Law of Torts – Introduction

Substantive Law vs Procedural Law

  • Substantive Law: Defines rights, duties, and liabilities (e.g., Law of Contracts, Law of Torts, Criminal Law).
  • Procedural Law: Provides the mechanism to enforce substantive law (e.g., Civil Procedure Code, Criminal Procedure Code, Evidence Act).
  • Example: The Evidence Act is called Adjective Law because it does not create rights/duties but prescribes the procedure of proving or disproving them.


Understanding Rights

  • We can exercise our rights only insofar as we perform our duty to protect the rights of others.
  • Rights and duties are co-relative:
    • Rights do not exist in a vacuum.
    • Duties safeguard and give meaning to rights.
  • Human existence is a cluster of rights and duties, both individual and social.

Duty: Performing to the best of one’s abilities, judgment, and competence.


What is a Wrong?

  • Wrong = Violation of a Legal Right.
  • A Legal Right is:
    • Recognized by law,
    • Enforceable by law.
  • Not every moral, religious, or spiritual right qualifies as a legal right.
  • Law is both a manifestation and a reflection of society.


Types of Wrongs

Civil Wrong

  • Affects only the concerned individual(s).
  • Remedy = Restitution / Compensation.
  • Based on the doctrine of Restitutio in Integrum – restoring the injured party as far as possible to the original position before the wrong.

Criminal Wrong

  • Affects society at large.
  • Remedy = Punishment (deterrence, retribution, or reformation).
  • Requires State intervention.


Illustrations

  • Civil Wrong: Breach of contract between two parties (e.g., non-payment for services).
  • Criminal Wrong: Theft, murder, rape – society’s order and security are at stake.
  • Example 1: A girl runs away from home due to scolding for poor marks. → This affects only her (a personal matter, not a legal wrong).
  • Example 2: The same girl is kidnapped and raped. → This affects society and order at large; hence, it is a criminal wrong requiring penalization.

Such penalization instills fear within society to regulate and deter such acts.


Rights in Rem vs Rights in Personam

  • Right in Rem: Available against the whole world.
    • Example: Ownership of property – everyone must respect it.
  • Right in Personam: Enforceable only against a particular person.
    • Example: Rights arising out of a contract – obligations are limited to contracting parties.


Relief in Law

  • What do people seek when they are wronged? Relief.
  • Criminal Law → Relief = Punishment.
  • Civil Law → Relief = Compensation / Restoration.

The type of relief sought determines whether the wrong is civil or criminal.


Cognizable vs Non-Cognizable Offenses

  • Cognizable: FIRs can be filed; police can arrest without warrant (serious crimes).
  • Non-cognizable: Only complaints can be filed; police need court approval to act.


Questions to Ponder

  • At what point does a civil wrong become a criminal wrong?
  • How many rights do we have, and how many times have they been violated?
  • Should law prioritize punishment or restoration as its ultimate relief?
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