
📘View Study GuideNavigating Tort Law: Defenses, Multiple Defendants, and Vicarious LiabilityThis episode unpacks the complex mechanics of responsibility in tort law, showing how courts allocate blame among multiple parties and the crucial defenses that can shift or bar liability. Whether you're preparing for the bar or seeking clarity on core principles, this detailed breakdown clarifies how to approach these layered issues with precision.Most tort cases hinge on the crucial difference between liability and responsibility—and mastering this distinction can make or break your exam score. In this episode, we peel back the layers of complex tort doctrines — from contributory negligence and comparative fault to vicarious liability and indemnity — revealing the secret frameworks that turn chaos into clarity.Imagine a reckless speeding driver with a documented history of violations, hitting a pedestrian outside a crosswalk. How should the legal system allocate responsibility when multiple parties are involved? You'll discover the nuanced rules of joint and several liability, and how states split the blame between full and proportional liability, dramatically impacting a defendant’s pocketbook. We break down the ins-and-outs of contribution and indemnity, explaining how defendants recover from each other after paying the full damages.In high-stakes scenarios involving multiple defendants, the choice between pure and modified comparative fault, and within that, the exact threshold language—less than or not greater than—can mean the difference between full recovery and complete zero. We clarify how these thresholds work in practice, using crystal-clear numerical examples, and teach you how to spot the exact language needed to get the right outcome on exam day.But it’s not just about the math. You’ll learn how doctrines like assumption of risk, including express waivers and implied consent, modify liability—especially in the gig economy and essential services—and the importance of the control test for distinguishing employees from independent contractors. We reveal how vicarious liability works differently from direct negligence, and when employer immunity turns into liability for wrongful acts like malicious assaults or inherently dangerous activities.This episode is perfect for law students, future lawyers, or anyone serious about cracking the toughest exam questions. If you want your rulebook to be second nature and build exam-ready outlines that are both precise and persuasive, this deep dive is your blueprint for success. Master these doctrines, and you'll unlock the precise control needed to allocate responsibility with confidence — because in tort law, how responsibility is divided is just as important as proving fault itself.Key TopicsThe structure of defenses based on plaintiff’s fault: contributory negligence, comparative fault, assumption of risk, and mitigationHow courts apportion fault among multiple defendants via joint and several liability versus several liabilityThe distinction and application of contribution and indemnity among joint tortfeasorsDeep dive into vicarious liability: scope of employment, detours vs. frolics, and exceptions for intentional tortsThe clear delineation between vicarious liability (respondeat superior) and direct liability for independent negligenceSpecial considerations: non-delegable duties, inherently dangerous activities, and liability in the gig economy
Podzilla Summary coming soon
Sign up to get notified when the full AI-powered summary is ready.
Free forever for up to 3 podcasts. No credit card required.

Torts Before 1L: Negligence Part Two - Actual Cause, Proximate Cause, Damages, Emotional Distress, and Wrongful Death

Torts Before 1L: Negligence Part One - Duty, Breach, Reasonable Care, and Special Duty Rules

Torts Before 1L: Intentional Torts - Battery, Assault, False Imprisonment, Trespass, Conversion, and Intentional Emotional Harm

Torts Before 1L: What Is Tort Law? Civil Wrongs, Protected Interests, and the Structure of Liability
Free AI-powered recaps of Law School and your other favorite podcasts, delivered to your inbox.
Free forever for up to 3 podcasts. No credit card required.