWCA Civ 93, the claimant transferred from a "safe" employer's pension scheme to a commercial scheme on the advice of a firm of financial advisers. The breach of duty alleged was confined to advice about the protection afforded by the Policyholders Protection Act 1975 to "with-profits" annuities, and this duty was found to be breached by the first instance judge. The claimant would not have chosen the Equitable Life with-profits annuity if he had been given correct advice, but that did not entitle him to recover the loss he had sustained as a result of his acquiring the annuity. The 1975 Act would have applied if Equitable Life had become insolvent. That was not the case. The real cause of the loss was that the terminal bonuses were not guaranteed and were adversely affected by the downturn in Equitable Life's fortunes. So the negligence as pleaded and as found by the judge did not relate to the fact that the terminal bonuses were not guaranteed.

Multiple potential causes edit

The general legal framework for consideration of causation where several competing causes have been put forward involves the following principles:

  • it is for the claimant to prove the causation on which they propose to lie
  • the defendant may but forward an alternative theory of causation but is under no obligation to do so
  • the court may conclude that causation remains doubtful, even in the face of a significant amount of expert evidence being presented
  • where the court considers one theory "improbable" and rules out other theories, the "improbable theory" remains such and does not become a "likely" cause by default:[2] Sherlock Holmes' guiding principle, from his investigation in The Sign of the Four (1890), "when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth", is not imported into the law.

The case of Rhesa Shipping Co SA v. Edmunds (1985),[3] records the above as general propositions. Sir Colin Mackay, in Joseph Simon Love v Halfords Ltd. (2014), relies on them, noting that they have been "often-cited".[2][4]

In Pickford v Imperial Chemical Industries (1998) 1 WLR 1189 the Lords were asked to determine the cause of repetitive strain injury endured by a typist. Lord Steyn posed the question, "That immediately raises the point that there must be an explanation for the fact that she contracted PDA4. What was the cause of her PDA4? There really was no alternative on the evidence to concluding that this condition was caused by Miss Pickford's typing work." But alternative explanations are that typing might aggravate an inherent condition or generally be an unsuitable occupation for someone with a predisposition to that condition, and neither proves the legal cause. In all cases, the burden of proof is on the claimant to prove the cause as pleaded. There is no burden on the defendant to prove an alternative explanation of the cause of any loss or damage, but a failure to do so may be a factor in deciding whether the claimant's explanation of the cause should be accepted. This test works well in straightforward situations, but it proves less successful in establishing causation in more complex situations where a number of actual or potential causes operate either consecutively or concurrently. For example, in Robinson v Post Office (1974) 1 WLR 1176 following an accident at work, the claimant had an anti-tetanus injection. Nine days later, there was an adverse reaction to the serum and brain damage resulted. No matter what tests the doctor might have performed, there would have been no sign of an adverse reaction within a reasonable time (see the Bolam Test). The doctor's reasonable decision to provide the standard treatment was therefore not the relevant cause of the brain damage because the claimant would not have been injected "but for" the defendant's negligence. Thus, in deciding between sequential contributions to the final result, the court must decide which is the more substantial contribution.

In the High Court case of Ide v ADB Sales Ltd. (2007) and subsequent appeal (2008), regarding a mountain bike accident, two explanations had been put forward in court. One explanation was rejected by the judge, leaving the alternative explanation to be accepted and allowing the judge in accepting the second explanation to reach the conclusion that this followed from "the totality of the evidence", in this case that the bicycle was defective and the supplier was liable under the Consumer Protection Act 1987.[5][6]

Breaking the chain of causation edit

Acts of a third party edit

Whether the acts of a third party break the chain of causation depends on whether the intervention was foreseeable.[7] The general rule is that the original defendant will be held responsible for harm caused by a third party as a direct result of his or her negligence, provided it was a highly likely consequence. So, for example, where the defendant has control over the third party, or where the third party is faced with a dilemma created by the defendant, the chain of causation is unlikely to be broken and the defendant will normally be liable to the claimant for the damage caused: Home Office v. Dorset Yacht Co Ltd. [1970] AC 1004. The continuity of liability is not imposed merely because the original negligence makes damage by the third party foreseeable, but where the defendant’s negligence makes it very likely that the third party will cause damage to the claimant: Lamb v. Camden LBC [1981] QB 625. In practice, however, the requirement that the third party intervention will usually break the chain and, at the very least, the liability to pay compensation representing the totality of the loss or damage will be apportioned between the two or more tortfeasors. So, for example, if A injures V, it is foreseeable that an ambulance will be called, that paramedics will lift and carry V, and that there will be a journey back to the hospital. This cycle of intervention is continued in the hospital. None of this activity affecting V would arise "but for" the original negligence so A will remain liable unless and until either an unforeseeable B intervenes (e.g. negligently drives his car and collides with the ambulance), or a paramedic or member of the hospital staff is so seriously negligent that it becomes a new cause of action.

