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Conditions to be satisfied for a defendant to be held liable in negligence
Doctrine of common employment
Duty of care on a driver who intends to turn to another lane
Duty of plaintiff in an action for negligence to give specific particulars and effect of failure to do so
Duty of plaintiff to give particulars of negligence
Duty of the plaintiff to lead evidence in proof of negligence
Effect of failure to prove particulars of negligence in an action for negligence
Elements of negligence
Essential elements a plaintiff must establish in an action in negligence
Facts that must be pleaded in an action in negligence
How an allegation of negligence against a corporate body is treated
How an allegation of negligence should be pleaded
How to establish liability for negligence in tort
How to establish negligence
Ingredients of the tort of negligence
Meaning of negligence
Meaning, nature and ingredients of negligence
Nature of damages that could result from negligence
Need for a claimant to plead the particulars of negligence and prove that the accident was the result of the defendant's negligence
Need for the plaintiff to provide particulars in a claim for negligence
Negligence as a matter of fact
Presumption of negligence in collision cases
Purport of the tort of negligence
Requirements for a successful claim in damages for negligence
Standard of care owed by a banker
The cardinal principle of liability in the tort of negligence
The most fundamental ingredient of the tort of negligence
The mutual duty of care placed on persons driving on the highway
The neighbourhood principle
The presumptions which are raised where an accident is caused by an employee
The principle that negligence is a question of fact and not of law
The principle that the claimant must be able to link the breach of duty of care which occasioned the injury to the defendant
The rule that negligence is only actionable if actual damages is proved
The rule that the particulars of the breach of duty must be set out in the pleadings
The rule that there must be a sufficient relationship of proximity or neighbourhood between the wrongdoer and the person who has suffered damage
The rule to be applied in cases of dilemma created for one person by the negligence of another
The test of negligence
What a plaintiff must prove in an action for negligence founded on an accident
What amounts to negligence
What must be proved in order to succeed in a claim for negligence
What must be shown before a court can find the defendant liable in negligence
What negligence entails
What the plaintiff must plead and prove in an action in negligence
When a bank will be deemed negligent
When a collecting bank will be held liable in negligence
When a defendant will be liable in negligence
When a medical man would be found guilty of negligence
When liability will be established in the tort of negligence
When the tort of negligence arises
Whether a bank acting as a collecting bank for a cheque can be liable in negligence
Whether a party will be held liable for the negligent act of a stranger done without his consent
Whether a road user is responsible for damage suffered by another road user who avoided colliding with him
Whether full particulars of negligence must be stated and cogent evidence proved in support
Whether he who alleges negligence has the burden of proving such allegation
Whether it is a matter of fact or law whether a driver drove his vehicle without due care
Whether it is necessary to prove negligence in order to establish liability where a dangerous thing such as electricity is used by a statutory authority
Whether negligence can be used as a defence to an action in tort
Whether negligence is a matter that must be proved; When an issue of negligence should be transferred to the general cause list
Whether negligence is actionable even though there is no contract between the parties
Whether negligence must be pleaded specifically where it has been admitted
Whether negligence must be specifically pleaded
Whether proof of damage alone is sufficient in an action in negligence
Whether the claimant is under a legal duty to plead the particulars of negligence in order to succeed in his claim
Whether the court can infer negligence on the part of the defendant
Whether the tort of negligence can arise from a breach of contract
Whether the tort of negligence can arise from contractual dealings
Whether there is a distinction between negligence and gross negligence in a case of bailment
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