THE LAWS OF THE UNREASONABLE VICTIM: CARE, MITIGATION, AND STRATEGIC DEFERRAL

Ehud Guttel*, Yuval Procaccia

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

In the domain of negligence - tort law's dominant liability regime - victim behaviour is the subject of two central doctrines: contributory negligence and mitigation of damages, regulating pre-harm and post-harm behaviour, respectively. This article demonstrates that, contrary to prevalent claims about the identical function of the two doctrines, each contends with a different problem. At the pre-harm phase, contributory negligence counters the victim's incentives to save cost by underinvesting in care. Conversely, in the post-harm phase, mitigation of damages counters the victim's inclination to inflate liability by strategically deferring mitigation. This observation carries several implications: it explains why the unification of the two doctrines - now endorsed by the Restatement and the Principles of European Tort Law - should be rejected; it offers guidance on when each doctrine should apply; and it explains the law's distinct approach to mitigation when performed by third parties.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)176-202
Number of pages27
JournalUniversity of Toronto Law Journal
Volume75
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS.

Keywords

  • contributory negligence
  • duty to rescue
  • mitigation of damages
  • sharing rules
  • strategic deferral
  • torts

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