Chapter.18 Complete Test Bank Trepass To Land And Nuisance - Tort Law 7e | Updated Test Bank Horsey by Kirsty Horsey. DOCX document preview.
Chapter 18: Trepass to land and nuisance
Test Bank
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 18 Question 01
1) What do we mean when we use the term ‘land torts’ in the context of claims in trespass and private nuisance?
a. The torts require land to be damaged or destroyed in some way
b. The torts are (technically) about harm to land rather than to a person
c. The torts relate to disputes over the ownership of land
Type: multiple response question
Title: Chapter 18 Question 02
2) To succeed in the tort of trespass, the interference with the land must be which of the following?
Please select all that apply.
a. Direct
b. Indirect
c. Intentional
d. Accidental
e. Negligent
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 18 Question 03
3) Trespass is actionable without proof of damage.
a. True
b. False
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 18 Question 04
4) Which of these would be a trespass?
a. A postman going through a gate and walking onto someone’s property to deliver mail
b. Branches from a neighbour’s tree overhang into a homeowner’s garden and make it difficult to access the shed
c. A man steps on a homeowner’s land after being pushed by his wife
d. A woman leaves her bicycle against the wall of someone’s house while she pops into the shop next door
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 16 Question 05
5) Trespass can occur in airspace above someone’s land.
a. True
b. False
Type: multiple response question
Title: Chapter 18 Question 06
6) A user of land can be liable in private nuisance for the creation of which of the following things?
Please select all that apply.
a. Unpleasant smells
b. Loud noise in the daytime
c. Loud noise at night time
d. Smoke
e. Vibrations
f. Dust
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 18 Question 07
7) Private nuisance is actionable without proof of damage.
a. True
b. False
Type: multiple response question
Title: Chapter 18 Question 08
8) Which of the following factors are/can be taken into account when determining whether a defendant is an unreasonable user of land?
Please select all that apply.
a. How long the activity claimed for has been going on
b. The time of day or night the activity takes place
c. Whether the defendant intended to annoy the claimant
d. Whether the claimant is unusually affected by the activity, more so than others would be
e. Whether the claimant has tried to take steps to stop the defendant being a nuisance
f. Whether the defendant could have foreseen that the claimant would be affected
g. What the area the claimant’s property is in is like
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 18 Question 09
9) In Hunter v Canary Wharf Ltd [1997], Lord Goff defined private nuisance as a tort ‘directed against the plaintiff’s enjoyment of his ____ over _____’.
Type: multiple response question
Title: Chapter 18 Question 10
10) Which Articles from the European Convention on Human Rights are most likely to be relevant to land torts claims?
Please select all that apply.
a. Article 1 of the First Protocol
b. Article 2
c. Article 3
d. Article 6
e. Article 8
f. Article 13
g. Article 14
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 18 Question 11
11) In Kennaway v Thompson [1981], Lawton LJ described when an injunction would be an appropriate remedy for private nuisance caused by noise. He said: ‘Intervention by injunction is only justified when the irritating noise causes inconvenience ______ what other occupiers in the neighbourhood can be expected to bear’.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 18 Question 12
12) Which concept did the case Network Rail Infrastructure Ltd v Morris (t/a Soundstar Studio) [2004] introduce/make more prominent in cases deciding whether a defendant was an unreasonable user, particularly with regard to potential sensitivity to the nuisance on the part of the claimant?
a. unreasonableness
b. foreseeability
c. reasonableness
d. carelessness
e. sensitivity
Type: multiple response question
Title: Chapter 18 Question 13
13) Which of these are valid defences to claims in private nuisance?
Please select all that apply.
a. Planning permission
b. Contributory negligence
c. Prescription
d. The claimant moved to the nuisance
e. The defendant holds an environmental permit
f. Statutory authority
g. The utility value of the defendant’s activity
Type: multiple response question
Title: Chapter 18 Question 14
14) When can damages be awarded in claims for private nuisance?
Please select all that apply.
a. For damage to property
b. In lieu of an injunction
c. For personal injury
d. For a decrease in value of the property concerned
e. For lost enjoyment of the property concerned
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 18 Question 15
15) Public nuisance is primarily a crime but in some cases, can also lead to a civil action. In Attorney General v PYA Quarries Ltd [1957], Romer LJ defined public nuisance, saying:
‘Any nuisance is ‘public’ which materially affects the reasonable comfort and convenience of life of ___ ______ of Her Majesty’s subjects’.