A person may be considered “careless” or “negligent” if they do not issue the appropriate level of care for a particular situation in question. For example, a higher level of care is called for if you are pouring boiling coffee into a friend’s glass over his lap than is called for if you are pouring cold lemonade over the kitchen sink. Generally, the law requires that individuals exercise the same kind of “due care” that a reasonable person would exercise under the same circumstances. This is called the “reasonable man” or “reasonable person” standard.
Some common negligence claims involve:
- alcoholic beverage liability (a provider of alcohol either a social host or bartender serves too many drinks to an underage or noticeably intoxicated individual who is then involved in an accident that causes injury to a third person)
- motor vehicle accidents (accidents caused by reckless or careless driving)
- slip and fall accidents (a person slips, falls and is injured on someone else’s property)
- medical malpractice (when a doctor doesn’t maintain the level of skill and knowledge commonly exercised by other doctors)


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