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Significations et usages de Damages

damages

  • plural of damage (noun)
  • present indicative (he,she,it) of damage (verb)

Définition

damage (n.)

1.a damage or loss

2.the act of damaging something or someone

3.any harm or injury resulting from a violation of a legal right

4.loss of military equipment

5.the occurrence of a change for the worse

6.the amount of money needed to purchase something"the price of gasoline" "he got his new car on excellent terms" "how much is the damage?"

7.something (such as money) given or received as payment or reparation (as for a service or loss or injury)

damage (v. trans.)

1.inflict damage upon"The snow damaged the roof" "She damaged the car when she hit the tree"

damage (v.)

1.suffer or be susceptible to damage"These fine china cups damage easily"

damages (n.)

1.a sum of money paid in compensation for loss or injury

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Merriam Webster

DamageDam"age (dăm"�j; 48), n. [OF. damage, domage, F. dommage, fr. assumed LL. damnaticum, from L. damnum damage. See Damn.]
1. Injury or harm to person, property, or reputation; an inflicted loss of value; detriment; hurt; mischief.

He that sendeth a message by the hand of a fool cutteth off the feet and drinketh damage. Prov. xxvi. 6.

Great errors and absurdities many commit for want of a friend to tell them of them, to the great damage both of their fame and fortune. Bacon.

2. pl. (Law) The estimated reparation in money for detriment or injury sustained; a compensation, recompense, or satisfaction to one party, for a wrong or injury actually done to him by another.

☞ In common-law actions, the jury are the proper judges of damages.

Consequential damage. See under Consequential. -- Exemplary damages (Law), damages imposed by way of example to others. Similar in purpose to vindictive damages, below. -- Nominal damages (Law), those given for a violation of a right where no actual loss has accrued. -- vindictive damages or punitive damages, those given specially for the punishment of the wrongdoer.

Syn. -- Mischief; injury; harm; hurt; detriment; evil; ill. See Mischief.

DamageDam"age, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Damaged (dăm"�jd); p. pr. & vb. n. Damaging (dăm"�*jĭng).] [Cf. OF. damagier, domagier. See Damage, n.] To occasion damage to the soundness, goodness, or value of; to hurt; to injure; to impair.

He . . . came up to the English admiral and gave him a broadside, with which he killed many of his men and damaged the ship. Clarendon.

DamageDam"age (dăm"�j), v. i. To receive damage or harm; to be injured or impaired in soundness or value; as, some colors in cloth damage in sunlight.

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Définition (complément)

⇨ voir la définition de Wikipedia

Synonymes

damage (v. trans.)

be bad for, cause damage to, deteriorate, impair, cause damage  (figurative), do damage  (figurative), do harm  (figurative), harm  (figurative), injure  (figurative), prejudice  (figurative), put at a disadvantage  (figurative)

Voir aussi

Locutions

Anoxic Brain Damage • Anoxic brain damage, not elsewhere classified • Brain Damage, Chronic • DNA Damage • DNA Damage-Inducible Transcript 3 Protein • Damage to coccyx obstetric • Damage to pelvic organs and tissues following abortion and ectopic and molar pregnancy • Damage to placenta from amniocentesis, caesarean section or surgical induction • Growth Arrest And DNA Damage-Inducible Protein 153 • Hypoxic Brain Damage • Material-damage • Obstetric damage to pelvic joints and ligaments • Other specified brain damage due to birth injury • Reperfusion Damage • Unspecified brain damage due to birth injury • assessment of damage • battle damage • brain damage • cause damage • cause damage to • cause great damage • cause great damage to • collateral damage • damage by fire • damage control • damage from instruments • damage from instruments during delivery • damage to placenta from amniocentesis, caesarean section or surgical induction • do damage • do great damage • do great damage to • fire damage • insurance against damage • material damage • minimal brain damage • obstetric damage to pelvic joints and ligaments • operational damage • single event damage • statement of damage • war damage

