4 resultados para Judgment
Resumo:
This presentation is about the law of professional negligence as it applies to sport. The presentation asks, paradoxically, if the skills you have as a sports coach or official might ever, on not being reasonably applied, leave you or your sport vulnerable to a claim in negligence. To inform this debate, the recent judgment in Bartlett v English Cricket Board Association of Cricket Officials (unreported, County Court (Birmingham), 27 August 2015) is critically considered. Arguably, this case is indicative of the extension of tortious liability in the UK, most notably, for officials and coaches in the context of amateur sport, essentially requiring HHJ Lopez to determine what might be termed the ‘professional liability of an amateur’.
Resumo:
Discusses the Supreme Court judgment in Woolway (Valuation Officer) v Mazars LLP on whether two non-contiguous floors in an office block that were under common occupation could be treated as a single "hereditament" for non-domestic rating purposes. Outlines the three broad principles identified by the court as the test for defining a hereditament. Considers the practical implications of this new framework, especially for valuation officers.
Resumo:
This paper traces transformations of mental labour and its distribution between human and machine from Mr Micawber's parody of arithmetical calculation (result happiness) in the mid-19th century to the late 20th century judgment of the Supreme Court of United States in Feist v. Rural (1991), concerned with copyright in databases.