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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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NEWS
The government has pledged to ‘move fast’ to protect children from harm caused by artificial intelligence (AI) chatbots, and could impose limits on social media as early as the summer
All eyes will be on the Court of Appeal (or its YouTube livestream) next week as it sits to consider the controversial Mazur judgment
An NHS Foundation Trust breached a consultant’s contract by delegating an investigation into his knowledge of nurse Lucy Letby’s case
Draft guidance for schools on how to support gender-questioning pupils provides ‘more clarity’, but headteachers may still need legal advice, an education lawyer has said
Litigation funder Innsworth Capital, which funded behemoth opt-out action Merricks v Mastercard, can bring a judicial review, the High Court ruled last week
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