A Lesson Is Learned But The Damage Is Irreversible • A Lesson Is Learned, But the Damage is Irreversible • A Lesson is Learned, But the Damage is Irreversible • Anything (Damage song) • Area damage • Art Damage • Articular cartilage damage • Bomb damage assessment • Brain Damage (comic) • Brain Damage (film) • Brain Damage (radio show) • Brain Damage (rock band) • Brain Damage (song) • Brain Damage Sound System • Brain damage • Brain damage (disambiguation) • Brain-damage • Brian Damage • Broadway Damage • Catastrophic optical damage • Cel Damage • Cell damage • Collateral Damage (Stargate SG-1) • Collateral Damage (The Wire) • Collateral Damage (film) • Collateral damage • Collateral damage (disambiguation) • Core damage frequency • Criminal damage in English law • DNA damage theory of aging • DNA damage-inducible transcript 3 • Damage (2009 film) • Damage (Angel episode) • Damage (Blues Explosion album) • Damage (British band) • Damage (The Cooper Temple Clause song) • Damage (You Am I song) • Damage (album) • Damage (band) • Damage (comics) • Damage (film) • Damage (novel) • Damage (song) • Damage 381 • Damage Case • Damage Control (Grey's Anatomy) • Damage Control (TV series) • Damage Control (comics) • Damage Control Inc. • Damage Controlman • Damage Done • Damage Inc • Damage Inc (disambiguation) • Damage Incorporated • Damage Incorporated (game) • Damage Mechanics • Damage control • Damage control (disambiguation) • Damage control (news) • Damage deposit • Damage mechanics • Damage over time • Damage per second • Damage to infrastructure in the 2010 Haiti earthquake • Damage to major ships at the Battle of Jutland • Damage tolerance • Damage waiver • Damage, Inc. Tour • Damage-Control • Different Damage • Diffuse alveolar damage • Direct DNA damage • End organ damage • Fantastic Damage • Fatigue damage spectrum • Fire damage • Foreign object damage • Forever (Damage album) • Genetic damage • Hammer Damage • Hanwha Damage Insurance • Hurricane Damage Potential Scale • Hydrogen damage • Incremental damage • Indirect DNA damage • Institutional damage • Irreparable damage or injury • Ischemic damage • Johnson–Holmquist damage model • Kausing Much Damage • Library damage resulting from the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake • Live Damage • Live Damage (Fuck the Facts live album) • Lotte Damage Insurance • Love Can Seriously Damage Your Health • Malicious Damage • Malicious Damage Act 1861 • Max Damage • Midland Land Damage Company • Negligent damage to Chysauster Ancient Village • Project Damage Control • Project Damage Control (album) • Property damage • Putting the Damage On • Racial discrepancy of Hurricane Katrina damage • Racial discrepenacy of Hurricane Katrina damage • Radiation damage • Real Damage • Severe Tire Damage • Severe Tire Damage (album) • Severe Tire Damage (band) • Severe Tire Damage (disambiguation) • Sometimes a Little Brain Damage Can Help • Splash Damage • Splash damage • Sprout damage • Statutory damage • Storm damage • Structural Damage • The Damage • The Damage Done • The Damage Done (EP) • The Damage Manual • The Damage a Man Can Do • The Needle and the Damage Done • The Real Damage • Tornado intensity and damage • Van Damage • Vienna Convention on Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage • War Damage Commission • Water damage • Water damage restoration

Dictionnaire analogique

damage (n.)


damage (n.)





damage (n.)

injury[Hyper.]

be hard on, wrong - wrong[Dérivé]


damage (n.)

casualty[Hyper.]





damage (v.)



Wikipedia

Damage

                   

Damage may refer to:

Contents

  General concepts

  Biology and medical

  Law

  • Damages, a sum of money awarded by a court of law
  • Institutional damage, unintended consequences to an individual resulting from interaction with an institution

  Entertainment

  Film and television

  Gaming

  Literature

  Music

  See also

   
               

Damages

                   

In law, damages are an award, typically of money, to be paid to a person as compensation for loss or injury;[1]. The rules for damages can and frequently do vary based on the type of claim which is presented (e.g., breach of contract versus a tort claim).

Contents

  Compensatory or expectation damages

Compensatory damages, called actual damages, are paid to compensate the claimant for loss, injury, or harm suffered as a result of (see requirement of causation) another's breach of duty. (e.g., in a negligence claim under tort law). Expectation damages are used in contract law.

