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Law School

The Law School of America
Law School
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  • Law School

    Torts Day Five: Liability Without Fault

    17/04/2026 | 1h 3 mins.
    This episode explores the core principles of strict liability, examining how the law assigns responsibility for inherently dangerous activities, defective products, and risky animals regardless of fault or negligence. Understanding this shift is crucial for grasping how legal policy adapts to societal needs and economic realities.
    Most companies inadvertently open themselves up to massive liability simply by engaging in risky activities—think handling hazardous chemicals or keeping wild animals—without realizing that certain hazards trigger strict liability from day one. In this compelling deep dive, we unravel how the law shifts the burden—charging the risk-taker for social costs regardless of fault. Whether it’s a pet dog’s bite, a factory’s explosion, or a defective product, understanding this critical legal framework transforms how you see risk, responsibility, and safety in society.
    You’ll discover how strict liability turns the traditional fault-based tort system on its head, focusing instead on societal policies that internalize external costs. We break down the three core pillars: animals, abnormally dangerous activities, and products liability—each a different lens for holding risky actors accountable. From the classic one-bite rule for domesticated dogs to the landmark 1868 English case of Rylans v. Fletcher, learn how history shaped today’s tough standards for wild animals and hazardous enterprises. We explore the science behind why dangerous activities like blasting with dynamite or storing hazardous waste are inherently risky, and why no amount of precautions can fully mitigate the danger—making strict liability not just fair, but essential.
    This episode demystifies the key elements needed to succeed on exams—building a clear mental framework for analyzing whether a product was defectively manufactured, defectively designed, or failed to warn about hidden dangers. You’ll see concrete examples like the Ford Pinto case, which exposes the deadly consequences of putting profit over safety, and understand how courts determine whether an activity is inherently ‘ultra-hazardous.’ Plus, we unravel the nuances of nuisance law—how a noisy neighbor or a foul odor can violate your right to quiet enjoyment, and how courts balance social utility against individual harm.
    Perfect for law students, legal professionals, or anyone eager to see the bigger picture of risk and responsibility, this episode elevates your understanding of the laws that keep society safe. Whether it’s a defective toy, a dangerous animal, or a covert environmental hazard, grasping the principles of strict liability empowers you to see risks from the perspective of both policy and justice. This is where law meets reality—more than just theory, it’s a blueprint for holding the risky actors accountable in a complex, modern world.
    Why this works: This episode hooks with an urgent insight about how companies are often unaware that engaging in inherently dangerous activities leads to automatic liability, regardless of care. It appeals directly to listeners’ desire to understand complex legal rules in a straightforward way, emphasizing concrete examples and frameworks that simplify exam success and practical understanding. The language balances approachability and authority, making it intensely valuable for anyone who wants to see the bigger picture of responsibility in society.
    Key Topics:
    The concept and rationale behind strict liability, emphasizing liability without fault.
    Classic cases and frameworks, including animals, abnormally dangerous activities, and products liability.
    The role of risk-shifting and societal policy in establishing liability for inherently hazardous actions.
    Detailed analysis of the three pillars of strict liability: animals, abnormally dangerous activities, and product defects.
    The categories of product defects—manufacturing, design, and information failures—and how courts assess them.
    Limitations on warning labels and the importance of
  • Law School

    Torts Day Four: The "Connection"

    16/04/2026 | 58 mins.
    In this episode, we explore the core principles and intricate mechanics of tort law, focusing on how courts connect careless acts to injuries and assign responsibility. From the factual causation to the nuanced doctrines like foreseeability and superseding causes, this analysis sheds light on how justice is balanced in complex scenarios.Most minor accidents could never result in catastrophic liability—unless the victim has a rare, hidden condition that turns a tiny bump into a lifelong nightmare.
    In this episode, we challenge your intuition about negligence, causation, and fairness, revealing how courts draw the boundary between what’s physically caused and what’s legally fair to hold liable. You'll discover how the infamous but-for test can fail in complex scenarios involving multiple negligent actors and how the substantial factor and alternative liability doctrines fix its limitations.
    We break down the groundbreaking case of Summers v. Tice, where the court shifted the burden of proof—an extraordinary move that still influences today’s joint and several liability. Plus, you'll learn how courts draw the line with foreseeability—the key to determining liability for bizarre, unforeseen events, like earthquakes or freak accidents.
    And because liability can sometimes extend far beyond what’s predictable, you’ll explore the eggshell skull rule, which holds defendants responsible for the full extent of injuries due to pre-existing vulnerabilities—like brittle bones or degenerative diseases. But beware: not all harms are connected. We dive into how courts reject liability when an unforeseeable superseding cause—such as a lightning bolt or a tornado—breaks the causal chain, shielding defendants from classic negligence.
    Perfectly suited for law students, practitioners, and anyone interested in the hidden logic behind those everyday accidents. This episode unpacks the delicate balance courts strike between physics and fairness—an essential framework for understanding tough liability questions. Before we finish, a provocative glimpse into strict liability, where fault itself becomes irrelevant, and defendants are held responsible regardless of precautions.
    If you’ve ever wondered how the law navigates an unpredictable world of carelessness and chaos, this is your deep dive into the core of tort law—where causation, fairness, and policy collide to shape responsibility.Key topics
    The importance of the but-for test and how it applies to straightforward and complex causation scenarios
    When and how the substantial factor test takes over in cases with multiple negligent actors
    The pivotal role of proximate cause and the concept of foreseeability in limiting liability
    The landmark case Palsgraf v. Long Island Railroad and its influence on understanding legal causation
    Intervening vs. superseding causes: what breaks the chain of liability
    The eggshell skull rule and its application in valuing damages
    Defense strategies: contributory negligence, comparative fault, assumption of risk, and specialized doctrines like the firefighter rule
  • Law School

