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Personal Injury Articles
Personal Injury Tort Law - Generally
Apart from legislation granting a right to sue for a
specific harm, personal injury law generally
consists of tort law and the civil procedure for
enforcing it. This article discusses the words used
to describe those who commit torts and how tort law
is a particular collection of accepted legal
theories for suing people for money.
Those Who Commit Torts
A person who does wrong may be known as a
perpetrator, a violator, or a wrongdoer. A
perpetrator, violator, or wrongdoer who commits a
tort is known as a tortfeasor. Two or more
tortfeasors may commit a single tort. When two or
more tortfeasors commit a single tort, they are
known as joint tortfeasors.
Certain conduct will result in the commission of a
tort. Conduct that will result in the commission of
a tort is known as tortious. Torts are some of the
law's standards for civil conduct. Torts are certain
kinds of conduct that a reasonable person will
avoid. Tortious conduct is conduct that is deemed to
be unreasonable.
Torts are sometimes described as being an invasion
or trespass upon the rights of another.
Legal Theories for Suing
Tort law is a major type of civil law along with
family law, property law, and contract law. Family
law gives a status right. Property law gives an
ownership right. Contract law gives an agreement
right. Tort law is different from the other major
kinds of civil law. Unlike the other major kinds of
civil law, the object of tort law is not something
as immediately pleasurable as a status, ownership,
or agreement right. The victim of a tort only has a
right to sue the tortfeasor before the statute of
limitation expires.
Torts can be viewed as certain general standards of
civil conduct. As a practical matter, however, torts
are nothing more than a collection of theories for
suing people for money (and perhaps other remedies,
if the law so permits).
In each of the other major types of law, there is
only one underlying theory for a lawsuit for money.
The underlying theory in family law is support. The
underlying theory in property law is compensation
for infringement. The underlying theory in contract
law is compensation for breach of agreement. There
are dozens of theories in tort law.
Although there are dozens of theories in tort law,
there is a theme: victims of tort are entitled to
compensation for breach of the particular general
civil duties that are owed them beyond family law,
property law, and contract law.
Your Lawyer
There are many kinds of wrongful conduct that are
deemed to be a tort. Your lawyer can advise you as
to whether the circumstances of your case gives you
the right to sue under tort law.
< Back to Articles
Copyright 2008
LexisNexis, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc.]
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