  Example

Neal Townsend signs a contract agreeing to buy 10 hours of landscaping services from Wisda's Landscaping for $50 an hour. If Neal Townsend breaks the contract and doesn't use any of Wisda's Landscaping's services, expectation damages paid to Wisda's Landscaping would be $500, which is the economic loss they suffered. If Wisda's Landscaping breaks the contract, and Neal Townsend is forced to hire another service for $60 an hour, expectation (direct) damages paid to Neal Townsend would equal $100 ($10 an hour, the difference in price between the original contract and the new contract).

(Note that, technically, Wisda's damages would be the lost profits only--if Wisda would have had $35 per hour in wages, materials and other expenses, its actual damages are only $15 per hour = $150.)

  Quantum (measure) of damages

  Breach of contract duty - (ex contractu)

On a breach of contract by a defendant, a court generally awards the sum that would restore the injured party to the economic position they expected from performance of the promise or promises (known as an "expectation measure" or "benefit-of-the-bargain" measure of damages).

When it is either not possible or not desirable to award the victim in that way, a court may award money damages designed to restore the injured party to the economic position s/he occupied at the time the contract was entered (known as the "reliance measure"), or designed to prevent the breaching party from being unjustly enriched ("restitution") (see below).

Parties may contract for liquidated damages to be paid upon a breach of the contract by one of the parties. Under common law, a liquidated damages clause will not be enforced if the purpose of the term is solely to punish a breach (in this case it is termed penal damages). The clause will be enforceable if it involves a genuine attempt to quantify a loss in advance and is a good faith estimate of economic loss. Courts have ruled as excessive and invalidated damages which the parties contracted as liquidated, but which the court nonetheless found to be penal.

  Breach of tort duty - (ex delicto)

Damages in tort are generally awarded to place the claimant in the position that would have been taken had the tort not taken place. Damages in tort are quantified under two headings: general damages and special damages.

In personal injury claims, damages for compensation are quantified by reference to the severity of the injuries sustained (see below general damages for more details). In non-personal injury claims, for instance, a claim for professional negligence against solicitors, the measure of damages will be assessed by the loss suffered by the client due to the negligent act or omission by the solicitor giving rise to the loss. The loss must be reasonably foreseeable and not too remote.[2] Financial losses are usually simple to quantify but in complex cases which involve loss of pension entitlements and future loss projections, the instructing solicitor will usually employ a specialist expert actuary or accountant to assist with the quantification of the loss.

  General damages

General damages, sometimes styled hedonic damages, compensate the claimant for the non-monetary aspects of the specific harm suffered. This is usually termed 'pain, suffering and loss of amenity'. Examples of this include physical or emotional pain and suffering, loss of companionship, loss of consortium, disfigurement, loss of reputation, loss or impairment of mental or physical capacity, loss of enjoyment of life, etc.[3] This is not easily quantifiable, and depends on the individual circumstances of the claimant. Judges in the United Kingdom base the award on damages awarded in similar previous cases.

General damages are generally awarded only in claims brought by individuals, when they have suffered personal harm. Examples would be personal injury (following the tort of negligence by the defendant), or the tort of defamation.

  Speculative damages

Speculative damages are damages that have not yet occurred, but the plaintiff expects them to. Typically, these damages cannot be recovered unless the plaintiff can prove that they are reasonably likely to occur.[4]

  Quantification of personal injury claims

The quantification of personal injury is not an exact science. In English law solicitors like to call personal injury claims as “general damages” for pain and suffering and loss of amenity (PSLA). Solicitors quantify personal injury claims by reference to previous awards made by the courts which are “similar” to the case in hand. The guidance solicitors will take into account to help quantify general damages are as hereunder:

1 The age of the client

The age of the client is important especially when dealing with fatal accident claims or permanent injuries. The younger the injured victim with a permanent injury the longer that person has to live with the PSLA. As a consequence, the greater the compensation payment. In fatal accident claims, generally the younger deceased, the greater the dependency claim by the partner and children.