    Torts Day Three: The "Mountain" of Negligence

    15/04/2026 | 1h 1 mins.
    In this episode, we explore the fundamental doctrines of negligence—the most crucial foundation of personal injury law—and decode how courts determine fault through duty and breach analysis. Whether you're a law student, practitioner, or just curious about how the legal system handles everyday accidents, this breakdown offers sharp insights into the mechanics behind liability.
    Most people think negligence is about bad intentions or malicious acts. In reality, it’s about carelessness—accidents that happen when you fail to meet society’s basic standard of conduct. In this episode, we dissect the core mechanics of tort law’s most important doctrine: negligence. Whether you're a law student, legal professional, or simply curious about how liability works, you'll gain clear insight into how courts determine fault in everyday chaos—like a fireworks explosion on a train platform or a slipped shopper in aisle four.
    We break down the foundational questions courts ask before any case proceeds: Did the defendant owe a duty of care? And did they breach it? You’ll discover how the famous foreseeability rule, rooted in the landmark Polsgraf v. Long Island Railroad case, shapes liability—whether to a foreseeable victim or everyone at large. We explore the controversial default standards, such as the reasonable prudent person, and how they serve as societal safeguards, holding even the clumsiest individuals accountable.
    This episode reveals the critical role of the Hand Formula, turning complex risk calculations into a straightforward check: if the cost of precautions is less than the probability times the severity of harm, failure to act is a breach. You’ll see how shortcuts like negligence per se and res ipsa loquitur operate as powerful tools in navigating evidence—allowing plaintiffs to bypass intensive math when regulatory violations or impossible-to-explain accidents occur.
    Why does all this matter? Because understanding negligence isn’t just academic—it's how society assigns fault, compensates victims, and deters reckless behavior. Whether it’s a homeowner ignoring an attractive nuisance or a corporate engineer overlooking a known hazard, the principles you learn here directly impact justice and fairness in everyday life.
    Perfect for law students, legal practitioners, or anyone interested in the hidden rules that keep society functioning. This episode arms you with a logical, strategic approach to negligence cases—demystifying the doctrines that shape our civil justice system. Get ready to see the law from a new perspective, because knowing the rules of the game is the first step to winning in the courtroom.
    Key topics:
    How the "sheer chaos" of everyday accidents is tamed by the negligence framework
    The importance of duty: foreseeability and the landmark Polsgraf v Long Island Railroad case
    The "reasonable prudent person" standard and how it's objectively applied
    The significance of special standards of care for children, professionals, and activities
    The role of the Hand Formula in calculating breach: B less than P times L
    When negligence per se applies and its strict gatekeeping requirements
    The doctrine of res ipsa loquitur and its use in proving breach with no direct evidence
    How the fireman's rule and assumption of risk doctrines limit liability for first responders
    The evolving landscape of landowner liability: trespassers, licensees, invitees
    The complex analysis for breach in dynamic scenarios, including recent case law
  • Law School

