Rescuer As Officious Intermeddler
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
20594_daniels_whale_float · TORTS · Choice ALydia, because a rescuer is entitled to indemnity from the person whom the rescuer was attempting to rescue.
Why it's attractive
The choice rewards the instinct that rescuers deserve reimbursement. The breaker is that rescue doctrine is not automatic indemnity; it requires negligent danger and foreseeable rescue.
Why it's wrong
Automatic rescuer indemnity overclaims the legal basis for recovery.
Spot it next time
Ask whether the answer states negligence-based recovery or a blanket remedy.
20594_daniels_whale_float · TORTS · Choice BDaniel, because Daniel did not know that Lydia would try to rescue him.
Why it's attractive
The choice makes Daniel's lack of actual knowledge feel decisive. The breaker is that the rescue rule uses foreseeability of rescue, not actual awareness of this rescuer.
Why it's wrong
Actual awareness is not the dispositive element; foreseeable rescue is.
Spot it next time
Use the Gold Key: rescue is foreseeable when danger invites it.
20594_daniels_whale_float · TORTS · Choice DDaniel, because Lydia was an officious intermeddler.
Why it's attractive
The choice uses a formal-sounding label that makes Lydia look like a meddler. The breaker is that apparent human peril gives her a legitimate rescue reason.
Why it's wrong
The officious-intermeddler frame does not fit an apparent human rescue.
Spot it next time
Check whether the plaintiff had a legitimate rescue reason.
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