header-logo header-logo

Protection from oneself

03 July 2009 / Kenneth Warner
Issue: 7376 / Categories: Features , Professional negligence
printer mail-detail

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

If you are not a subscriber, subscribe now to read this content
If you are already a subscriber sign in
...or Register for two weeks' free access to subscriber content

MOVERS & SHAKERS

FOIL—Bridget Tatham

FOIL—Bridget Tatham

Forum of Insurance Lawyers elects president for 2026

Gibson Dunn—Robbie Sinclair

Gibson Dunn—Robbie Sinclair

Partner joinslabour and employment practice in London

Muckle LLP—Ella Johnson

Muckle LLP—Ella Johnson

Real estate dispute resolution team welcomes newly qualified solicitor

NEWS
Solicitors are installing panic buttons and thumb print scanners due to ‘systemic and rising’ intimidation including death and arson threats from clients
Ministers’ decision to scrap plans for their Labour manifesto pledge of day one protection from unfair dismissal was entirely predictable, employment lawyers have said
Cryptocurrency is reshaping financial remedy cases, warns Robert Webster of Maguire Family Law in NLJ this week. Digital assets—concealable, volatile and hard to trace—are fuelling suspicions of hidden wealth, yet Form E still lacks a section for crypto-disclosure
NLJ columnist Stephen Gold surveys a flurry of procedural reforms in his latest 'Civil way' column
Paper cyber-incident plans are useless once ransomware strikes, argues Jack Morris of Epiq in NLJ this week
back-to-top-scroll