Acts of the claimant edit

Loss of a chance edit

In loss of chance cases, the court is invited to assess hypothetical outcomes, either affecting the claimant or a third party where the defendant's negligence deprived the claimant of the opportunity to obtain a benefit or avoid a loss. Although it has been relatively unsuccessful in cases of medical negligence, it does provide a remedy in professional negligence generally.

Loss of a right edit

Recent medical negligence cases suggest tacit recognition of a more rights-based approach to damage.

Causation: law and science compared edit

Science and law have different functions but share striking similarities. Both purport to provide rational, reasoned, independent, unbiased processes concerned with the objective assessment of evidence. There are also striking differences. Scientific assertions compared with determinations of legal causation have the following characteristics:

  • they are population-based, not individual; general not particular;
  • they are probabilistic, not deterministic;
  • they are generally expressed as the refutation of the hypothesis and not a finding of fact or proof of an allegation;
  • the evidence is not exhaustive, whereas an adjudication is determined according to the evidence available.

The major distinction between legal determinations and scientific assertions lies in the concept of certainty. The legal concept of causation is deterministic: it is an expression of the fiction of certainty, an absolute concept. The scientific concept of causation is probabilistic: it is an expression of the uncertainty of truth, an asymptotic concept.

See also edit

References edit

  • Cane, Peter. (1999). Atiyah’s Accidents, Compensation and the Law. Sixth edition, Chapter 5. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-60610-1
  • Deakin, Simon; Johnston, Angus & Markesinis, B. S. (2003). Markesinis and Deakin's Tort Law. pp. 174–201. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-925712-4
  • Hart, H. L. A. & Honore, A. M. (1985). Causation in the Law. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • The Law Commission. (2001). The Illegality Defence in Tort. Consultation Paper No 160
  • Luckham, Mary. "Informed consent to medical treatment and the issue of causation: the decision of the House of Lords in Chester v Afshar [2004] UKHL 41"
  • Robinson, Robert C, The Role of Causation in Decision of Tort Law, Journal of Law, Development, and Politics 2010 Volume I Issue II
  • Rogers, W. V. H. Winfield and Jolowicz on Tort, pp. 195–231. London: Sweet & Maxwell. ISBN 0-421-76850-9
  • Stevens, Robert. An Opportunity to Reflect [4][permanent dead link]
  • Weir, Tony. (2002). Tort Law. Chapters 4 & 5. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-924998-9
  • Clinical Negligence, edited by Michael Powers, Nigel Harris and Anthony Barton, fourth edition 2008, Tottel Publishing; ISBN 978-1-84766-075-6.]

Notes edit

  1. ^ (SAAMCO) [1997] AC 191, 214
  2. ^ a b England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division), Joseph Simon Love v Halfords Ltd. [2014] EWHC 1057, paragraph 20 delivered 8 April 2014, accessed 22 December 2023
  3. ^ 1 WLR 948
  4. ^ Oddy, A. and McDonald, A., The burden of proof and competing theories on causation, Herbert Smith Freehills, published 27 February 2013, accessed 22 December 2023
  5. ^ England and Wales High Court, Ide v ATB Sales Ltd., 17 July 2017, accessed 10 November 2022
  6. ^ Crown Office Chambers, Richard Lynagh KC, accessed 10 November 2022
  7. ^ "Causation in English Tort Law". IPSA LOQUITUR. Retrieved 22 October 2019.

