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E-book
Author Nolan, Virginia E., 1948-

Title Understanding enterprise liability : rethinking tort reform for the Twenty-first Century / Virginia E. Nolan, Edmund Ursin
Published Philadelphia : Temple University Press, 1995

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Description 1 online resource (ix, 254 pages)
Contents pt. I. Enterprise Liability: An Introduction. 1. Contemporary Tort Reform and Enterprise Liability. 2. Traditional Tort Theory and Enterprise Liability: An Overview -- pt. II. The Compensation Plan Strategy. 3. Workers' Compensation Plans and Enterprise Liability. 4. Leon Green: Explication and Application. 5. The Columbia Plan and Dashed Hopes. 6. Renewed Focus on Compensation Plans in the 1950s. 7. The Keeton-O'Connell Plan, Legislative Successes, and Proposed Extensions of No-Fault. 8. Dashed Hopes (Again) and the Need for Alternatives -- pt. III. The Common Law Strategy. 9. Leon Green and the "Tort" Version. 10. Karl Llewellyn and the "Sales Law" Version: Strict Products Liability Proposed. 11. Perspectives on Courts and Legislatures: The 1930s. 12. Increased Focus on the Common Law: The 1940s. 13. The Possibility of a Judicially Created Strict Enterprise Liability. 14. Strict Products Liability: Recognition and Adoption. 15. The Damages Agenda of the 1950s
Summary In recent years critics have assailed the cost, inefficiency, and unfairness of American tort law, including products liability and medical malpractice. Yet victims of accidental injury who look to the tort system for deserved compensation often find it a formidable obstacle. Those who seek to reform tort law find legislatures, including the United States Congress, paralyzed by the clash of powerful special interest groups. Understanding Enterprise Liability sheds new light on the tort reform debate by challenging its fundamental assumptions. Offering historical insight and fresh perspectives on the politics and possibilities for sensible reform, Virginia Nolan and Edmund Ursin pragmatically assess alternative routes to a workable, balanced, and equitable system of compensation for personal injury
Tort reformers commonly equate "enterprise liability" with strict products liability and other expansive tort developments of recent decades. Damages reform and no-fault alternatives are, in turn, seen as a repudiation of a failed theory of enterprise liability. In contrast, the authors demonstrate that both strict product liability and no-fault compensation plans are a product of the enterprise liability theory first articulated early in this century by Leon Green and Karl Llewellyn. As the theory of enterprise liability matured, damages reform became an integral part of the enterprise liability agenda, establishing that both no-fault and damages reform are an aspect, not a repudiation, of enterprise liability theory
Nolan and Ursin examine proposals to displace tort law by no-fault schemes, including the medical no-fault proposal of the American Law Institute's Reporters' Study on Enterprise Responsibility for Personal Injury. Noting that even automobile no-fault plans have been blocked by special interests and legislative stalemate, the authors suggest that we rethink the common assumption that courts have no role to play in tort reform. Their own specific proposal, based on the precedent of strict products liability, incorporates the insights of no-fault compensation plan scholarship to create an enterprise liability doctrine that should appeal to courts and to tort reformers
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 179-241) and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Enterprise liability -- United States
Torts -- United States
Law reform -- United States
LAW -- Administrative Law & Regulatory Practice.
LAW -- Torts.
Enterprise liability
Law reform
Torts
United States
Form Electronic book
Author Ursin, Edmund
ISBN 9781439907641
1439907641