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03 July 2009 / Kenneth Warner
Issue: 7376 / Categories: Features , Professional negligence
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Protection from oneself

Kenneth Warner considers the scope of an assumed duty of care

The law of negligence proceeds on the basic premise that in conducting activities we owe a duty to take reasonable care to avoid causing harm to those who are foreseeably affected by our acts or omissions.

Having said that, the law allows for the presumption that persons of mature age and sound intellectual ability will exercise ordinary care for their own welfare, in their everyday lives. The common law has never recognised a general duty of care to “go to the rescue” of another person who is seen to be in some way acting to his or her own detriment. The case law does admit, however, of the much more limited circumstance, where a duty arises on the basis that a defendant has in some way or other assumed a duty of care towards the plaintiff. In this exceptional circumstance, a significant failure on the defendant’s part can amount to a breach of duty sounding in damages in tort, despite the immediate vehicle of

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MOVERS & SHAKERS

Slater Heelis—Charlotte Beck

Slater Heelis—Charlotte Beck

Partner and Manchester office lead appointed head of family

Civil Justice Council—Nigel Teasdale

Civil Justice Council—Nigel Teasdale

DWF insurance services director appointed to Civil Justice Council

R3—Jodie Wildridge

R3—Jodie Wildridge

Kings Chambers barrister appointed chair of R3 Yorkshire

NEWS

The abolition of assured shorthold tenancies and section 21 evictions marks the beginning of a ‘brave new world’ for England’s rental sector, writes Daniel Bacon of Seddons GSC

Stephen Gold’s latest Civil Way column rounds up a flurry of procedural and regulatory changes reshaping housing, alternative dispute resolution (ADR) and personal injury litigation
Patients are being systematically failed by an NHS complaints regime that is opaque, poorly enforced and often stacked against them, argues Charles Davey of The Barrister Group
A wealthy Russian divorce battle has produced a sharp warning about trying to challenge foreign nuptial agreements in the wrong English court. Writing in NLJ this week, Vanessa Friend and Robert Jackson of Hodge Jones & Allen examine Timokhin v Timokhina, where the High Court enforced Russian judgments arising from a prenuptial agreement despite arguments based on the landmark Radmacher decision
An obscure Victorian tort may be heading for an unexpected revival after a significant Privy Council ruling that could reshape liability for dangerous escapes, according to Richard Buckley, barrister and emeritus professor of law at the University of Reading
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