Taking tort seriously

Author:

Smith Stephen A1

Affiliation:

1. James McGill Professor, Faculty of Law, McGill University

Abstract

In Recognizing Wrongs, John Goldberg and Benjamin Zipursky argue that tort law is just what ‘it looks to be’ – and that what it looks to be is a law of wrongs and recourse. It is not necessary, in their view, to turn to economics, sociology, philosophy, or any other discipline to understand tort law: it is sufficient to take seriously judges’ reasons for why they decide tort cases as they do. In advancing this argument, Goldberg and Zipursky seek to distinguish themselves from two influential camps in contemporary tort theory: (a) theories that argue that tort law’s rights are ‘rights’ in only a nominal sense and (b) theories that accept that tort law’s rights are genuine but defend those rights by invoking a comprehensive moral theory. In this review essay, I argue that Goldberg and Zipursky largely succeed in their ambitions. The qualifications that I explore are twofold. First, certain tort remedies are not recourse for wrongs, even at the level of appearances. Second, it is not easy to construct a theory of tort law while sticking as close to tort law’s appearances as Goldberg and Zipursky purport to stick. The theory that Goldberg and Zipursky ultimately defend relies on certain philosophic ideas (though it does not rely on a comprehensive moral theory); it is also complex, multilayered, and skeletal in its account of tort law’s primary duties and, thus, arguably less of a ‘theory of tort law’ than those offered by their competitors (though I argue that this feature is a virtue of their account).

Publisher

University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress)

Subject

Law,Sociology and Political Science

Reference41 articles.

1. The sceptics have always been less influential outside of North America. And they have even less influence in civil law faculties.

2. Ernest Weinrib, The Idea of Private Law (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1995) [Weinrib, Idea of Private Law].

3. The best known of whom are either employed by, or studied at, the University of Toronto: Alan Beever, A Theory of Tort Liability (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2016) [Beever, Theory of Tort Liability]; Alan Brudner, with Jennifer M Nadler, The Unity of the Common Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013); Arthur Ripstein, Private Wrongs (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2016) [Ripstein, Private Wrongs].

4. See text accompanying notes 15–19 below.

5. Beever, Theory of Tort Liability, supra note 3; Ripstein, Private Wrongs, supra note 3.

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