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Occupiers Liability in Tort
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 February 2016
Abstract
- Type
- Legislation
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Cambridge University Press and The Faculty of Law, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem 1971
References
1 England—Occupiers' Liability Act, 1957; Scotland—Occupiers' Liability (Scotland) Act, 1960; New-Zealand—Occupiers' Liability Act, 1962.
2 For extensive critical review of the doctrine, see Barak, A., “Liability of Occupier of Land in Torts” (Hebrew), Studies in Law in Memory of Abraham Rosenthal (1964), 104Google Scholar, and bibliography there.
3 International Lawyers' Convention in Israel, 1959 (1959), p. 59.
4 (1944) P.G., Suppl. 1, p. 129.
5 The London Society for Promoting Chrisianity among the Jews v. Orr (1947) A.L.R. 364.
6 The Laws of Palestine (Drayton) vol. III, (English) 2569, 2580.
7 Ibid., 368.
8 See Denning, , The Changing Law (1953) p. 69.Google Scholar
9 Barak, op. cit., 158–9.
10 Rotenstreich v. A.G. (1953) 7 P.D. 58; A.G. v. Berkovitz (1957) 11 P.D. 206. Tracing the strange process of adoption is interesting in itself. In Rotenstreich the triple distinction was, correctly, referred to and applied in respect of the degree of negligence necessary for conviction under sec. 218 of the Criminal Code Ordinance, 1936 (causing death through negligence). Zalach v. Sireni (1956) 10 P.D. 1317, relying on Rotenstreich, unwarrantedly applied it to civil liability. In Berkovitz—an appeal against judgment of a District Court which analysed sec. 50 (2) and rejected the doctrine in favour of the general principle of negligence—the application of this doctrine was finally asserted.
11 (1962) 16 P.D. 1933, 1939.
12 Breslinger v. Rubinstein (1965) (III) 18 P.D. 215. See also Farkash v. Uni and Rashut Ha'Pituach v. Koen (1964) 17 P.D. 1098.
13 Particularly Barak's op. cit., p. 1, n. 2.
14 Farkash v. Uni, ubi supra 1939.
15 See especially Barak, A., “Legislative Regulation of the Liability of the Occupier of Land”, (1970) 2 Mishpatim 129, 143 ff.Google Scholar, 150 and bibliography cited there.
16 This is also the answer to a further objection (ibid., 149) that sec. 37 requires no connection between the offensive behaviour of the trespasser and the causation of the injury.
17 Ibid., 155, 158.
18 See ibid., 151.
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