    Torts Day Two: The "Yes, But" Defense

    14/04/2026 | 1h 3 mins.
    In this episode, we delve into the strategic complexity of affirmative defenses in tort law. Understanding how and when these shields apply can turn a losing case into a victory, or vice versa. We explore key defenses like consent, protective privileges, and necessity, with practical insights on applying them in exam scenarios and real-life situations.
    Key Topics:
    The importance of privileges as affirmative defenses and their burden of proof
    The nuanced distinctions between express, implied, and law-implied consent
    How scope, capacity, and fraud can undermine consent defenses
    The core of protective privileges: self-defense, defense of others, and defense of property
    The critical limits of proportionality and the duty to retreat
    When necessity applies: public necessity vs private necessity
    Legal strategies for analyzing complex fact patterns with multiple torts
    The moral and policy limits of necessity, especially regarding human life
    Most accidental injuries aren't just about bad luck—they reveal the law's complex hierarchy of values. What happens when a homeowner's defensive trap maims a thief and suddenly they're being sued for battery? The answer lies in the unseen power of affirmative defenses—legal shields like consent, self-defense, property protection, and necessity—that can turn a wrongful act into a lawful one.
    In this episode, we dissect a bold legal experiment: a homeowner who rigs a shotgun trap to protect their property. How does the law treat a criminal who breaks the law but is harmed by a homeowner’s risky setup? You'll uncover the nuances behind deadly force limits, the importance of scope and proportionality, and why the law always ranks human life above property—even in extreme emergencies.
    We break down key concepts like express, implied, and law-implied consent—showing you when these defenses stand and when they fall apart, especially under fraud or capacity issues. Plus, learn how the law handles defense of others, the duty (or lack thereof) to retreat, and the unique safeguards that apply inside your own home. We explore the boundaries of reasonable force, the devastating moral question of sacrificing one life to save another, and the infamous Katko v. Briney case that set a legal precedent for deadly property traps.
    Why does the law treat property differently from human life? Because it values safety above possessions, forbidding lethal defenses like spring guns—even against trespassers—outside lawful self-defense. But there’s an extraordinary twist: during genuine emergencies, property rights can be temporarily overridden to save lives, with the law forced to weigh human well-being over strict ownership rights.
    Whether you're a law student, legal professional, or anyone interested in the moral limits of self-preservation, this episode reveals the core strategies for navigating tort law’s murkiest situations. You'll learn the crucial “shields checklist”—a mental framework to analyze complex fact patterns confidently—arming you to spot when a seemingly wrongful act is justified under the law.
    Join us as we confront the haunting question: in a life-or-death emergency involving innocent lives, does tort law give you a license to sacrifice one to save another? This moral and legal puzzle is the ultimate test of fairness, and understanding it could change the way you see justice, morality, and personal safety forever.
    Perfectly suited for students, legal thinkers, and anyone who craves clarity in chaos, this episode turns intricate tort doctrines into practical insights that empower your next legal challenge. Hit play and master the delicate art of legal judo—where knowing the right defense can turn the tides in your favor when it matters most;
  • Law School

    Torts Day One: The Power of Intent

    13/04/2026 | 58 mins.
    This episode breaks down the core principles of intentional torts, from the foundational engine of volitional acts and intent to the nuanced doctrine of transferred intent. Whether you're preparing for law school exams or courtroom practice, understanding these concepts is essential for effective issue spotting and case analysis.
    Key Topics:
    The core engine of intentional torts: volitional acts and intent
    Differentiating between specific intent and substantial certainty standard
    The significance of transferred intent across five key torts
    How mental capacity, age, and mental illness impact liability
    The boundaries of battery, assault, false imprisonment, and emotional distress
    The importance of the 'missing element' framework for exam success
    Strategic factors influencing the pursuit of intentional tort claims, including damages and insurance exclusions
    The potential future shift toward a unified theory of intentional harms under reform proposals
    Most intentional torts come down to one thing: did you mean to do it? That simple question — often overlooked in the chaos of real human behavior — is the foundation of liability in tort law. In this episode, uncover how the law draws a sharp line between accidents and deliberate wrongdoing, and why understanding this distinction changes everything in civil litigation.
    You’ll discover the core engine that powers all intentional torts: the two vital components of a volitional act and intent. We explore how the law defines a conscious movement, why reflexes and seizures usually don’t count, and why even sleeping victims can sue for battery. From the classic "human projectile" cases to the nuanced rule of transferred intent, this episode demystifies the legal doctrines that determine liability—no matter how clumsy or misguided the defendant.
    We take a close look at the difference between specific intent and general intent, how courts interpret substantial certainty, and why mental illness or age do not automatically shield a defendant. Plus, learn how modern rules around property — trespass to land and chattels — hinge on the simple act of intentionally crossing a boundary, regardless of mistaken ownership or intent to trespass.
    Why does the law emphasize intent in the first place? Because it unlocks the potential for punitive damages, exposes liability for reckless behavior, and strips away defenses like comparative fault. But be warned: insurance companies often block collection when it comes to intentional acts. We unpack the strategic importance of proving intent and how to navigate tricky facts and exam traps with a systematic four-step framework.
    Finally, we challenge the traditional silos of battery, assault, false imprisonment, and emotional distress. Could a future reform do away with these distinctions and adopt a single broad doctrine of intentional harm? Whether you’re a law student, legal professional, or just curious about the mechanics behind human conduct and accountability, this episode arms you with the insight, clarity, and strategy to master the language of intent in tort law.

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About Law School

The Law School of America podcast is designed for listeners who what to expand and enhance their understanding of the American legal system. It provides you with legal principles in small digestible bites to make learning easy. If you're willing to put in the time, The Law School of America podcasts can take you from novice to knowledgeable in a reasonable amount of time.
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