"The virtual universal acceptance of this work ... is the surest testimony to the great worth of this textbook."
[2001] 01 The Irish Judicial Studies Journal, review of the third edition, Mr Justice Iarflaith O'Neill
First published in 1980, McMahon and Binchy on the Law of Torts has long been a cornerstone work in Irish law. The Fifth Edition remains an essential resource for both practitioners and students.
This peerless examination of Irish tort law has been extensively revised and analyses the significance of such decisions as:
Nolan v Wirenski [2016] IECA 56 (damages)
Cantrell v Allied Irish Banks plc [2020] IESC 71 (limitations)
Ruffley v Board of Management of St Anne's School [2017] IESC 33 (workplace bullying)
Cromane Seafoods Ltd v Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Food [2016] IESC 6 (legitimate expectation)
Whelan v Allied Irish Banks Ltd [2014] IESC 3 (duty of care)
University College Cork v Electricity Supply Board [2020] IESC 38 (negligence)
Key legislation is also examined, such as:
Data Protection Act 2018
Protected Disclosures Act 2014
Protected Disclosures (Amendment) Act 2022
Personal Injuries Resolution Board Act 2022
Consumer Rights Act 2022
Courts and Civil Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2023
This title is included in Bloomsbury Professional's Irish Civil Litigation online service.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
McMahon and Binchy remains the textbook of choice for litigators. The authors ... remain brilliant examples of the academics who emerged from a new generation of lawyers. -- Michael Kealey * Gazette, review of 4th edition * ... practitioners frequently forego opening the relevant authorities, being content to quote the relevant passages from McMahon and Binchy and judges have rarely if ever resisted. The virtual universal acceptance of this work ... is the surest testimony to the great worth of this text book. -- Mr Justice Iarflaith O'Neill * [2001] 01 The Irish Judicial Studies Journal, review of the third edition *
Auflage
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Zielgruppe
Maße
Höhe: 248 mm
Breite: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-5265-2986-2 (9781526529862)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Bryan McMahon, former judge of the High Court, received his BCL and LLB degrees from University College Dublin before accepting a fellowship to Harvard Law School, where he was awarded the LLM in 1965. Mr Justice McMahon was subsequently Professor of Law and Head of the Department of Law in University College Cork for 20 years. In 1987, he went into private legal practice, while holding a part-time professorship at University College Galway. In 1999 he was appointed to the Bench as a Judge of the Circuit Court and in 2007 to the High Court, from which he retired in April 2011. Mr Justice McMahon has co-authored many legal texts, including Law of Torts; casebook in Irish Law of Torts; European Community law in Ireland, etc. Mr Justice McMahon has chaired, at the request of the government, The National Crime Forum, the National Archives Advisory Council, and Referendums for the Amendment of the Constitution. He has lectured extensively in Europe and USA on a variety of legal topics. He is currently Chair of the Governing Body of University College Cork, and a former Chairman of the Abbey Theatre, Ireland's national theatre. He was awarded an LL.D (honoris causa) by University College, Dublin in 2012.
William Binchy BA BCL LLM (NUI) MA (DUBL) FTCD (1995), Barrister-at-Law.
William Binchy is a practising barrister. He was Regius Professor of Laws at Trinity College, Dublin from 1992 to 2012 and continues to lecture on its Master of Laws Degree programme. He was formerly a special legal adviser on family law reform to the Irish Department of Justice and Research Counsellor to the Law Reform Commission. He was a Commissioner with the Irish Human Rights Commission for two terms, from 2000 to 2011.
He was Visiting Fellow at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge (Michaelmas Term 2002) and Visiting Fellow at the Institute of European and Comparative Law, Oxford (June 2011). He has authored, co-authored and co-edited books on private international law, torts and family law, and acts as expert witness in private international law in litigation throughout Europe.
He has represented Ireland at the Hague Conference on Private International Law on the themes of marriage and inter-country adoption and the Irish Human Rights Commission at the United Nations during the formulation of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. He was a member of the Hederman Committee on the Offences Against the State Acts.
He has acted as consultant to the Irish Department of Foreign Affairs in relation to the Timor-Leste judicial system and is editor of a book on comparative aspects of the Timorese legal system. He has organised an annual workshop at Trinity College Dublin for African Chief Justices and senior judiciary and has co-edited books on comparative aspects of the legal systems of South Africa, Tanzania and Botswana.
Autor*in
University of Cork, Ireland
Barrister-at-Law, Ireland
1 Overview of the Law of Torts
2 Causation
3 Remoteness
4 Concurrent Wrongdoers: Joint and Several Tortfeasors
5 Negligence
6 The Duty of Care
7 The Standard of Care
8 Affirmative Duties
9 Proof of Negligence
10 Negligence and Economic Loss
11 Manufacturers' and Producers' Liability for Defective Products
12 Occupiers' Liability
13 Liability of Vendors, Lessors and Builders for Quality and Fitness of Premises
14 Professional Negligence
15 Negligence on the Roads
16 Negligent Care of Children
17 Negligently Inflicted Psychiatric Damage
18 Employers' Liability
19 Public Authorities
20 Defences
21 Statutory Duties and Rights
22 Trespass to the Person
23 Trespass to Land
24 Nuisance
25 The Rule in Rylands v Fletcher
26 Liability for Fire
27 Liability for Injuries caused by Animals
28 Trespass to Goods
29 Detinue
30 Conversion
31 Passing Off
32 Torts Affecting Business Relations
33 Torts Affecting Family Relations
34 Defamation
35 Deceit and Injurious Falsehood
36 Misuse of Process
37 The Right to Privacy
38 Liability of the State
39 Corporations, Partnerships, Unincorporated Bodies and Trade Unions
40 Minors and Mentally Ill Persons
41 Survival of Actions on Death
42 Fatal Injuries
43 Vicarious Liability
44 Damages
45 Injunctions
46 Limitations