I'm doing research on actions brought before Canadian Courts for negligence. I'm looking specifically at Duty of Care and failure to meet the standard of care.
I'm offering the findings of my research here for anyone who may be interested. The first case I'm looking at is:
McPhail's Equipment Co. Ltd. v. Roxanne III, 1994 (BC S.C.)
The BC S.C. means Supreme Court of British Columbia
You can read the case Here.
The issue considered by Mr. Justice Brouck is:
I'm offering the findings of my research here for anyone who may be interested. The first case I'm looking at is:
McPhail's Equipment Co. Ltd. v. Roxanne III, 1994 (BC S.C.)
The BC S.C. means Supreme Court of British Columbia
You can read the case Here.
The issue considered by Mr. Justice Brouck is:
Mr. Justice Brouck asserts the criteria for finding a cause of action in a negligence claim. He writes:Issue
Are there sufficient facts to indicate that the plaintiff may succeed against Mr. Langdon in its claim of negligence?
The proposed claim against Mr. Langdon is based in negligence. A cause of action in negligence requires a positive answer to 3 essential questions before it will succeed. Duty of care is only one of them. Failure to obtain a positive answer with respect to any one question means the negligence action must fail. The questions are:
a)Did the defendant owe the plaintiff a duty of care?
b)Did the defendant fail to meet the standard of care the law imposes with respect to that duty?
c)Did the breach of the standard of care by the defendant cause the damages suffered by the plaintiff?
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