As social organization developed from
a predominantly agricultural to a predominantly technological and urban system,
as the relations of men became more and more intimate, the greater was the
need, the need of Law. A basic force at work here is change which necessarily
has its effects upon the law, habits, manners, modes of thought, the production
of goodsand distribution of goods. The very sizes of the population are far
different today than they were a century and half ago. As the society develops
law too develop, along, in fact law is one of the greatest instrument for
changes and developments1 These changes and developments brought about the tort
of negligence as a separate and independent tort (Though it is of a recent
origin) 2. It is necessary to emphasize that the law of tort, like those other
branches of the law, is concerned with the question of liability; an action
founded upon tort is an action between persons, either natural or artificial
(i.e. corporation) and the outcome can only be that one of them, the defendant
is or is not liable to do or refrain from doing something at the suit of the other.
If there is no defendant whose liability can be established according to the
principles of the law then the plaintiff is left without redress.
The tort of negligence, in its
formative stages, was treated merely as a mode of committing other torts and not
as an independent tort itself until 1825.
Consequent upon frequency of actions
in which negligence was the substance of the action, the increase in
mechanization and industrialization of society and the consequent
multiplication of personal injury caused by negligence have all led to the idea
of negligence as a separate tort itself and not simply as a mode of committing
trespass or other torts. Then came the view that liability for negligence can
only exists if the case is covered by a duty which has already been
recognized3. It was put most forcibly in Landon‟s case4 that “Negligence is not
actionable unless the duty to be careful exists. And the duty to be careful
only exists where the wisdom of our ancestors has decided that it shall
exist”.Certainly, it is true that in denying the existence of a duty in some
cases the judges have done so on the ostensible ground that no authority for
such a duty exists, but recently, they have not hesitated to produce a new duty
when it has seemed right to them to do so. That is why Lord Denning L.J. has
said, “If we never do anything which has never been done before, we shallnever
get anywhere.The law will stand still while the rest of the world goes on; and
this will be bad for both”5.
TOPIC: APPRAISAL OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE TORT OF NEGLIGENCE IN NIGERIA
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 68
Price: 3000 NGN
In Stock

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