Donate SIGN UP

is it all injury the law protects?

Avatar Image
maxosaxo | 14:17 Sun 28th Oct 2012 | Law
55 Answers
does every complaint you have entitle you to a remedy in court?its a kwestn given to us to solve by tomorrow.pls help answer
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 20 of 55rss feed

1 2 3 Next Last

Avatar Image
Very simply, "any injury or damage" doesn't necessarily end up as a successful liability claim. I used to work in insurance and yes, often people claimed for injury or loss (and sometimes it went to court), but it had to be proven that those being claimed against were negligent in their duty of care, before the claim could succeed. Many claims get thrown out...
21:18 Sun 28th Oct 2012
kwestn...?

the answer is no ... but you must figure out the explanation why yourself

you will not make a very good, or properly qualified solicitor etc, if you cannot answer these things yourself... or spell...
Question Author
oh and kojo i can spell.just because i decide to shorten some stuffs doesn't mean i can't.and to be honest i just started this law stuff, last week precisely.i know the answer but don't know how to start or proceed
Well, I was going to help, but if you're going to get stroppy.........
I'll point you in the right direction for research areas, but I am not answering your question.

Look at contract law - what are the circumstances in which you might seek a remedy from the Court? Look at frustration, breach, etc.

Look at tort - "who is my neighbour etc", what is the standard and duty of care - consider the different duties depending on the relationship.

If you are looking for a legal career, you need to be able to do research quickly.
Sorry, must type faster - didn't see you only started last week.

Right if you know the answer - write what you know here and I'll try and point you in the right direction.
of course you do.

so why didn't you ask - "this is what i know, but can anyone help me proceed?" ...?

you asked for people to give you solve this, to give you the answer...

as barmaid says, tell us what you know...


oh and spellng my name wrong doesn't actually help prove your point... not sure how you thought it would really ... it just makes you look petulant... and again shows you cannot spell...
Question Author
tnx yáll 4 erytin.gat wat i nided.nd kojo i c u
Remind me not to engage you when (if) you qualify
It takes me longer to type KWESTN than QUESTION.
Do you mean rather that does any injury you get entitle to to a remedy in Court? For example, maybe looking at liability, causation, loss, contributory negligence etc... ?
Question Author
dzug wat u min by dat
Question Author
jenna yah
maxo, please stop writing in textspeak, most of us don't understand it. If you want our help, bother to spell properly please.

..and no, IMO - you have to prove negligence for injury claims to succeed.
Maxo - if you answer my post I will attempt to help you. However, if you wish to ignore me, fine.
Out of curiosity, do you speak like that too? Don't you think it would be a good idea to always write properly so that when you need to write for your course, etc you don't inadvertently write some bits in childish text speak?
dat?
Ok, what level are you studying at? Might help pitch how you need to approach it, detail, level etc...

Are you in the UK?

We do get a lot of people on here who come on wanting people to essentially do their homework for them - people who don't seem to want to bother doing the work themselves and often people studying for a law degree and it doesn't tend to reflect very well on people undertaking that level of study and wanting to go on to practice law if they are showing that little effort.
this person cannot possibly be studying anything above Y6.
I'm interested to see what maxosaxo is studying for, it doesn't mean they are necessarily studying for a law degree or a higher level of study and there may be other reasons for the way they write.
Yes, pure laziness, Jenna.

1 to 20 of 55rss feed

1 2 3 Next Last

Do you know the answer?

is it all injury the law protects?

Answer Question >>

Related Questions

Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.