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THE LAW COMMISSION Item 2 of the Si
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should emphasise at the outset that
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practitioners and academics) consid
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punitive damages should survive for
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and sued, he will, at worst, be mad
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‘exceptional’ 62 conduct or mot
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defendant or his legal advisers per
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an undertaking in damages which was
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likely adversely to affect him or h
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noting the concession by the respon
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Kralj, which was an “excruciating
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two of their lordships who gave jud
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such a restriction, unless one take
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(1) legislation should provide that
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1.3 Historically, a number of diffe
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nuisance 195 has also been recognis
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day market). At first instance, Pet
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equired to trigger an account of pr
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disgorgement to principals of bribe
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disgorge what he has saved by commi
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there is no consensus among comment
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(a) Restitutionary damages should b
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the purposes of the claim to restit
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account of profits and damages but
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area. The problem of ‘election of
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there is no such in-built limitatio
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PART IV EXEMPLARY DAMAGES: PRESENT
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that exemplary damages were not awa
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1.96 These questions were recently
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to be irrelevant to, and even incon
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1.107 Consistently with the apparen
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manner. As shall be seen below, it
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1.117 Major Commonwealth jurisdicti
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In the present case there is the fu
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an aspect of the case which made ex
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1.137 The ‘non-discrimination’
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We have ... been referred to a numb
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Thus it has been suggested that the
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underlying such damages, that of pu
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easons of fairness to defendants: i
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(6) Multiple plaintiffs 1.165 Very
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Legal Services Act 1990 and Rules o
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MR himself suggested figures to ass
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Thompson v MPC achieves its aims, t
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proceeded on the basis that the doc
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would be that to allow insurance wo
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PART V EXEMPLARY DAMAGES: REFORM 1.
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1.8 As regards the divide between t
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3. THE CASE FOR AND AGAINST EXEMPLA
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(5) The criminal approach to vicari
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particularly unsatisfactory to rely
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1.34 On the first interpretation an
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4. OUR CENTRAL REFORM PROPOSALS (1)
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when applying this principle a cour
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indefensible position which the com
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... the availability of exemplary d
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But these concepts are inadequate,
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for a wrong which arises under an A
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view that such an award would be co
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the promise. To award exemplary dam
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else should, actually constitute in
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awarded as damages (including exemp
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1.88 The first argument is that it
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(2) the relationship between (on th
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was determined, the court could mak
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(iii) A ‘last resort’ remedy (2
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A discretionary or an absolute bar
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1.117 We have therefore recommended
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discrimination between, for example
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- Page 141 and 142: 1.141 In our view, this is necessar
- Page 143 and 144: the punitive damages award on the A
- Page 145 and 146: to that remedy. 720 Yet this means
- Page 147 and 148: (31) once punitive damages have bee
- Page 149 and 150: e so where the defendant consents t
- Page 151 and 152: 1.183 We also think that any ‘adv
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- Page 155 and 156: (c) Implications of the adoption of
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- Page 163 and 164: 1.224 The second difference is that
- Page 165 and 166: award if they succeed in persuading
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- Page 169 and 170: ... [c]ontracts should only be held
- Page 171 and 172: (ii) The problems of defining with
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- Page 177 and 178: punitive damages, no enactment shal
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- Page 183 and 184: PART VI SUMMARY OF RECOMMENDATIONS
- Page 185 and 186: (19) the ‘cause of action’ test
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- Page 189: MICHAEL SAYERS, Secretary 11 Septem
- Page 193 and 194: APPENDIX C Persons and organisation
- Page 195 and 196: Steve Hedley John Hodgson L Hoyano
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