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Study Guide: FBLA Review: Tort Law (Negligence, Intentional Torts, Defenses)
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FBLA Review: Tort Law (Negligence, Intentional Torts, Defenses)

By Fatskills Exam Guides Team — the exam nerds behind 28,500+ quizzes and 2.1M practice questions across 500+ global exams.

⏱️ ~5 min read

FBLA – Tort Law (Negligence, Intentional Torts, Defenses)

What This Is

Tort law governs civil wrongs that cause harm to people or property, and it is a core component of the FBLA Business Law cluster. Understanding negligence, intentional torts, and the available defenses lets you evaluate liability for a company’s actions—whether it’s a cafeteria slip?and?fall, a faulty product, or a hostile?work?environment claim. Mastery of these concepts is essential for the FBLA exam because questions often ask you to identify the correct cause?of?action, apply the elements, and determine the appropriate remedy.


Key Terms & Formulas

  • Negligence – Failure to exercise reasonable care, resulting in injury; the most common business tort.
  • Duty of Care – Legal obligation to act as a reasonably prudent person would under similar circumstances (e.g., a store must keep aisles clear).
  • Breach – Violation of the duty of care; measured by the “reasonable person” standard.
  • Causation – Must prove both actual cause (“but?for” the defendant’s act) and proximate cause (foreseeable results).
  • Damages – Monetary compensation; Compensatory = Special Damages + General Damages.
  • Intentional Torts – Wrongful acts done on purpose (e.g., Assault, Battery, False Imprisonment, Defamation, Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress).
  • Defamation – Publication of a false statement that harms reputation; split into Libel (written) and Slander (spoken).
  • Strict Liability – Liability without fault for ultra?dangerous activities or defective products; the plaintiff need only prove injury and causation.
  • Affirmative DefensesComparative Negligence, Assumption of Risk, Consent, Statute of Limitations, and Illegality.
  • Comparative Negligence – Plaintiff’s fault reduces recovery; Modified Comparative Negligence bars recovery if plaintiff is ?50?% at fault (most states).
  • Res Ipsa Loquitur – “The thing speaks for itself”; allows inference of negligence when the instrumentality is under the defendant’s control and the injury is of a type that ordinarily does not occur without negligence.
  • Punitive Damages – Awarded to punish and deter especially reckless conduct; not available for ordinary negligence.

Step?by?Step / Process Flow

  1. Identify the Tort Category – Is the claim based on negligence, an intentional tort, or strict liability?
  2. Apply the Elements – For negligence: duty-breach-causation-damages. For intentional torts: intent + act + causation + damages.
  3. Check for Defenses – Evaluate comparative negligence, assumption of risk, consent, etc., and calculate any reduction in recovery.
  4. Determine the Remedy – Compute compensatory damages (special + general) and decide if punitive damages are available.
  5. Conclude Liability – State whether the business is liable, partially liable, or immune, and summarize the award.

Common Mistakes

  • Mistake: Treating “intent” as “knowledge” for intentional torts.
    Correction: Intent requires a purposeful desire to bring about the act; mere knowledge that harm might occur is insufficient.

  • Mistake: Forgetting the “proximate cause” element in negligence.
    Correction: Always ask whether the injury was a foreseeable result of the breach; remote or superseding causes break the chain.

  • Mistake: Applying punitive damages to ordinary negligence cases.
    Correction: Punitive damages are reserved for recklessness, malice, or fraud—never for simple carelessness.

  • Mistake: Over?looking the “but?for” test and substituting “substantial factor” in negligence.
    Correction: Use “but?for” for single?defendant cases; “substantial factor” is for multiple?defendant causation.

  • Mistake: Assuming comparative negligence automatically eliminates recovery.
    Correction: Only when the plaintiff’s fault reaches the statutory threshold (usually 50?% or 51?%) is recovery barred.


Exam Insights

  1. Distinguish Negligence vs. Intentional Torts – FBLA questions often present a fact pattern that could fit both; look for the presence of purposeful conduct.
  2. Res Ipsa Loquitur Traps – The doctrine only applies when the instrumentality was under the defendant’s exclusive control; a busy supermarket aisle may not qualify.
  3. Defamation Nuances – Remember the “public figure” standard (actual malice) and the “privilege” defenses (e.g., statements made in court).
  4. Comparative Negligence Percentages – Know the difference between “pure” (any fault reduces recovery) and “modified” (recovery barred at 50?% or 51?%).

Quick Check Questions

  1. A high?school cafeteria fails to mop a spill for 30 minutes. A student slips, breaks a wrist, and misses two weeks of school. Which tort elements are satisfied?
    Answer: Duty, breach, actual & proximate causation, and damages.
    Explanation: The school owed a duty of care to keep the floor safe; the breach (failure to mop) caused the injury, which is foreseeable and resulted in compensable damages.

  2. A rival business publishes a false statement that “XYZ Corp is filing for bankruptcy tomorrow.” XYZ sues for defamation. What defense is most likely to succeed?
    Answer: Truth (justification) if the statement is proven false.
    Explanation: Truth is an absolute defense to defamation; if XYZ can show the claim is false, liability is avoided.

  3. A customer is injured by a defective toaster sold by a retailer. The customer sues for negligence. Which doctrine is the strongest alternative claim?
    Answer: Strict liability (product liability).
    Explanation: The plaintiff need not prove negligence; merely showing the product was defective and caused injury triggers strict liability.


Last?Minute Cram Sheet (10 one?liners)

  1. Negligence = Duty?+?Breach?+?Causation?+?Damages.
  2. Res Ipsa Loquitur-“the thing speaks for itself” – only when defendant had exclusive control.
  3. Comparative negligence reduces recovery proportionally to plaintiff’s fault.
  4. Modified comparative negligence bars recovery at ?50?% (or 51?%) plaintiff fault.
  5. Intentional torts require purposeful conduct, not just knowledge.
  6. Defamation = false statement?+?publication?+?fault?+?damages; truth is a complete defense.
  7. Punitive damages = only for recklessness, malice, or fraud—never for ordinary negligence.
  8. Strict liability = liability without fault for ultra?dangerous activities or defective products.
  9. Assumption of risk = plaintiff voluntarily exposed to known danger; eliminates liability.
  10. Trap: Mixing “but?for” (single defendant) with “substantial factor” (multiple defendants) – use the correct causation test.