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Contract and Tort Law for Computer Scientists

Contract and Tort Law for Computer Scientists. Christian S. Tacit, Barrister & Solicitor Tel: 613-599-5345 Email: ctacit@tacitlaw.com. Canadian Systems of Law. There are two systems of law that operate in Canada – Common Law and Civil Law

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Contract and Tort Law for Computer Scientists

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  1. Contract and Tort Law for Computer Scientists Christian S. Tacit, Barrister & Solicitor Tel: 613-599-5345 Email: ctacit@tacitlaw.com

  2. Canadian Systems of Law • There are two systems of law that operate in Canada – Common Law and Civil Law • Common Law – operates in all Canadian Provinces and territories other than Quebec and is based on the British approach to law • Civil Law – operates in Quebec and is based on the European continental approach to law

  3. The Common Law System • “Judge made” law – legal principles develop incrementally through successive cases • In modern society many areas of the law are codified into statute, rather than just being left to develop purely through case law, but even the interpretation of those statutes develops incrementally based on the case law • Statutes are also used to alter the common law where it is found not to meet current social norms

  4. The Civil Law System • The Quebec Civil Law system is based on the French legal tradition • The main source of the law is the Quebec Civil Code and takes precedence over interpretations arising out of individual cases

  5. Civil Law as a Type of Law The term “civil law” is also used to distinguish all areas of the law other than criminal law

  6. Areas of Law of Potential Professional Liability for Computer Scientists • Contract Law • Tort Law

  7. What is a Contract? • A contract is an exchange of promises between two or more parties to do, or refrain from doing, an act which is enforceable in a court of law • A contract is a binding legal agreement • The law provides remedies for breaches of contracts

  8. Elements of a Contract • Offer and acceptance • Consideration • An intention to create legal relations • Legal capacity • Legality • Formalities

  9. Offer and acceptance • One party must make an offer and the other party must accept that exact offer for a contract to be formed • The evidence on which contract formation is assessed is objective (i.e., would a reasonable person conclude that an offer and matching acceptance had occurred?) • Some contracts can be oral and others can not

  10. Consideration • The price of the promise – both parties to a contract must bring something to the bargain • Can be either conferring an advantage on another party or incurring some kind of inconvenience or detriment towards oneself • A common law requirement • Consideration must be real, but need not be adequate • Consideration must not be from the past

  11. Intention to be Legally Bound • There is a presumption for commercial agreements that parties intend to be legally bound (unless the agreement says otherwise) • Some types of agreements are unenforceable as a matter of public policy • Privity of contract – typically it is only the parties to a contract who can enforce it

  12. Legal Capacity Persons contracting must not be under a legal disability, such as being minors or being adults who are mentally incapacitated

  13. Legality In order to be enforceable, the purpose of a contract cannot be illegal or against public policy

  14. Formalities and writing • Most contracts can be formed orally, but some could not • For example: • Contracts in consideration of marriage • Contracts which cannot be performed within one year • Contracts for the transfer of an interest in land • Contracts by the executor of a will to pay a debt of the estate with their own money • Contracts for the sale of goods above a certain value • Contracts in which one party becomes a surety (acts as guarantor) for another party's debt or other obligation • Various jurisdictions have changed some of these rules

  15. Elements of a Compensable Breach of Contract • Existence of a contract • Breach of the contract • Damages to the plaintiff caused by the breach • Damages resulting from the breach were foreseeable at the time that the contract was made

  16. Defences to Claim of Breach of Contract • No contract • No breach – either no actual breach occurred or a breach occurred but liability is limited by a disclaimer clause • Limitation period has expired • Breach did not result in damages • Damages not foreseeable at time contract was made

  17. Objective of Damages for Breach of Contract To restore the plaintiff to the position he or she would have been in if the contract had been performed

  18. Damage Awards for Breach of Contract • General damages – compensation for actual losses suffered that flow from the breach and were in the contemplation of the parties when the contract was formed • Consequential damages – compensation for damages that although not naturally flowing from a breach, were within the contemplation of the parties when the contract is formed (e.g., economic harm) • Aggravated damages – awarded for the manner in which the contract was breached causing additional harm (e.g., contract breach occurs in manner that causes mental distress) • Punitive damages – awarded to punish certain types of behaviour (e.g., fraud or bad faith) • Plaintiffs have a duty to mitigate their damages

  19. Contractual Determination of Damages • Liquidated damages are a pre-estimate of loss agreed in a contract should the contract be breached • A penalty clause that seeks to deter breaches by requiring the payment of a steep penalty in the event of a breach where the amount of the penalty does not constitute a genuine pre-estimate of damages will not be enforced, even if it is called a liquidated damages clause

  20. Definition and Purpose of Tort Law • A tort is a civil wrong other than a breach of contract • Tort law defines what constitutes a legal injury and establishes the circumstances under which one person may be held responsible (i.e., liable) for another’s injury

