A Tort is the French word for a "wrong." A tort is a civil wrong. A civil wrong is involves a breach of a duty owed to someone else, as opposed to criminal wrongdoing which involves a breach of a duty owed to society. Torts are civil wrongs other than breaches of contract and certain equitable wrongs.

The law of torts law is a remainder category of civil wrongs once other wrongs are excluded. It covers a grab bag of legal cases comprising such disparate topics as auto accidents, false imprisonment, slander and libel, product liability (such as defectively designed consumer products), and environmental pollution (toxic torts).

A person who suffers legal damage may be able to use tort law to receive damages (usually monetary compensation) from someone who is responsible or liable for those injuries. Generally speaking, tort law defines what is a legal injury and what is not. A person may be held liable (responsible to pay) for another's injury caused by them. torts can be classified in a number of different ways, one is to distinguish according to degree of fault, so that there are intentional torts, negligent torts, and strict liability torts.

For example, Alice throws a ball and accidentally hits Brenda in the eye. Brenda may sue Alice for losses occasioned by the accident (such as the cost of medical treatment and lost pay due to missing work), as well as for punitive damages. Whether or not Brenda wins her lawsuit depends on whether she can prove Alice engaged in tortious conduct. Here, Brenda would try to prove that Alice had a responsibility not to harm people and failed to exercise the responsibility which a reasonable person would render in throwing the ball. This is an example of the negligence tort.

One of the main topics within liability for negligence is determining the standard of care—a legal phrase that means deciding between when conduct is or is not of the kind which may give rise to a wrong. Put another way, the main issue is whether a person must cope with the loss suffered on his or her own, or whether the loss will be compensated (paid for) by another party.

In much of the Western world, the measure of tort liability is negligence. If the injured party cannot prove that the person believed to have caused the injury acted with negligence (lack of reasonable care), at the very least, tort law will not compensate (pay) the victim. However, tort law also recognizes intentional (purposeful) torts and strict liability torts, which apply when the person accused of committing the tort satisfied certain standards of intent (meaning) and/or performed certain types of conduct.

In tort law, injury is defined broadly. Injury does not just mean a physical injury, such as where Brenda was struck by a ball. Injuries in tort law reflect any invasion of any number of individual interests. This includes interests recognized in other areas of law, such as property rights. Actions for nuisance (annoying or hurting) and trespass (unlawful entering) of land can arise from interfering with rights in real property. Conversion law and trespass to chattels (personal property) can protect interference with movable property. Interests in prospective (possible future) economic advantages from signed agreements can also be injured and become the subject of tort actions. A number of situations caused by parties in a contractual (written agreement) relationship may still be tort rather than contract claims, such as breach of duties.

Tort law may also be used to compensate (pay) for injuries to a number of other individual interests that are not recognized in property or contract law. This includes an interest in freedom from emotional distress, privacy interests, and reputation. These are protected by a number of torts such as Intentional infliction of emotional distress, privacy torts, and defamation/slander (destruction of a reputation). Defamation and privacy torts may, for example, allow a celebrity to sue a newspaper for publishing an untrue and harmful statement about him. Other protected interests include freedom of movement, protected by the intentional tort of false imprisonment which is when you are arrested without cause.

The equivalent of tort in civil law jurisdictions is delict. The law of torts can be categorised as part of the law of obligations (duties), but unlike voluntarily assumed obligations (such as those of contract, or trust), the duties imposed by the law of torts apply to all those subject to the relevant jurisdiction. To behave in tortious manner is to harm another's rights, body, property or other rights. One who commits a tortious act is called a tortfeasor.

From Wikipedia under the GNU Free Documentation License
Sat Jul 31 17:41:10 2010

How do I write a tort notice in Indiana?
Q. I need to know how to set up a tort notice to file with our local school corporation for an injury my daughter recieved.
Asked by BKV - Sat May 13 19:48:54 2006 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments

A. find a 'we the people store' and you'll get all the info u need
Answered by thepenpal - Sat May 13 20:08:24 2006

The President in his new conference speaks about duplicated tests by doctors, why isn't he talking about TORT?
Q. Reform? That's why doctors each get their own tests, they want to have their own paperwork and not someone else's mistake. There is the fear that they will be sued using someunsupportedd test results. Shouldn't he be talking about TORT Reform?
Asked by Banker - Wed Jul 22 20:34:02 2009 - - 4 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Tort reform is the larger part of the answer. I was in healthcare a long time and hospitals and doctors are sued by scum and it is settled out of court because it is cheaper than going to court and fighting it and for the doctor to take off from treating the patient. This is also a reason for the unnecessary tests, a lawyer will come along and second guess a physician and with his hind sight say , "doctor would it have been standard to have done test xyz" the doctor is nailed even if it was not standard. tort reform.
Answered by American Woman - Wed Jul 22 21:05:46 2009