2 The nature and extent of the injuries sustained.

Solicitors will consider “like for like” injuries with the case in hand and similar cases decided by the courts previously. These cases are known as precedents. Generally speaking decisions from the higher courts will bind the lower courts. Therefore, judgments from the House of Lords and the Court of Appeal have greater authority than the lower courts such as the High Court and the County Court. A compensation award can only be right or wrong with reference to previous judgments. Sometimes it is a matter of opinion of how much an injury claim is worth and the skill of the solicitor is persuading the opponent and ultimately the judge that their assessment is right.[citation needed] Solicitors must be careful when looking at older cases when quantifying a claim to ensure that the award is brought up to date and to take into account the court of appeal case in Heil v Rankin [5] Generally speaking the greater the injury the greater the damages awarded.

A quick guide to assess personal injury claims is by reference to the Judicial Studies Board Guidelines for the Assessment of General Damages in Personal Injury Cases [1]. Some case examples can also be considered [2]

3 Gender of the client

Generally speaking damages for personal injury for males and females are the same. However where there can be a difference weighted in favour of females is where the injury results in permanent scarring to the skin.[6] Where the scarring is clearly visible such as the face, legs, and arms, females will usually obtain a greater amount of compensation than males. The compensation reflects the general assumption that females will be affected more than males by scarring and thus will be awarded more. However each case will be decided on its own particular facts. For instance a male model who sustains a scarring tissue to his face may obtain just as much as a female.[citation needed]

4 Personal attributes and fortitude of the client

This heading is inextricably linked with the other points above. Where two clients are of the same age, experience and suffer the same injury, it does not necessarily mean that they will be affected the same. We are all different. Some people will recover more quickly than others. The courts will assess each claim on its own particular facts and therefore if one claimant recovers more quickly than another, the damages will be reflected accordingly. It is important to note here that “psychological injuries” may also follow from an accident which may increase the quantum of damages.

When a personal injury claim is settled either in court or out of court, the most common way the compensation payment is made is by a lump sum award in full and final settlement of the claim. Once accepted there can be no further award for compensation at a later time unless the claim is settled by provisional damages often found in industrial injury claims such as asbestos related injuries.

  Special damages

Special damages compensate the claimant for the quantifiable monetary losses suffered by the plaintiff.[citation needed] For example, extra costs, repair or replacement of damaged property, lost earnings (both historically and in the future), loss of irreplaceable items, additional domestic costs, and so on. They are seen in both personal and commercial actions.

Special damages can include direct losses (such as amounts the claimant had to spend to try to mitigate[7] problems) and consequential or economic losses resulting from lost profits in a business. Special damages basically include the compensatory and punitive damages for the tort committed in lieu of the injury or harm to the plaintiff.

Damages in tort are awarded generally to place the claimant in the position in which he would have been had the tort not taken place. Damages for breach of contract are generally awarded to place the claimant in the position in which he would have been had the contract not been breached. This can often result in a different measure of damages. In cases where it is possible to frame a claim in either contract or tort, it is necessary to be aware of what gives the best outcome.

If the transaction was a "good bargain" contract generally gives a better result for the claimant.

As an example, Neal sells Mary a watch for £100. Neal tells Mary it is an antique Rolex. In fact it is a fake one and worth £50. If it had been a genuine antique Rolex, it would be worth £500. Neal is in breach of contract and could be sued. In contract, Mary is entitled to an item worth £500, but she has only one worth £50. Her damages are £450. Neal also induced Mary to enter into the contract through a misrepresentation (a tort). If Mary sues in tort, she is entitled to damages that put herself back to the same financial position place she would have been in had the misrepresentation not been made. She would clearly not have entered into the contract knowing the watch was fake, and is entitled to her £100 back. Thus her damages in tort are £100. (However, she would have to return the watch, or else her damages would be £50.)

If the transaction were a "bad bargain", tort gives a better result for the claimant. If in the above example Mary had overpaid, paying £750 for the watch, her damages in contract would still be £450 (giving him the item he contracted to buy), however in tort damages are £700. This is because damages in tort put her in the position she would have been in had the tort not taken place, and are calculated as her money back (£750) less the value of what she actually got (£50).

  Various matters

  Incidental and consequential losses

Special damages are sometimes divided into incidental damages, and consequential damages.

