Asked by

Jamaal Johnson
on Nov 29, 2024

verifed

Verified

If an intervening cause is deemed to be a superseding cause, it does not relieve the defendant of liability for that harm.

Intervening Cause

An event that occurs after the defendant's act and contributes to a harm, potentially relieving the defendant of liability.

Superseding Cause

An unforeseeable event that interrupts the chain of causation and becomes the primary cause of an incident, relieving the defendant of liability.

  • Evaluate the rules that determine responsibility or its absence due to intervening and superseding factors.
verifed

Verified Answer

AL
April LabaniegoDec 04, 2024
Final Answer:
Get Full Answer