Tort reform supporters, why does Texas have the one of the highest medical costs in the nation?
Q. Texas is one of a few states that tried medical malpractice reform, and they still have hugely more expensive health care costs than all northeastern states. Why has it failed them? And why aren't you pushing for a private market solution? Why in this case is legal reform necessary when you believe it is the cause of all evils in all other cases?
Asked by i_was_myself - Sun Nov 22 10:04:00 2009 - - 8 Answers - 0 Comments

A. To answer your question, there must be a way to blame it on the Democrats. I am always amazed how many Americans seem not to be aware about the real healthcare issues relying instead on FOX and other sources to spread lies about the healthcare system of the USA and those abroad. I mean, if healthcare in nations with universal coverage is so bad, why do they keep it? Obama wants to make insurance more available to all and change the system so that it gives the American people value for money [1]. He also wants change so that the insurance companies find it harder to get out of paying for treatment. The system he is proposing looks similar to that which works in Taiwan where private companies are involved in providing healthcare [2]. … [cont.]
Answered by The Patriot - Sun Nov 22 16:22:31 2009

From Yahoo Answer Search: "Tort"
Wed Jul 21 13:01:15 2010

Bill seeks to protect volunteer doctors - DOTmed.com
dotmed.com
Bill seeks to protect volunteer doctors - DOTmed.com
Fri, 30 Jul 2010 04:02:33 GMT+00:00
DOTmed.com Currently, employees at community health centers and volunteers at free clinics are covered under the Federal Tort Claims Act. But volunteers at federally ... Thailand: New Med Mal Rules Law Professor Blogs Network (blog)
City Council in other action from July 26, 2010 - Sioux City Journal
siouxcityjournal.com
City Council in other action from July 26, 2010 - Sioux City Journal
Wed, 28 Jul 2010 05:03:33 GMT+00:00
Sioux City Journal Tort Claim: Approved a tort claim settlement of $16000 to Hue Lap Tran in connection with an Aug. 14, 2009, accident when a police cruiser rear-ended his ...
ZOCCA v. ZOCCA - Leagle.com
leagle.com
ZOCCA v. ZOCCA - Leagle.com
Fri, 30 Jul 2010 16:29:43 GMT+00:00
Leagle.com Such a setoff would have no application to Raffaele's judgment here, for court costs incurred in successfully defeating Giovanni's tort claims against him. ...

From Google News Search: "Tort"
Fri Jul 30 14:21:59 2010

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librepensee12.free.fr
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le miroir aux insectes une operation pas aussi banale qu il semble au premier abord La LP 12 en effet ne raccroche pas un wagon de plus au train des expos conference lectures colloque de

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From Yahoo Image Search: "Tort"
Sat Jul 10 17:19:46 2010

Cal Tort in Sterling Free Chips & Queso or Salsa Tonight 7-9pm
frugalfriends.wordpress.com
Cal Tort in Sterling Free Chips & Queso or Salsa Tonight 7-9pm

frugalfriends

Mon, 26 Jul 2010 20:44:42 GM

Cal . Tort. in Sterling Free Chips & Queso or Salsa Tonight 7-9pm. Jump to Comments. Tonight the California Tortilla in Dulles, VA (located at 22000 Dulles Retail Plaza, Suite 156, Dulles, VA 20166) will be hosting the Silent Critics ...

Interview with house music DJ, producer David Tort (Includes ...
digitaljournal.com
Interview with house music DJ, producer David Tort (Includes ...

unknown

Mon, 05 Jul 2010 19:23:25 GM

Spaniard David . Tort. is a popular DJ and producer, who has created hits such Changes , Work It Out , Lost in Acid , as well as remixes for David Guetta, Tiesto and Nelly Furtado.

Sarah Palin Reassures Rich Folks About Alaska's Tort Liability ...
crooksandliars.com
Sarah Palin Reassures Rich Folks About Alaska's Tort Liability ...

karoli

Sat, 05 Jun 2010 22:00:00 GM

Well, here's a little treasure (PDF) from the Pacific Research Institute (aka right wing hatchery of the west). Sarah Palin has written the foreward for their ". Tort. Liability Index", where she brags about how "reformed" Alaska's tor.

From Google Blog Search: "Tort"
Thu Jul 29 11:55:06 2010