Incidental losses include the costs needed to remedy problems and put things right. The largest element is likely to be the reinstatement of property damage. Take for example a factory which was burnt down by the negligence of a contractor. The claimant would be entitled to the direct costs required to rebuild the factory and replace the damaged machinery.

The claimant may also be entitled to any consequential losses. These are the lost profits that the claimant could have been expected to make in the period whilst the factory was closed and rebuilt.

  Proximate cause

Recovery of damages is subject to the legal principle that damages must be proximately caused by the wrongful conduct of the defendant. This is known as the principle of proximate cause. This principle governs the recovery of all compensatory damages, whether the underlying claim is based on contract, tort, or both.[8] Damages are likely to be limited to those reasonably foreseeable by the defendant. If a defendant could not reasonably have foreseen that someone might be hurt by their actions, there may be no liability.

This rule does not usually apply to intentional torts (for example, deceit), and also has stunted applicability to the quantum in negligence where the maxim Intended consequences are never too remote applies – 'never' is inaccurate here but resorts to unforeseeable direct and natural consequences of an act.

  Quantifying losses in practice – expert evidence

It may be useful for the lawyers for the plaintiff and/or the defendant to employ forensic accountants or forensic economists to give evidence on the value of the loss. In this case, they may be called upon to give opinion evidence as an expert witness.

  Statutory damages

Statutory damages are an amount stipulated within the statute rather than calculated based on the degree of harm to the plaintiff. Lawmakers will provide for statutory damages for acts in which it is difficult to determine the value of the harm to the victim. Mere violation of the law can entitle the victim to a statutory award, even if no actual injury occurred. These are similar to, but different from, nominal damages (see below), in which no written sum is specified.

For example, United States Civil Code 18 USC §§2520 provides for statutory damages to victims of various wiretapping offences.[9] The Lanham (Trademark) Act provides for minimum damages of $500 per type of item, for goods sold with unauthorized use of a trademark (15 U.S.C. § 1117(c), Lanham Act Section 35(c).).[10] In copyright law, European directive 2004/48/EC on the Enforcement of Intellectual Property Rights bases damages on, "the amount of royalties which would have been due if the infringer has requested authorisation".[11]

  Nominal damages

On the other hand, nominal damages are very small damages awarded to show that the loss or harm suffered was technical rather than actual. Perhaps the most famous nominal damages award in modern times has been the $1 verdict against the National Football League (NFL) in the 1986 antitrust suit prosecuted by the United States Football League. Although the verdict was automatically trebled pursuant to antitrust law in the United States, the resulting $3 judgment was regarded as a victory for the NFL. Historically, one of the best known nominal damage awards was the farthing that the jury awarded to James Whistler in his libel suit against John Ruskin. In the English jurisdiction, nominal damages are generally fixed at £2.[citation needed]

Many times a party that has been wronged but is not able to prove significant damages will sue for nominal damages. This is particularly common in cases involving alleged violations of constitutional rights, such as freedom of speech.

  Punitive damages (non-compensatory)

Generally, punitive damages, which are also termed exemplary damages in the United Kingdom, are not awarded in order to compensate the plaintiff, but in order to reform or deter the defendant and similar persons from pursuing a course of action such as that which damaged the plaintiff. Punitive damages are awarded only in special cases where conduct was egregiously invidious and are over and above the amount of compensatory damages, such as in the event of malice or intent. Great judicial restraint is expected to be exercised in their application. In the United States punitive damages awards are subject to the limitations imposed by the due process of law clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution.

In England and Wales, exemplary damages are limited to the circumstances set out by Lord Patrick Devlin in the leading case of Rookes v. Barnard. They are:

  1. Oppressive, arbitrary or unconstitutional actions by the servants of government.
  2. Where the defendant's conduct was 'calculated' to make a profit for himself.
  3. Where a statute expressly authorises the same.

Rookes v Barnard has been much criticised and has not been followed in Canada or Australia or by the Privy Council.

