| Hint | Answer | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| 3. Was C a Secondary Victim? | Alcock | 0%
|
| C can only be owed a DOC if he suffered a medically recognised psychiatric condition, not mere grief, emotion or stress. | Hinz v Berry | 0%
|
| C is a primary victim if C was either physically injured, or physical injury was reasonably foreseeable. | Page v Smith | 0%
|
| The event must have been sudden and horrifying - not a slow, drawn out process. It must also be contemporaneous with the negligence, more or less. | Sion v Hampstead | 0%
|
| . | x | 0%
|
| 2. Was C a Primary Victim? | x | 0%
|
| . | x | 0%
|
| a) Did C have close ties of love and affection? There is a rebuttable presumption with children/parents and spouses, but must be proven if it’s anyone else | x | 0%
|
| b) Was C present at the accident, or during its very immediate aftermath? | x | 0%
|
| c) Did C witness the aftermath/accident with his own senses? | x | 0%
|
| d) Would a person of normal fortitude, in the claimant’s position, have suffered psychiatric harm? | x | 0%
|