  21. Categories of Torts • Intentional torts – torts against the person (assault, battery, false imprisonment, intentional infliction of mental suffering, malicious prosecution, libel and slander, and fraud) and property torts (trespass to property, trespass to chattels and conversion) • Negligence – covers the full scope of human activity (e.g., product liability, “slip and fall”, negligent misrepresentation, professional negligence, etc.) • Strict liability torts – nuisance

  22. The Evolution of Tort Law • Tort law has evolved over time based on case law • Additional torts have also been created by statutes (e.g., occupiers liability, competition law) • Perceived failures of the common law to address the needs of society through tort law have led to additional statutory reforms (e.g., workers’ compensation and negligence legislation)

  23. Elements of a Negligence Claim • Duty of care owed by defendant to the plaintiff according to the proximity (i.e., “neighbour”) principle • Breach of the duty of care by a failure to meet the required standard of care, which is that of the reasonable person in the circumstances • Causal link between the defendant’s act or omission and the plaintiff’s loss (i.e., damages) • Damages were reasonably foreseeable at the time of the breach

  24. The Duty and Standard of Care Owed by Professionals Professionals have a duty to exercise the skill, care and diligence that may reasonably be expected of a person (i.e., a professional person in a particular discipline) of ordinary competence, measured by the professional standards of the time

  25. Negligence and Economic Harm • Negligence can involve compensable harm that is purely economic in nature • This is often, though not exclusively, the situation in cases involving negligent misrepresentation

  26. Defences to Negligence Claims • No duty of care owed – the duty of care can only arise in circumstances involving reasonably foreseeable harm and proximity sufficient to establish a duty of care and where there are no policy reasons that would negate the establishment of the duty of care • No breach of the standard of care • No damages were caused by a breach of the standard of care • Damages were not reasonably foreseeable • Limitation period has expired

  27. Elements of Negligent Misrepresentation • Duty of care exists based on a special relationship (e.g., professional person and lay person who may reasonably rely on the professional person’s professional expertise) • Professional person makes representation that is untrue, inaccurate or misleading • The representation is made negligently • Person receiving the representation relies on it in a reasonable manner • The reliance is detrimental and damages result

  28. Defences to Claims for Negligent Misrepresentation • No duty of care is owed – (e.g., plaintiff is not a member of the class of individuals that professional knew would rely on the misrepresentation) • Plaintiff’s reliance is not reasonable (e.g., the representation was part of a discussion and not a formal opinion or the professional limited liability through a disclaimer clause) • Professional’s negligent misrepresentation did not cause damages • Limitation period has expired

  29. Objective of Damages for Commission of Tort To restore the plaintiff to the position he or she would have been in if the tort had not been committed

  30. Damage Awards for Commission of Tort • General damages – compensation for non-monetary loss or harm suffered as a result of the commission of the tort that was foreseeable when the tort was committed (e.g., pain and suffering, mental distress or damage to reputation) • Special damages – compensation for the quantifiable monetary losses suffered by the plaintiff that include direct losses (such as amounts the plaintiff had to spend to try to mitigate problems), consequential or economic losses (such as lost profits in a business), and punitive damages, where applicable • Punitive damages – awarded to punish certain types of behaviour (e.g., fraud or bad faith) • Plaintiffs have a duty to mitigate their damages

  31. Vicarious Liability • In certain cases, one person can be liable for the harm cause by another • One example relevant to professional liability is an employer’s liability for the actions or omissions of its employees

  32. Limitation Period – Prior to 2004 • For claims arising before January 1, 2004, various limitation periods applied

  33. Limitation Period – After 2003 • Subject to certain exceptions set out in the Limitations Act, 2002 (Ontario), a proceeding shall not be commenced after the second anniversary of the day on which a claim was discovered • Generally speaking a claim is discovered when the claimant knew there was damage, or when a reasonable person ought to have known there was damage • There is also an absolute limitation period that applies after the 15th anniversary of the day on which the act or omission on which the claim is based takes place

  34. The Role of Insurance • Professional liability insurance policies are available for professionals • Occurrence policies cover incidents that take place during the policy term, whereas claims made policies cover claims made during the policy term • The scope of indemnification by the insurer is described in the policy and it may or may not include legal fees • Such policies are subject to specified deductibles and exclusions

  35. The Role of Insurance (continued) Some typical exclusions include: • Errors and omissions outside the insured party’s area of professional practice • Taking on an unreasonable risk relative to the responsibility that the common law normally imposes on a contract

  36. The Role of Insurance (continued) An insured party owes the following duties to its insurer: • To complete the insurer’s insurance application fully and honestly • To notify the insurer immediately when a claim is made against the insured party • To co-operate fully with the insurer in the investigation and resolution of the claim

  37. THANK YOU!

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