Full Privilege No Damages Misread
This trap appears as a wrong-answer choice in 1 active question. Spotting how it is built is the repair: read each example's “why it's attractive” before the “why it's wrong.”
Subject distribution
- Torts1
Example wrong choices
17630_blown_bible_orchard · TORTS · Choice BAll damages resulting from the Bible's being blown onto Paul's land.
Why it's attractive
The student treats the spill as the entry-caused event and stacks all downstream damage onto the trucker. The Gold Key handles the axis: spill-caused damage is not recoverable absent an abnormally dangerous activity.
Why it's wrong
The student treats the spill as the entry-caused event and stacks all downstream damage onto the trucker. The Gold Key handles the axis: spill-caused damage is not recoverable absent an abnormally dangerous activity.
17630_blown_bible_orchard · TORTS · Choice CNominal damages only.
Why it's attractive
The student treats the qualified privilege as a complete shield. The Silver Key handles the axis: the privilege protects the entry, not the damage the entry itself causes.
Why it's wrong
The student treats the qualified privilege as a complete shield. The Silver Key handles the axis: the privilege protects the entry, not the damage the entry itself causes.
17630_blown_bible_orchard · TORTS · Choice DNo damages.
Why it's attractive
The student treats the qualified privilege as absolute. The same Silver Key handles the axis: the privilege is qualified, and the actor is liable for damage caused by the entry itself.
Why it's wrong
The student treats the qualified privilege as absolute. The same Silver Key handles the axis: the privilege is qualified, and the actor is liable for damage caused by the entry itself.
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