stupid legal hurdle.
trying to argue a question of causation. trying to say that the plaintiff severed the causal link between the contraceptive company's negligence and the damage of having to care for a disabled kid by willingly not aborting the pregnancy... but damn >.< stupid high court ratios
any ideas to get over this and turn black into white, white into black?
trying to argue a question of causation. trying to say that the plaintiff severed the causal link between the contraceptive company's negligence and the damage of having to care for a disabled kid by willingly not aborting the pregnancy... but damn >.< stupid high court ratios
any ideas to get over this and turn black into white, white into black?
220. At various points in the debate about whether damages should be allowed for the cost of bringing up a child, reference is made to the parents having made a choice to keep the child rather than offer it for adoption, or to their having made a choice not to terminate the pregnancy by abortion. As mentioned earlier, this "choice" has been said to reveal that for the parent the benefits of having the child outweigh the burdens[339]. Sometimes, it has been advanced (as it was in McFarlane) as an argument about causation - the parents' choice is said to break the causal nexus between negligent conduct and expenditure on bringing up the child.
221. Inevitably, references to "choice" invite attention to the fact that for the individual the decision the parent makes, or refrains from making, is necessarily determined by the application of a combination of reason, emotion and beliefs that is unique to that individual. Whatever the decision, so long as the decision is to pursue a lawful course, it would be wrong for the law to characterise that course as unreasonable. To do so would deny the individual's autonomy to choose the lawful course of action which, to that individual, seems best.