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Ignis suus information


Ignis suus (his fire; Latin), sometimes ignus suus, is a common law principle relating to an occupier's liability over damage caused by the spread of fire. It traditionally imposes strict liability.

It was cited in the case Burnie Port Authority v General Jones Pty Ltd at the Supreme Court of Tasmania. When this case was taken to the High Court of Australia, the ignis suus rule was rejected as inappropriate for modern circumstances, had never been introduced into Australian law, and also on the basis it had been absorbed into the Rylands v. Fletcher principle, which was held to no longer be good law in Australia. Both ignis suus and the Rylands and Fletcher rule were found by the majority of the HCA in Burnie, as stated and led by Mason CJ, to be absorbed into the tort of negligence.[1]

  1. ^ "Rule in Rylands and Fletcher: potential for Canadian environmental law cases?". Juniper Law. Retrieved 13 May 2023.

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Ignis suus

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Ignis suus (his fire; Latin), sometimes ignus suus, is a common law principle relating to an occupier's liability over damage caused by the spread of fire...

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Burnie Port Authority v General Jones Pty Ltd

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which decided it would abolish the rule in Rylands v Fletcher, and the ignis suus principle, incorporating them generally into the tort of negligence. A...

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Latin declension

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emphatic, but they are not widely used. Sē, suī has a possessive adjective: suus, sua, suum, meaning 'his/her/its/their own': Patrem suum numquam vīderat...

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Sanskrit nominals

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these cases. The noun ātman ('self') and adjective svaḥ ('own'; cf. Latin suus) decline so as to express reflexivity in any case, person, and number. The...

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