| Chapter Overview
Chapter 19: Intentional Torts
Intentional torts are actions taken with
the intent to harm another person or another's property. The
intent to harm does not have to be hostile or immoral. The
law of intentional torts requires that the person causing
the harm either knew or should have known that his or her
actions would result in harm.
Types of Damages A
victim of an intentional tort can recover damages. There are
three types of damages—compensatory, nominal, and punitive.
Damages that pay, or compensate, an injured person for being
harmed are called compensatory damages. They may include costs
that have resulted or are expected to result from the injury.
If a plaintiff is unable to show financial loss, the jury
may award nominal damages. Nominal damages involve a small
amount of money that the defendant must pay in order to show
that the defendant was wrong. Punitive damages are awarded
to punish a defendant whose actions were malicious, willful,
or outrageous. Juries usually decide how much money is appropriate.
Torts That Injure Persons One
category of torts is torts that cause injury to persons. These
types of torts include battery—in which a person intentionally
makes contact with another person in a harmful or offensive
way—and assault—which occurs when a person intentionally
causes someone to fear immediate harm. Other examples of torts
that injure persons are infliction of emotional distress,
false imprisonment, and defamation. Defamation includes acts
that harm a person's reputation. Slander is the intentional
attack on someone's reputation through spoken words that are
false. Libel is intentionally writing untruthful information
to injure another person's reputation.
Torts That Harm Property Intentional
torts may harm a person's real, personal, or intellectual
property. Trespass is a tort in which a person enters another
person's private property without permission. A nuisance is
a tort that occurs when someone interferes with your ability
to use and enjoy your own property, even if the person has
never physically entered your property. The tort of conversion
occurs when someone unlawfully takes, damages, or interferes
with another's personal property. Patents and copyrights exist
to protect the ideas, inventions, and creative works of an
individual. A person who interferes with someone's patent
or copyright through unauthorized use of the ideas may be
found guilty of the tort of infringement.
Defenses to Intentional Torts There
are certain defenses a person may use to try to prove that
he or she should not be found liable for an intentional tort.
These reasons include consent, privilege, self-defense, and
defense of property. Consent is the most common defense to
a tort. The defendant argues that the plaintiff agreed to
the harmful conduct and should not be able to sue. Privilege
justifies behavior that would otherwise be a tort when it
serves the public interest. Self-defense and defense of property
justify the use of certain force to protect one's person or
property.
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