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  2. Duty (criminal law) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duty_(criminal_law)

    Duty (criminal law), is an obligation to act under which failure to act (), results in criminal liability.Such a duty may arise by a person's status in relation to another, by statute, by contract, by voluntarily acting so as to isolate someone from help by others, and by creating a danger.

  3. Duty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duty

    A sense-of-duty can also come from a need to fulfill familial pressures and desires. This is typically seen in a militaristic/patriotic way. [1] Cicero, an early Roman philosopher who discusses duty in his work "On Duties", suggests that duties can come from four different sources: [2] as a result of being a human

  4. Legal liability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_liability

    Legal liability concerns both civil law and criminal law and can arise from various areas of law, such as contracts, torts, taxes, or fines given by government agencies. The claimant is the one who seeks to establish, or prove, liability.

  5. Law of obligations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_obligations

    The specific rights and duties are referred to as obligations, and this area of law deals with their creation, effects and extinction. An obligation is a legal bond (vinculum iuris) by which one or more parties (obligants) are bound to act or refrain from acting.

  6. Duty of care - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duty_of_care

    At common law, duties were formerly limited to those with whom one was in privity one way or another, as exemplified by cases like Winterbottom v. Wright (1842). In the early 20th century, judges began to recognize that the cold realities of the Second Industrial Revolution (in which end users were frequently several parties removed from the original manufacturer) implied that enforcing the ...

  7. Omission (law) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omission_(law)

    In law, an omission is a failure to act, which generally attracts different legal consequences from positive conduct. In the criminal law, an omission will constitute an actus reus and give rise to liability only when the law imposes a duty to act and the defendant is in breach of that duty.

  8. Vicarious liability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vicarious_liability

    Vicarious liability is a form of a strict, secondary liability that arises under the common law doctrine of agency, respondeat superior, the responsibility of the superior for the acts of their subordinate or, in a broader sense, the responsibility of any third party that had the "right, ability, or duty to control" the activities of a violator.

  9. Consideration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consideration

    A party that already has a legal duty to provide money, an object, a service, or a forbearance, does not provide consideration when promising merely to uphold that duty. [7] [34] [35] [36] That legal duty can arise from law, or obligation under a previous contract.