Punitive damages awarded in a US case would be difficult to get recognition for in a European court, where punitive damages are most likely to be considered to violate ordre public.[12][2]

  Contemptuous damages

This type of damages are rarely awarded. They are given when the plaintiff's suit is trivial, used only to settle a point of honour or law. Awards are usually of the smallest amount, usually 1 cent or similar. Court costs are not awarded.[13]

  Aggravated damages

Aggravated damages are not often awarded; they apply where the injury has been aggravated by the wrongdoer's behaviour, for example, their cruelty.[14]

  Restitutionary or disgorgement damages

In certain areas of the law another head of damages has long been available, whereby the defendant is made to give up the profits made through the civil wrong in restitution. Doyle and Wright define restitutionary damages as being a monetary remedy that is measured according to the defendant's gain rather than the plaintiff's loss.[15] The plaintiff thereby gains damages which are not measured by reference to any loss sustained. In some areas of the law this heading of damages is uncontroversial; most particularly intellectual property rights and breach of fiduciary relationship.

In England and Wales the House of Lords case of Attorney-General v. Blake opened up the possibility of restitutionary damages for breach of contract. In this case the profits made by a defecting spy, George Blake, for the publication of his book, were awarded to the British Government for breach of contract. The case has been followed in English courts, but the situations in which restitutionary damages will be available remain unclear.

The basis for restitutionary damages is much debated, but is usually seen as based on denying a wrongdoer any profit from his wrongdoing. The really difficult question, and one which is currently unanswered, relates to what wrongs should allow this remedy.

  Legal costs

In addition to damages, the successful party is entitled to be awarded his reasonable legal costs that he spent during the case. This is the rule in most countries other than the United States. In the United States, a party generally is not entitled to its attorneys' fees or for hardships undergone during trial, although a few exceptions exist, such as discrimination.[16] See American rule.

  History

Among the Saxons, a price called Weregeld was paid for homicide by the killer, in part to the family of the victim, in part to the local king.

  See also

  Notes

  1. ^ International principle: Trans-Lex.org, Garner, p.416
  2. ^ Remoteness in English Law
  3. ^ Beaman, Richard (2010-09-22). "Loss of Amenity". Douglas Wemyss Solicitors. Leicester. http://d-w-s.co.uk/content/personal-injury-loss-amenity-compensation. 
  4. ^ "Legal Definition of Speculative Damages". http://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Speculative+Damages. Retrieved July 4, 2010. 
  5. ^ Heil v Rankin & Another [2000] EWCA Civ 84, Court of Appeal
  6. ^ Console, Richard P. "Gender Gaps in Scar Compensation", Attorneys Console & Hollawell P.C., March 20th, 2012, accessed March 21st, 2012.
  7. ^ There is a duty to mitigate losses Trans-Lex.org
  8. ^ Brinig, Brian P., JD, CPA (2011). Finance & Accounting for Lawyers. Portland, OR: BV Resources, LLC. pp. 200. ISBN 978-1-935081-71-5. http://www.BVResources.com. 
  9. ^ "TITLE 18 > PART I > CHAPTER 119 > § 2520". Cornell University Law School. http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/search/display.html?terms=statutory%20damages&url=/uscode/html/uscode18/usc_sec_18_00002520----000-.html. Retrieved 7 March 2011. 
  10. ^ "Trademark Counterfeiting". Klemchuk Kubasta LLP. http://www.kk-llp.com/readmore.asp?rartid=16. Retrieved 7 March 2011. 
  11. ^ "Which kind of damages are available in IP disputes?". World Intellectual Property Organization. http://www.wipo.int/enforcement/en/faq/judiciary/faq08.html#pre. Retrieved 7 March 2011. 
  12. ^ H Koziol/V Wilcox, Punitive Damages: Common Law and Civil Law Perspectives (2009).
  13. ^ Spetz, Steven E (1974). "Civil Court Procedure And Remedies For Tort". Can I Sue? An Introduction to Canadian Tort Law. Toronto: Pitman. p. 219. ISBN 0-273-04189-4. 
  14. ^ Behand, Nadine (2009). How To Run Your Own Court Case. Sydney: Redfern Legal Centre. p. 145. ISBN 978-1-921410-83-3. 
  15. ^ "Restitutionary damages - the unnecessary remedy" [2001] MULR 1; accessed via http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/MULR/2001/1.html on August 16, 2010
  16. ^ "Remedies for Employment Discrimination". http://eeoc.gov/employees/remedies.cfm. Retrieved July 4, 2010. 
   
               

 

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