A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

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1. D and P worked on the same shift at E Company. D found P quite attractive and several times asked her to wear more revealing clothes and to engage in sexual relations with him. P refused each time and told D to stop bothering her. On two subsequent occasions, D came up to P while she was working and gently massaged her shoulders. P pulled away both times and complained to her supervisor. P suffered no physical harm. On these facts, could a jury find D liable for battery?

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Transcript of A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

Page 1: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

1. D and P worked on the same shift at E Company. D found P quite attractive and several times asked her to wear more revealing clothes and to engage in sexual relations with him. P refused each time and told D to stop bothering her. On two subsequent occasions, D came up to P while she was working and gently massaged her shoulders. P pulled away both times and complained to her supervisor. P suffered no physical harm.

On these facts, could a jury find D liable for battery?

Page 2: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

Page 3: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

B. Yes, because P had told D to leave her alone.

Page 4: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

C. No, if the jury finds that D had no purpose either to harm or offend P.

Page 5: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

D. Yes, provided that the jury finds that the reasonable person would have found D’s actions offensive.

Page 6: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

2. P was riding his bicycle in New York’s Central Park when a passing runner inadvertently made contact with P, causing P to crash. P suffered a compound fracture of the humerus. (A compound fracture is one where the bone protrudes through the skin.) D, a physician, also running in the park, stopped to render aid to P and began to attempt to reduce the fracture. P screamed in pain and told the physician to stop. D continued until the protruding bone was realigned.

On these facts, could a jury find D liable for battery?

Page 7: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

A. No, provided that D persuades the jury that without the treatment D administered, P would likely have suffered far greater injury and would have been at risk of dying because of untreatable infection from the dirty wound.

Page 8: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

B. Yes, because D was not P’s physician.

Page 9: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

C. No, because the physician was responding to an emergency situation.

Page 10: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

D.Yes, but only for the treatment that P received after his request that D desist.

Page 11: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

3. P, a six-year old, was crossing a busy street without paying proper attention. D, a passer-by, saw a car approaching P at a speed that would have caused the car to collide with P before P could have reacted to a shouted caution. D ran across the street, scooping P up and saving P from a life-threatening situation. P was autistic and could not tolerate being touched. The unexpected contact caused P to become severely upset, and when D set P down on the sidewalk, P began to hit his head on the sidewalk, causing himself injury.

On these facts, is D liable for battery?

Page 12: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

A.No, because P’s injuries were self-inflicted.

Page 13: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

B.Yes, because D touched P without P’s consent, and the touching caused P injury.

Page 14: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

C. No, because D lacked the intent required for battery.

Page 15: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

D.Yes, because D had no legal responsibility to aid P.

Page 16: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

1. D and P were having an angry argument. During the altercation, D stepped into his office and came out with a gun, which he pointed at P, then 50 feet distant, in a threatening manner. P dove for the ground, at which point D returned to his office. The gun was not loaded.

On these facts, could a jury find D liable for assault?

Page 17: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

Page 18: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

B. Yes, because the angry argument had frightened P, who was concerned that D might initiate fisticuffs.

Page 19: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

C. No, if the jury finds that D had no purpose to frighten P.

Page 20: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

D. Yes, provided that the jury finds that P had no way of knowing whether the gun was loaded or not.

Page 21: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

2. P was driving his car. D had been tailgating P, but pulled up next to P at a traffic light, rolled down his window, and began shaking his fist and cursing at P. P’s doors were locked, but he could hear D and see D’s contorted face. When the light turned green, D pulled away more quickly than P and, while the rear of D’s car was even with the front of P’s, briefly swung the steering wheel to the right. The cars did not touch, but P, alarmed, steered his car sharply to the right, running off the street onto an adjacent lawn.

On these facts, could a jury find D liable for assault?

Page 22: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

A. No, if the jury finds that D had no intention to enter P’s lane of traffic.

Page 23: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

B. Yes, because P’s car ran off the road.

Page 24: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

C. No, because the vehicles never came into contact.

Page 25: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

D.Yes, because D’s actions were substantially certain to cause P to fear an imminent collision.

Page 26: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

3. D was on his way to the corner store when he encountered P on the sidewalk. D and P hated each other, and they got into a heated argument. D said to P, “If you’re still here after I come back, I’m going to beat you to a pulp.

On these facts, is there an assault?

Page 27: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

A.No, unless D made some gesture indicating his firmness of purpose.

Page 28: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

B.Yes, because D threatened imminent, unconsented-to physical contact.

Page 29: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

C. No, because D’s statement was conditional and related to a future event.

Page 30: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

D.Yes, provided D’s conduct frightened P and caused him to flee.

Page 31: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

1. P was traveling from Westchester County Airport to San Francisco. Because there are no direct flights from Westchester to anywhere at all, P’s itinerary called for him to change planes at Chicago’s O’Hare airport. P was an obstinate passenger and continuously challenged the flight attendants’ authority and resisted obeying directions. When the flight arrived in Chicago, airline officials told P that they would not permit him to board his connecting flight to San Francisco or, indeed, to board any flight. P, having only his airline ticket and $10.00, was unable to get transportation for five hours until his cousin from St. Louis drove to pick him up.

On these facts, is there false imprisonment by the airline?

Page 32: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

A. Yes, because P was unable to leave the airport for five hours.

Page 33: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

B. No, because P was not restrained in a bounded area.

Page 34: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

C. Yes, because the airline breached its contract of carriage with plaintiff.

Page 35: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

D. No, because it was P’s own fault that the airline would not transport him further.

Page 36: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

2. D, emerging from a local grocery store, saw P, a teenager, placing leaflets on car windshields, including D’s. D accosted P, grabbing him by the arm, and demanded that P return to D’s car and remove the leaflet. P struggled, but was unable to break D’s grip. D berated P for about a minute and then released him.

On these facts, is there false imprisonment?

Page 37: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

A. No, because an outdoor parking lot is not a bounded area.

Page 38: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

B. Yes, because D committed a battery.

Page 39: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

C. No, because there was no substantial confinement.

Page 40: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

D. Yes, because P was unable to break D’s grip.

Page 41: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

3. P’s 15-day sentence for shoplifting was up. State law requires jailers to release prisoners at noon on the last day of confinement. On this day, the jailer was interrogating a suspect in a murder case and did not open P’s cell door until 1 p.m.

On these facts, is there false imprisonment?

Page 42: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

A. Yes, because the jailer had an obligation to release P at the appointed time.

Page 43: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

B. No, provided that the jailer was not the official who originally confined P.

Page 44: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

C. Yes, provided that P suffered physical injury or economic loss because of the delay.

Page 45: A.No, because P suffered no physical injury.

D. No, because P was confined pursuant to judicial order.