The Tortious Liability of Statutory Bodies

A Comparative and Economic Analysis of Five Cases

Jean-Bernard Auby author Dagmar Coester-Waltjen author Simon Deakin author Basil S Markesinis author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:1st Nov '99

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The Tortious Liability of Statutory Bodies cover

In a number of important decisions such as Stovin v. Wise,X v. Bedfordshire, Barrett v. Enfield London Borough Council and others, English courts have been forced to grapple with the important issue of tortious liability of statutory bodies. Following the Hill decision, they opted for a wide non-liability rule on a variety of policy and economic efficiency grounds. Yet many of their arguments have been considered and rejected by both German and French courts when deciding factually equivalent situations. This study analyses five leading English cases in a comparative and economic way and questions the validity of their assumptions as well as their arguments in the light of the recent important decision of the Strasbourg Court of Human Rights in Osman v. UK. This thought-provoking book, written by two English academics from Oxford and Cambridge Universities, in collaboration with two leading authorities from the Universities of Paris and Munich, should provide food for thought for judges, practitioners, academics and students for years to come. This book will be essential reading for scholars and practitioners interested in public law, human rights, comparative methodology, and tort law.

Le sujet, d'une grande importance pratique presente egalement un vif interet theofique; il a meme conduit les auteurs a s'interroger sur la compatibilite - ou plutot l'incompatibilite - de ces decisions anglaises avec le Human Rights Act. Benedicte Fauvarque-Cosson Revue Internationale de droit Compare July 2001 Our judges would do well to read this illuminating study, and take to heart the words of Lord Bingham, the only English judge who would have allowed the Newham case to go ahead. It would require very potent considerations of public policy to override the rule of public policy which has first claim on the loyalty of law: that wrongs should be remedied. Clare Dyer The Guardian September 2002

ISBN: 9781841131245

Dimensions: 129mm x 194mm x 14mm

Weight: unknown

184 pages