causation, english, concerns, legal, tests, remoteness, causation, foreseeability, tort, negligence, also, relevant, english, criminal, english, contract, english, negligence, causation, proves, direct, link, between, defendant, negligence, claimant, loss, dam. Causation in English law concerns the legal tests of remoteness causation and foreseeability in the tort of negligence It is also relevant for English criminal law and English contract law In the English law of negligence causation proves a direct link between the defendant s negligence and the claimant s loss and damage For these purposes liability in negligence is established when there is a breach of the duty of care owed by the defendant to the claimant that causes loss and damage and it is reasonable that the defendant should compensate the claimant for that loss and damage Contents 1 Public policy 2 The factual test of causation 2 1 Multiple potential causes 3 Breaking the chain of causation 3 1 Acts of a third party 3 2 Acts of the claimant 4 Loss of a chance 5 Loss of a right 6 Causation law and science compared 7 See also 8 References 9 NotesPublic policy editPolicy at this level is less than ordre public but nevertheless significant The policy is to give bound to the scope of people who can claim damages how much they can claim and within what timeframe The claimant must prove that the breach of the duty of care caused actionable damage The test for these purposes is a balance between proximity and remoteness that there was a factual link between what the defendant did or failed to do and the loss and damage sustained by the claimant and that it was reasonably foreseeable at the relevant time that this behaviour would cause loss and damage of that type To clarify the nature of the judicial process in Lamb v Camden LBC 1981 QB 625 Lord Denning said The truth is that all these three duty remoteness and causation are all devices by which the courts limit the range of liability for negligence All these devices are useful in their way But ultimately it is a question of policy for the judges to decide In other words the court s main task is to do justice as between these parties in their present situation For this purpose a weighing evaluative process is required rather than a clear cut rule of law For example in Meah v McCreamer and others No 2 1986 1 AER 943 the claimant suffered head injuries and brain damage as a result of the defendant s negligent driving which led to a personality disorder Four years later he sexually assaulted and raped three women The illegal nature of his conduct was not raised at the civil trial and the claimant was held entitled to damages to compensate him for being imprisoned following his conviction In separate proceedings the three women assaulted obtained a judgment for compensation so he sought indemnification from the negligent driver and his insurers for the amounts he had been ordered to pay This was not a claim for his own personal injuries nor direct financial loss but indirect loss The three women could not have sued the driver directly because they were not foreseeable and so no duty of care was owed to them The question was whether a person convicted of a crime was entitled to be indemnified against the consequences of that crime Woolf J held that the action would be dismissed on two grounds First the damages were too remote to be recoverable and if such actions were to be allowed it would leave insurers open to indefinite liability for an indefinite duration Secondly as a matter of policy defendants should not have a right to be indemnified against the consequences of their crimes In Clunis v Camden and Islington Health Authority 1998 QB 978 the claimant had been discharged from hospital where he had been detained under s3 Mental Health Act 1983 He was to receive aftercare services in the community under s117 Act 1983 but his mental condition deteriorated and two months later he fatally stabbed a stranger at a London Underground station He pleaded guilty to manslaughter on the ground of diminished responsibility and was ordered to be detained in a secure hospital Subsequently he brought an action against his local health authority for negligence The health authority applied to strike out the claim as disclosing no cause of action on two grounds First that the claim arose out of the health authority s statutory obligations under s117 Act 1983 and those obligations did not give rise to a common law duty of care Secondly that the claim was based on the plaintiff s own criminal act In the Court of Appeal the health authority s appeal was allowed on both grounds The factual test of causation editThe basic test for establishing causation is the but for test in which the defendant will be liable only if the claimant s damage would not have occurred but for his negligence Alternatively the defendant will not be liable if the damage would or could on the balance of probabilities have occurred anyway regardless of his or her negligence To understand this a distinction has to be made between cause and a precondition for the events Lord Hoffmann in South Australia Asset Management Corp v York Montague Ltd 1 gave a classic example A mountaineer about to undertake a difficult climb is concerned about the fitness of his knee He goes to a doctor who negligently makes a superficial examination and pronounces the knee fit The climber goes on the expedition which he would not have undertaken if the doctor had told him the true state of his knee He suffers an injury which is an entirely foreseeable consequence of mountaineering but has nothing to do with his knee The doctor s negligence does result in the mountaineer running a risk which he otherwise would not have done but this is insufficient to incur liability The purpose of the doctor s duty to take care is to protect the mountaineer against injuries caused by the failure of the knee not rock falls Even though