A statute of limitations is the deadline for filing a lawsuit. If you do not file not your lawsuit by the end of the statute you can no longer sue the person or entity. Here are some common time limits for various disputes:
Personal Injury. In most cases it is a two years limit from the time it was discovered. However, some situations may only be one year.
Breach of a written contract. Four years for the date the breach occurred.
Breach of oral contract. Two years from the date of the breach.
Damage to personal or real property. Three years from the day the damages occurred.
Claims against government agencies. This are a little different the other lawsuits. Before you can sue a government entity you must file a claim with the agency first. Then they will decide if they should pay you or not. Once they decide not to pay you and reject your claim, you are then free to file a lawsuit. Your initial claim with the agency must be filed within six months of the incident.
Collecting a debt with a court ordered judgement. Ten years from the date the judgement is issued.
Intentional Torts and Punitive Damages
Intentional torts are those in which a person deliberately means to damage your property or physically hurt you. If someone deliberately strikes you with a car or their fist, these are intentional torts. With intentional torts the persons mindset is crucial. For example if I intended to hit you, it is a form of battery. But if I am simply careless and hit you it is negligence.
Proving a person acted intentionally as opposed to negligently can be a big deal. The reason it becomes so important because if it is done intentionally the victim is entitled to recover punitive damages.
Punitive damages are designed to punish the wrongdoer. And deter them from doing it again. It is also meant to compensate the victim financially. Punitive damages can be anywhere from one dollar to the multimillion dollar suits you hear about on TV.
Abuse of process
Abuse of process is the misuse of the judicial process in order to achieve an improper goal. This differs from malicious prosecution where there is no justification for filing a lawsuit. Abuse of process there is a legal justification for filing a suit but the the abuser, is abusing the process to try and gain some sort of advantage end result.
This would be a person who files repeated court motions in an attempt to get you to settle the case, rather than deal with the multiple hearings.
What is the difference between a tort any crime?
A lot of people get confused on the difference between a tort in a crime. A single act can be both a tort and a crime which is the source of a lot of confusion. But a tort is a civil action where you're trying to gain something financially for what occurred. By comparison a crime is when the community as a whole seeks justice for some wrongdoing. The end result would not be financial but incarceration.
For example, assault can be both a tort and a crime. You can sue the person for your injuries and the community can prosecute them as well.
Negligence is the most common tort. Negligence is simply defined as being careless. Not paying enough attention for the circumstances in which you are surrounded.
Examples of negligence would be automobile accidents caused by speeding or failing to stop at stop signs or signals. It can also be caused by failing to maintain your vehicle. For example, not keeping your brakes in working order would be a case of negligence should you be in an accident that would have been prevented if the brakes worked properly.
The difficulty with negligence is determining whether or not the person was actually negligent. "Due care" is the term used to figure out if someone was doing what they should have been doing to otherwise prevent an accident. Due care is dependent on a number of factors. The circumstances of the situation, the age of the parties, whether anyone had any mental or physical disability and the list goes on. In order to determine if someone was negligent you first have to determine what a reasonable person would've done in the same set of circumstances.
This is where the law becomes very convoluted and the reason why there are so many court cases, is trying to determine what amount of action or lack of action is required in order to determine negligence.
For example, assault can be both a tort and a crime. You can sue the person for your injuries and the community can prosecute them as well.
Negligence is the most common tort. Negligence is simply defined as being careless. Not paying enough attention for the circumstances in which you are surrounded.
Examples of negligence would be automobile accidents caused by speeding or failing to stop at stop signs or signals. It can also be caused by failing to maintain your vehicle. For example, not keeping your brakes in working order would be a case of negligence should you be in an accident that would have been prevented if the brakes worked properly.
The difficulty with negligence is determining whether or not the person was actually negligent. "Due care" is the term used to figure out if someone was doing what they should have been doing to otherwise prevent an accident. Due care is dependent on a number of factors. The circumstances of the situation, the age of the parties, whether anyone had any mental or physical disability and the list goes on. In order to determine if someone was negligent you first have to determine what a reasonable person would've done in the same set of circumstances.
This is where the law becomes very convoluted and the reason why there are so many court cases, is trying to determine what amount of action or lack of action is required in order to determine negligence.
Torts
What is tort law?
Tort law is fairly simple to understand, when someone does something wrong and either hurts you or damages your property that person has to pay for what they have done. When I say pay I mean it financially, not in some physical way.
The however the simple fact that someone injures you or damages property does not mean they have committed a tort and have to pay for the damages. A person has to pay for the damages only if it was their fault. Some accidents are truly accidents. They are unavoidable. No one is at fault for what happened. When that happens each party involved is responsible for the cost of their own injuries or damage.
A person is responsible for your losses only if their conduct is of a "tortious" nature. The three types of Tort conduct are negligence, intentional misconduct, and strict liability.
How a reasonable person would have acted in a similar situation is usually up to the jury to decide based on all the facts presented at trial. The standard of care is often determined by simple common sense.
The classic case it is often cited to students is of a man walking down the street with a piano falls out of a window above a store seriously injuring him. The injured man cannot prove how the piano fell out of the window. The owner of the shop will not admitted any fault in the piano falling out of the window. Because of this type of incident will not occur on its own without someone being negligent and the store owner who has the ability to figure out why the accident happened, it is up to the store owner to prove that he was not at fault for the person's injuries. Without this role the store owner would be able to avoid responsibility simply by remaining silent and pretending to be ignorant about the cause of the accident.
This is called the doctrine of "res ipsa loquitur". It literally means the thing speaks for itself. It only applies when the accused has exclusive control of the item that hurts you and you did not contribute in any way to the accident and the accident would not have happened unless someone was negligent.
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