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- Newsgroups: talk.abortion
- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!sdd.hp.com!nigel.msen.com!heifetz!rotag!kevin
- From: kevin@rotag.mi.org (Kevin Darcy)
- Subject: Re: Jim Kalb is NOT crazy, just confused?
- Message-ID: <1992Jul26.013400.18858@rotag.mi.org>
- Organization: Who, me???
- References: <1992Jul20.004857.3979@panix.com> <1992Jul20.065656.28578@julian.uwo.ca> <1992Jul20.224702.4823@panix.com>
- Date: Sun, 26 Jul 1992 01:34:00 GMT
- Lines: 94
-
- In article <1992Jul20.224702.4823@panix.com> jk@panix.com (Jim Kalb) writes:
- >wlsmith@valve.heart.rri.uwo.ca (Wayne Smith) writes:
- >
- >[I had written:]
- >
- >>>The chance of breaking something from a single act of picking up a dish
- >>>in a china shop is considerably less than 1/100. Nonetheless, it
- >>>doesn't seem (to me, at any rate) as a violation of the customer's right
- >>>to be left alone to stick him with the responsibility of paying for the
- >>>dish if it does break. The reason is that china breaking is the kind of
- >>>thing that tends to happen when people pick up china, so it's forseeable
- >>>and the actor is held responsible.
- >
- >>The main purpose of picking up china is to see if it is worthy of
- >>purchase, or to aid in identification. You make it sound as if the
- >>purpose was to break it by way of handling. Because it is an object
- >>which someone else owns, then you are responsible for it while in your
- >>care. It is not because dammage is a possible consequence that the
- >>viewer is held responsible...
- >
- >My point was that even though the purpose is just as you say, if it
- >breaks the customer is held responsible. Intent to break is not
- >required and I am sorry if it sounded like that was what I thought -- I
- >meant the opposite. However, it does seems to me that the breakage must
- >be the (at least somewhat) forseeable result of the customer's act for
- >the customer to be held responsible. For example, if the customer
- >picked up a dish and while he was holding it a bullet fired by someone
- >who was robbing the shop broke it, the stick-up man and not the customer
- >would be held responsible even though the dish was in the customer's
- >care at the time and would not have been broken if the customer had not
- >moved it from where it was.
-
- Ah, but that's because violation of statute raises a legal PRESUMPTION of
- the violator's negligence, not just because the result was "unforeseeable".
- It's one of the more subtle weapons the law has against criminal activity --
- a criminal always risks becoming a magnet for all sorts of civil liability
- when he or she commits their criminal act; civil liability which is heaped ON
- TOP OF any criminal penalties levied by the state for violation of statute.
- Usually, this civil liability is invisible, since most criminals don't have
- "deep pockets" to plunder in civil court, but against rich criminals, e.g.
- drug kingpins and/or mobsters, I imagine it can be a pretty potent attack.
-
- Anyhow, the violation-of-statute angle distorts your analogy. Why not just
- pick a casebook example of "remote and unforeseeable" consequences to make
- your point. I recommend the famous _Palsgraf_ case (_Palsgraf v Long Island
- Railway_, 248 N.Y. 330 (1928))...
-
- >>Indeed, as was pointed out above, pregnancy from sex is statisticly
- >>(sp?) unlikely. From an unbiased point of view, only the most likely
- >>outcome of an action or event should hold the title of the forseeable
- >>consequence of that event. So in the case of sex, the forseeable
- >>consequence is pleasure (or a headache, or an argument, or sleep... :)
- >>)
- >
- >I don't think that's right -- it's recognized in law and in common moral
- >judgment that an action can have several forseeable consequences, and in
- >a proper case people can be held responsible for even rather unlikely
- >consequences. For example, if someone gives me a rifle for Christmas
- >and I try it out by shooting it at passing cars, I'm guilty of homicide
- >if I kill someone even if (because I'm such a bad shot) by far the most
- >likely outcome was a series of misses.
-
- You're probably guilty of manslaughter, actually, since you never intended
- to kill any PARTICULAR person. See, the criminal law CAN make a distinction
- between premeditated and merely foreseeable consequences.
-
- Frankly, I don't buy Wayne's argument that only the _most_ likely
- consequence of an event should be considered "foreseeable". The most likely
- consequence of pulling the trigger on a handgun is for it to propel a
- bullet at high speed out of its barrel, but that's not the only FORESEEABLE
- consequences of the action, particularly if some living person's cranium is
- 6 inches away along the bullet's trajectory. And of course the law treats
- the resulting homicide as intentional.
-
- On the other hand, I don't concur with Jim that "foreseeability" is the key
- here, if we're talking about a criminal matter -- criminal INTENT is, or to
- lapse into jargon again, the _mens rea_ of the actor(s). The couple having
- sexual intercourse may acknowledge the POSSIBILITY of an unwanted pregnancy,
- but that doesn't mean they INTEND to conceive. Therefore, it's hard to justify
- "punishing" them for their "violation".
-
- >For that matter, a father is
- >responsible for the support of his offspring, even if it was a one-night
- >stand and he didn't intend to become a father.
-
- You're not the only one who has discerned the fundamental inconsistency
- between the pro-choice abortion position and the current law wrt paternity
- child-support, Jim. However, I find the general concensus to be that it
- is better to reform the latter, than to violate people's Bodily Autonomy
- by legislating against abortion. If you want to discuss this issue in more
- detail, I would recommend doing so in alt.abortion.inequity. Otherwise, you
- might reawaken the wrath of this newsgroup's resident net.cops...
-
- - Kevin
-