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Page 1: Business Law Civil and Criminal Liability Class 1.

Business Law

Civil and Criminal Liability

Class 1

Page 2: Business Law Civil and Criminal Liability Class 1.

What is “Business Law”?Course topics• Torts and Crimes Relating to Businesses• Overview of Contract Law, including

Contracts for the Sale of Goods (UCC 2)• Overview of Agency and Laws Affecting

the Employment Relationship• Introduction to Business Forms• Overview of Property Law: Personal,

Intellectual (Copyright) & Real• Wills and Intestate Succession

Page 3: Business Law Civil and Criminal Liability Class 1.

Review of the Basics Sources of Law• Constitutions (federal/state)• Legislation (federal/state/local)• Judge-made law (federal/state)• Agency regulations (federal/ state)

Page 4: Business Law Civil and Criminal Liability Class 1.

Review of the Basics The Court System• The 3-tiered system• Trial courts• Intermediate court of appeals• Supreme Court

Page 5: Business Law Civil and Criminal Liability Class 1.

What Law Applies?Primary Authority• What is it?• Why is it necessary?

Secondary Authority• What is it?• Restatements• Uniform laws

Page 6: Business Law Civil and Criminal Liability Class 1.

Bedrock of Legal AnalysisThe prima facie case• Elements of the case

Defenses• The basic defenses

IRAC• Issue• Rule• Application of rule to facts• Conclusion

Page 7: Business Law Civil and Criminal Liability Class 1.

Personal Injury Actions By and Against

Business Entities

Law of TortsLaw of Torts

Page 8: Business Law Civil and Criminal Liability Class 1.

Intentional Torts• Defamation• Assault/Battery• False Imprisonment• Invasion of Privacy/Commercial

Exploitation• Tort of Outrage• Fraud• Interference with contractual

relationship

Page 9: Business Law Civil and Criminal Liability Class 1.

Defamation• Statement• That is false• Published• Causes Injury

Defense: TRUTH

Page 10: Business Law Civil and Criminal Liability Class 1.

Assault• Intentional Act that• Creates reasonable

apprehension of• Immediate harmful

or offensive physical contact

Battery• An intentional act

that• Creates a harmful or

offensive contact

Defenses: Self Defense, Consent

Page 11: Business Law Civil and Criminal Liability Class 1.

False Imprisonment• An intentional act that• Causes actual, unlawful confinement

or restraint• Through force or threat of force• Against the will of the detainee

Defenses: Detention was justified and reasonable; Consent

Page 12: Business Law Civil and Criminal Liability Class 1.

Invasion of Privacy/Commercial Exploitation(1)Disclosure of

personal information;

(2)Intrusion into another’s private affairs;

(3)Appropriation of the likeness of another;

(4)Putting someone in a false light

www.youtube.com/watch?v=lEXZ2hfD3bU

Page 13: Business Law Civil and Criminal Liability Class 1.

Tort of Outrage• Intentional infliction of emotional

distress:– An intentional act that– Is extreme and outrageous– And causes– Severe emotional distress

Page 14: Business Law Civil and Criminal Liability Class 1.

Tobacco - Fraud

•False statement•As to existing fact•Intent to deceive•Justifiable reliance•Injury

Page 15: Business Law Civil and Criminal Liability Class 1.

Interference with Contracts

• Existence of a valid contractual relationship or business expectancy;

• Knowledge of the relationship or expectancy by the alleged interfering party;

• Intentional interference inducing or causing breach or termination of the relationship or expectancy; and

• Resultant damage.

Page 16: Business Law Civil and Criminal Liability Class 1.

Negligence• Four elements

1. Duty of care owed to the plaintiff

2. Breach of the duty3. Which results in (causation)4. Injury

Page 17: Business Law Civil and Criminal Liability Class 1.

Toyota – What Next?

Page 18: Business Law Civil and Criminal Liability Class 1.

Strict LiabilityIn participating in some limited activities, a business will be liable for harm even though no duty was breached; no intentional tort committed.

Page 19: Business Law Civil and Criminal Liability Class 1.

Damages

Page 20: Business Law Civil and Criminal Liability Class 1.

Criminal Law

Businesses as offenders and as victims

Page 21: Business Law Civil and Criminal Liability Class 1.

Business As Victim• Theft– Shoplifting

• Fraud• Embezzlement• Arson

Shoplifting costs US businesses an estimated $16 billion annually

Page 22: Business Law Civil and Criminal Liability Class 1.

Business as Criminal• How does a business commit

a crime?–Who forms the intent?–Who commits the act?

Page 23: Business Law Civil and Criminal Liability Class 1.

RICO• Prohibits two or more

“racketeering acts” to accomplish– Investing in or acquiring a legitimate

business with criminal money–Maintaining or acquiring a business

through criminal activity–Operating a business through

criminal activity

Page 24: Business Law Civil and Criminal Liability Class 1.

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