the injury might be reasonably foreseeable the doctor is not liable In The Empire Jamaica 1955 1 AER 452 the owners sent their ship to sea without properly licensed officers The pilot fell asleep and a collision occurred Though the pilot was negligent at the time he was generally competent Thus the question for the courts was were the owners liable for the collision because they sent their ship to sea without properly licensed officers Or was the factual precondition superseded by the question as to the competence of the pilot There is no question that sending the ship to sea is a cause of the collision The legal question is whether it is the cause This is a question that the courts treat as objective addressed by evidence and argument Hart and Honore 1985 describe the process for establishing legal causation as constructing a parallel series of events counterfactual situation and comment the parallel series is constructed by asking what the course of events would have been had the defendant acted lawfully Thus the owners were not liable Although they sent the ship to sea without licensed officers what actually transpired rather than with licensed officers the lawful course the cause of collision was failing to navigate a safe passage As to the pilot his lack of licence did not bear on his general competence The significant factor was the pilot s negligence at the time and the pilot s lack of license made no difference there Had the pilot been licensed he would have been no less likely to sleep The license would not have awoken him The owners were therefore exonerated on grounds that whether or not the pilot held a license made no difference to the real cause which was not the pilot s general level of competence but rather his negligence at the time Similarly in Christopher Andrews v Barnett Waddingham LLP and RAJ Waddingham 2006 EWCA Civ 93 the claimant transferred from a safe employer s pension scheme to a commercial scheme on the advice of a firm of financial advisers The breach of duty alleged was confined to advice about the protection afforded by the Policyholders Protection Act 1975 to with profits annuities and this duty was found to be breached by the first instance judge The claimant would not have chosen the Equitable Life with profits annuity if he had been given correct advice but that did not entitle him to recover the loss he had sustained as a result of his acquiring the annuity The 1975 Act would have applied if Equitable Life had become insolvent That was not the case The real cause of the loss was that the terminal bonuses were not guaranteed and were adversely affected by the downturn in Equitable Life s fortunes So the negligence as pleaded and as found by the judge did not relate to the fact that the terminal bonuses were not guaranteed Multiple potential causes edit The general legal framework for consideration of causation where several competing causes have been put forward involves the following principles it is for the claimant to prove the causation on which they propose to lie the defendant may but forward an alternative theory of causation but is under no obligation to do so the court may conclude that causation remains doubtful even in the face of a significant amount of expert evidence being presented where the court considers one theory improbable and rules out other theories the improbable theory remains such and does not become a likely cause by default 2 Sherlock Holmes guiding principle from his investigation in The Sign of the Four 1890 when you have eliminated the impossible whatever remains however improbable must be the truth is not imported into the law The case of Rhesa Shipping Co SA v Edmunds 1985 3 records the above as general propositions Sir Colin Mackay in Joseph Simon Love v Halfords Ltd 2014 relies on them noting that they have been often cited 2 4 In Pickford v Imperial Chemical Industries 1998 1 WLR 1189 the Lords were asked to determine the cause of repetitive strain injury endured by a typist Lord Steyn posed the question That immediately raises the point that there must be an explanation for the fact that she contracted PDA4 What was the cause of her PDA4 There really was no alternative on the evidence to concluding that this condition was caused by Miss Pickford s typing work But alternative explanations are that typing might aggravate an inherent condition or generally be an unsuitable occupation for someone with a predisposition to that condition and neither proves the legal cause In all cases the burden of proof is on the claimant to prove the cause as pleaded There is no burden on the defendant to prove an alternative explanation of the cause of any loss or damage but a failure to do so may be a factor in deciding whether the claimant s explanation of the cause should be accepted This test works well in straightforward situations but it proves less successful in establishing causation in more complex situations where a number of actual or potential causes operate either consecutively or concurrently For example in Robinson v Post Office 1974 1 WLR 1176 following an accident at work the claimant had an anti tetanus injection Nine days later there was an adverse reaction to the serum and brain damage resulted No matter what tests the doctor might have performed there would have been no sign of an adverse reaction within a reasonable time see the Bolam Test The doctor s reasonable decision to provide the standard treatment was therefore not the relevant cause of the brain damage because the claimant would not have been injected but for the defendant s negligence Thus in deciding between sequential contributions to the final result the court must decide which is the more substantial contribution In the High Court case of Ide v ADB Sales Ltd 2007 and subsequent appeal 2008 regarding a mountain bike accident two explanations had been put forward in court One explanation was rejected by the