If there is direct evidence of what caused the damage, the courts will examine this, rather than inferring the cause of the damage.
Answer
Barkway v South Wales Transport Co Ltd [1950] 1 All ER 392
Tags
#breach #negligence #tort
Question
If there is direct evidence of what caused the damage, the courts will examine this, rather than inferring the cause of the damage.
Answer
?
Tags
#breach #negligence #tort
Question
If there is direct evidence of what caused the damage, the courts will examine this, rather than inferring the cause of the damage.
Answer
Barkway v South Wales Transport Co Ltd [1950] 1 All ER 392
If you want to change selection, open original toplevel document below and click on "Move attachment"
Parent (intermediate) annotation
Open it If there is direct evidence of what caused the damage, the courts will examine this, rather than inferring the cause of the damage. (See Barkway v South Wales Transport Co Ltd [1950] 1 All ER 392).
Original toplevel document (pdf)
cannot see any pdfs
Summary
status
not learned
measured difficulty
37% [default]
last interval [days]
repetition number in this series
0
memorised on
scheduled repetition
scheduled repetition interval
last repetition or drill
Details
No repetitions
Discussion
Do you want to join discussion? Click here to log in or create user.