Negligence
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Negligence

This is the second book in the Baby Bar Bookcase Series.  This book covers Negligence; including the various standards of care and ways to establish breach of duty, on top of the standard causation and damage discussion.  There are fact patterns on Negligence, Negligence Per Se, and Res Ipsa Loquitor for you to practice your newly honed skill.

This book covers the various highly tested areas of duty including: landlord, liscensee, trespasser, etc.  The book sets out a clear formula to answering and completing analysis on any Negligence essay.  

For a quick preview of what is inside our books, check out our youtube video at: https://youtu.be/YAJXafr4oKE

Here is an example passage from the book:

"**Unknown Trespasser – Defendant has no duty of care as to a trespasser whose presence is unknown to the defendant. Defendant has no duty to inspect his land to attempt to discover unknown trespassers.


**Known Trespasser – A defendant that becomes aware that a particular plaintiff has trespassed on his property or becomes aware of facts to which he should reasonably conclude the plaintiff has trespassed, is regarded as a known trespasser. Most jurisdictions require a defendant to exercise reasonable care to prevent injuries to a known trespasser deriving from actions conducted on the defendant’s land, to warn of hidden dangers of which the defendant is aware and the trespasser is unaware, but there is no duty to prevent injury deriving from natural conditions on the land.


**Child Trespasser – The defendant owes a heightened standard of care as to artificial conditions on the defendants land when the artificial condition is a foreseeable risk of unreasonable danger to trespassing children, it is foreseeable that children are likely to trespass where the artificial condition is located, the child trespasser is unaware of the risk, and the risk of danger of the artificial condition outweighs its utility.


**Licensees – A licensee is a person who enters onto defendants land with defendant’s express or implied permission, and who does not enter for a purpose benefiting the defendant or defendant’s actions. A defendant has a duty to exercise reasonable care to warn of any artificial conditions of which he is aware of or reasonably should be aware of, and which the licensee is unaware and unlikely to discover."

The book contains rule statements, outlines, and instructions for how to layout your Negligence discussion.