nuisance$54001$ - Übersetzung nach niederländisch
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nuisance$54001$ - Übersetzung nach niederländisch

Attractive nuisance; Attractive-nuisance doctrine

nuisance      
n. hindernis; plaag
private nuisance         
ACT (OR NEGLECT) WHICH CAUSES INCONVENIENCE OR DAMAGE
Private nuisance; Quiet enjoyment; Right to quiet enjoyment; Tort of nuisance; Right of quiet enjoyment; Nuisence; Nuscince; Nuisance law; Inspector of Nuisances
persoonlijke last (stoornis in gebruik van grond en het er nut van hebben)
nodding acquaintance         
WIKIMEDIA BAND DISCOGRAPHY
Sorry You're Not a Winner (EP); Anything Can Happen in the Next Half Hour (EP); Nodding Acquaintance; Sorry You're Not A Winner EP; Enter Shikari Discography; Live from Planet Earth - Bootleg Series Volume 3; Live From Planet Earth (album); Commit No Nuisance; Live at Milton Keynes - Bootleg Series Volume 1; Bootleg Series Vol.2: Live At Rock City; Nodding Acquaintance EP; Sorry You're Not a Winner EP; Live in London. W6. March 2012. - Bootleg Series Volume 4; Live at Rock City - Bootleg Series Volume 2; Live in the Barrowland - Bootleg Series Volume 5; Live in London. W6. March 2012; Live from Planet Earth (album); Bootleg Series Vol.1: Live At Milton Keynes; Nodding Acquaintance (EP); Enter Shikari Live at Deezer; Enter Shikari live at Deezer; Live at Alexandra Palace (Enter Shikari live album); Live at Alexandra Palace 2; Stop the Clocks (Enter Shikari song)
oppervlakkige kennismaking

Definition

attractive nuisance doctrine
n. a legal doctrine which makes a person negligent for leaving a piece of equipment or other condition on property which would be both attractive and dangerous to curious children. These have included tractors, unguarded swimming pools, open pits, and abandoned refrigerators. Liability could be placed on the people owning or controlling the premises even when the child was a trespasser who sneaked on the property. Basically the doctrine was intended to make people careful about what dangerous conditions they left untended. Some jurisdictions (including California) have abolished the attractive nuisance doctrine and replaced it with specific conditions (e.g. open pit and refrigerators) and would make property owners liable only by applying rules of foreseeable danger which make negligence harder to prove.

Wikipedia

Attractive nuisance doctrine

The attractive nuisance doctrine applies to the law of torts in some jurisdictions. It states that a landowner may be held liable for injuries to children trespassing on the land if the injury is caused by an object on the land that is likely to attract children. The doctrine is designed to protect children who are unable to appreciate the risk posed by the object, by imposing a liability on the landowner. The doctrine has been applied to hold landowners liable for injuries caused by abandoned cars, piles of lumber or sand, trampolines, and swimming pools. However, it can be applied to virtually anything on the property.

There is no set cutoff point that defines youth. The courts will evaluate each "child" on a case-by-case basis to see if the "child" qualifies as a youth. If it is determined that the child was able to understand and appreciate the hazard, the doctrine of attractive nuisance will not likely apply.

Under the old common law, the plaintiff (either the child, or a parent suing on the child's behalf) had to show that it was the hazardous condition itself which lured the child onto the landowner's property. However, most jurisdictions have statutorily altered this condition, and now require only that the injury was foreseeable by the landowner.