Article contents
The Sources and Challenges of Norm Generation in Tort Law
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 March 2018
Abstract
Tort cases apply particular standards of behaviour to defendants and society, often using common-sense sounding benchmarks such as “reasonableness”. This article explores the ways in which courts establish facts, for the purpose of making a decision on appropriate standards of behaviour, by using sources of authority from the world beyond tort. Facts, rather than being separate from and prior to the application of the legal norms, are often inseparably bound with legal judgment in any particular decision. Two areas of tort law are assessed: some of the English asbestos cases, and the Dutch Urgenda climate change case. The facts required for the setting of, and compliance with, the standard of negligence in these cases are found in a range of external sources, including standards, rules and understandings from scientific bodies, regulators, legal and non-legal documents.
- Type
- Special Issue on Judge-Made Risk Regulation and Tort Law
- Information
- European Journal of Risk Regulation , Volume 9 , Special Issue 1: Special Issue on Judge-Made Risk Regulation and Tort Law , March 2018 , pp. 34 - 47
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- © Cambridge University Press
Footnotes
University College London. I am grateful to the editors, and other participants at the Judge Made Risk Regulation Workshop, Utrecht 9–10 February 2017 for their very helpful comments on this article.
References
1 Sheila Jasanoff’s work on co-production is very useful here. Jasanoff, See S (ed.), States of Knowledge: The Co-Production of Science and Social Order (Routledge 2004)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Weimer, M and de Ruijter, A (eds), Regulating Risks in the EU – The Co-production of Expert and Executive Power (Hart Publishing forthcoming)Google Scholar; Fisher, E, “Climate Change Litigation, Obsession and Expertise: Reflecting on the Scholarly Response to Massachussets v EPA ” (2013) 35 Law & Policy 236 Google Scholar.
2 Urgenda Foundation v The State of the Netherlands (Ministry of Infrastructure and the Environment, 24 June 2015, English translation at <uitspraken.rechtspraak.nl/inziendocument?id=ECLI:NL:RBDHA:2015:7196>.
3 So I am not writing about the line of case law arising out of Fairchild, but the more routine cases. Fairchild v Glenhaven Funeral Services Ltd [2003] 1 AC 32.
4 But see eg Gardner, J, “The Negligence Standard: Political not Metaphysical” (2017) 80 Modern Law Review 1 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Lee, M, “Safety, Regulation and Tort: Fault in Context” (2011) 74 Modern Law Review 555 Google Scholar.
5 Para. 4.43.
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10 Blythe v Birmingham (1856) 11 Ex 781, Alderson B, 784.
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20 Eg Overseas Tankship (UK) Ltd v The Miller Steamship Company (The Wagon Mound) (No 2) [1967] 1 AC 617 (PC), 643, Lord Reid.
21 For example, Margereson and Hancock v JW Roberts [1996] PIQR 154 (High Court), 167.
22 [1996] Env LR 304 (CA).
23 Supra, note 9.
24 Report on effects of asbestos dust on the lungs and dust suppression in the asbestos industry (HMSO 1930).
25 Para. 42.
26 Maguire v Harland and Wolff Plc [2005] EWCA Civ 01, [2005] PIQR 21, eg [48], [56]–[57]. See also Rice v Secretary of State for the DBERR [2008] EWHC 3216 (QB).
27 See para. 62.
28 Para. 21.
29 Para. 57.
30 Margereson, supra, note 22, p 307.
31 See especially the High Court decision, 175–76.
32 But note the different approach of Maguire and Jeromson. In Maguire, the silence lets the defendant off the hook, in Jeromson, the emphasis is on a general understanding that asbestos is dangerous, and the silence on the existence of any safe level places responsibility on the defendant to take precautions or seek advice.
33 Supra, note 2.
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37 The application of ordinary negligence in this case may be an important factor in the appeal.
38 Para. 4.3.
39 Para. 4.12.
40 Para. 4.18.
41 Para. 4.22.
42 Para. 4.29.
43 Para. 4.84.
44 Para. 4.86.
45 Para. 4.42.
46 Para. 4.42, also on the EU, para. 4.43.
47 Para. 4.54.
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49 Supra, note 3.
50 Although that might be the way in which this broader material enters the court room.
51 Fisher, supra, note 1, 251.
52 Supra, note 1.
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57 Also Gardner, supra, note 4, on fact and law in the “reasonable person”.
58 Para. 4.22.
59 At p 158. See also Mance LJ’s dissenting judgment in Maguire.
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61 Para. 4.14.
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64 Para. 4.12.
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67 “This Agreement … aims to strengthen the global response to the threat of climate change … including by: (a) Holding the increase in the global average temperature to well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels and pursuing efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5°C …”.
68 Eg Anderson and Bows, supra, note 62.
69 Paras. 4.77, 4.86.
70 Note again the historical nature of the discussion. In more contemporary cases, reflecting the greater fragmentation of “regulation” / “governance”, the courts are also turning to private standards, see Lee supra, note 4.
71 Supra, note 17.
72 See also Hale LJ in Jeromson, para. 45.
73 Wikeley, supra, note 14.
74 Jasanoff, S, “Serviceable Truths: Science for Action in Law and Policy” (2015) 93 Texas Law Review 1723, 1725 Google Scholar.
75 Supra, note 1.
76 Supra, note 4: “Nuisance and Regulation in the Court of Appeal” (2013) Journal of Planning and Environmental Law 277.
77 I have not raised all of the dilemmas, of course. The costs to gathering and organising all of this information must be acknowledged, as must the real skill in the knowledge generation in the cases discussed here.
78 “Occupying the Field: Tort and the Pre-Emptive Statute” in Steele, J and Arvind, TT (eds), Tort Law and the Legislature (Hart Publishing, 2012)Google Scholar.
79 “Hunter v Canary Wharf” in P Mitchell and C Mitchell (eds), Landmark Cases in the Law of Tort (Hart Publishing, 2010).
80 Supra, note 5.
81 See Graaf and Jans, supra, note 14, on whether Urgenda renders meaningless the provisions of the Dutch constitution limiting the rights for individuals in international law.
82 Oreskes, supra, note 63.
83 Jasanoff, S, “A New Climate for Society” (2010) 27 Theory, Culture and Society 233 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
84 Gardner, supra, note 4.
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