judge leaving the alternative explanation to be accepted and allowing the judge in accepting the second explanation to reach the conclusion that this followed from the totality of the evidence in this case that the bicycle was defective and the supplier was liable under the Consumer Protection Act 1987 5 6 Breaking the chain of causation editMain article Breaking the chain Acts of a third party edit Whether the acts of a third party break the chain of causation depends on whether the intervention was foreseeable 7 The general rule is that the original defendant will be held responsible for harm caused by a third party as a direct result of his or her negligence provided it was a highly likely consequence So for example where the defendant has control over the third party or where the third party is faced with a dilemma created by the defendant the chain of causation is unlikely to be broken and the defendant will normally be liable to the claimant for the damage caused Home Office v Dorset Yacht Co Ltd 1970 AC 1004 The continuity of liability is not imposed merely because the original negligence makes damage by the third party foreseeable but where the defendant s negligence makes it very likely that the third party will cause damage to the claimant Lamb v Camden LBC 1981 QB 625 In practice however the requirement that the third party intervention will usually break the chain and at the very least the liability to pay compensation representing the totality of the loss or damage will be apportioned between the two or more tortfeasors So for example if A injures V it is foreseeable that an ambulance will be called that paramedics will lift and carry V and that there will be a journey back to the hospital This cycle of intervention is continued in the hospital None of this activity affecting V would arise but for the original negligence so A will remain liable unless and until either an unforeseeable B intervenes e g negligently drives his car and collides with the ambulance or a paramedic or member of the hospital staff is so seriously negligent that it becomes a new cause of action Acts of the claimant edit Main article Acts of the claimantLoss of a chance editMain article Loss of chance in English law In loss of chance cases the court is invited to assess hypothetical outcomes either affecting the claimant or a third party where the defendant s negligence deprived the claimant of the opportunity to obtain a benefit or avoid a loss Although it has been relatively unsuccessful in cases of medical negligence it does provide a remedy in professional negligence generally Loss of a right editMain article Loss of right in English law Recent medical negligence cases suggest tacit recognition of a more rights based approach to damage Causation law and science compared editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Causation in English law news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Science and law have different functions but share striking similarities Both purport to provide rational reasoned independent unbiased processes concerned with the objective assessment of evidence There are also striking differences Scientific assertions compared with determinations of legal causation have the following characteristics they are population based not individual general not particular they are probabilistic not deterministic they are generally expressed as the refutation of the hypothesis and not a finding of fact or proof of an allegation the evidence is not exhaustive whereas an adjudication is determined according to the evidence available The major distinction between legal determinations and scientific assertions lies in the concept of certainty The legal concept of causation is deterministic it is an expression of the fiction of certainty an absolute concept The scientific concept of causation is probabilistic it is an expression of the uncertainty of truth an asymptotic concept See also editDamages Remoteness in English lawReferences editCane Peter 1999 Atiyah s Accidents Compensation and the Law Sixth edition Chapter 5 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 60610 1 Deakin Simon Johnston Angus amp Markesinis B S 2003 Markesinis and Deakin s Tort Law pp 174 201 Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 925712 4 Hart H L A amp Honore A M 1985 Causation in the Law Oxford Clarendon Press The Law Commission 2001 The Illegality Defence in Tort Consultation Paper No 160 1 Luckham Mary Informed consent to medical treatment and the issue of causation the decision of the House of Lords in Chester v Afshar 2004 UKHL 41 2 Robinson Robert C The Role of Causation in Decision of Tort Law Journal of Law Development and Politics 2010 Volume I Issue II 3 Rogers W V H Winfield and Jolowicz on Tort pp 195 231 London Sweet amp Maxwell ISBN 0 421 76850 9 Stevens Robert An Opportunity to Reflect 4 permanent dead link Weir Tony 2002 Tort Law Chapters 4 amp 5 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 924998 9 Clinical Negligence edited by Michael Powers Nigel Harris and Anthony Barton fourth edition 2008 Tottel Publishing ISBN 978 1 84766 075 6 Notes edit SAAMCO 1997 AC 191 214 a b England and Wales High Court Queen s Bench Division Joseph Simon Love v Halfords Ltd 2014 EWHC 1057 paragraph 20 delivered 8 April 2014 accessed 22 December 2023 1 WLR 948 Oddy A and McDonald A The burden of proof and competing theories on causation Herbert Smith Freehills published 27 February 2013 accessed 22 December 2023 England and Wales High Court Ide v ATB Sales Ltd 17 July 2017 accessed 10 November 2022 Crown Office Chambers Richard Lynagh KC accessed 10 November 2022 Causation in English Tort Law IPSA LOQUITUR Retrieved 22 October 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Causation in English law amp oldid 1191266199, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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