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The Civil Liability from Medical Negligence of Doctors Treating Complications of Coronavirus in the English Law / A Comparative Study with the Iraqi Civil Law

Received: 15 February 2022    Accepted: 7 March 2022    Published: 9 January 2023
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Abstract

The Author has tried hard in this study to make a logic comparison between two different legal systems. That is to say the English common law, considered the leading system among other Anglo-American ones. And the Iraqi civil law highly affected and influenced by both the Islamic jurisprudence and the Egyptian civil law. It is worth-bearing in mind that the English common law includes many types of torts and the civil liability arising from them, including the tort of negligence in general. The general principles applied to which, can also be applied to medical negligence in particular. After the wide-spread dissemination of the coronavirus the British national health services organ (NHS) has given the cases of the doctor's treating the complications of this pandemic an ultimate importance. And the English courts based the civil liability arising from the medical negligence on three basic elements: the duty of care taken by doctors, the breach of this duty, and the damage suffered by patients. As well as the causation or the causal link between the tort of negligence and the damage or injury. Whereas the Iraqi civil law No. (40) of 1951 deals with the problems related to the civil liability arising from medical negligence of treating patients from coronavirus pandemic, by resorting to the general rules of the civil liability from the illegal act, which is based upon three basic elements: the trespass or transgression committed by the wrongdoer, the damage suffered by the victim and the causal link between them. As opposite to the Egyptian civil law No. (131) of 1948, which considers the first element of this liability as the fault rather than the trespass or transgression. After discussing the attitudes adopted by both the English and Iraqi laws, the author recommends that the Iraqi legislator should adopt the attitude taken by the English law, and let the Act of God deny both the fault element and the causation element of the civil liability arising from medical negligence. And also let the plea volenti non fit injuria deny both the fault element and the causation element of the civil liability of the defendant doctor arising from medical negligence.

Published in International Journal of Law and Society (Volume 6, Issue 1)
DOI 10.11648/j.ijls.20230601.11
Page(s) 1-9
Creative Commons

This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.

Copyright

Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Science Publishing Group

Keywords

Civil Liability, Medical Negligence, Common Law, Civil Law

References
[1] Abdul Majeed Al Hakim. The concise of the explanation of the general theory of obligations. Part one, sources of Obligations. a comparison with Islamic Jurisprudence. Baghdad. 1963.
[2] Abdul Majeed Al-Hakkim, Abdul-Baki Al-Bakri, & Mohammed Taha Al-Basheer, The concise of the general theory of obligations in the Iraqi civil law. Part one, the source of Obligations, Baghdad, 1980.
[3] Abdul Razaq Al Sanhouri. The Medium Commentary on the elucidation of the New Civil Code (Al Wasit in the Explanation of New Civil Law). Part One. The theory of obligations in general. Sources of obligations. Contract-illegal act-Unjust enrichment-law. Al-Ma'arif Publishing house. Alexandria. 2004.
[4] Abdul salam Al-Tirmanini. The Comparative Law, The major legal curricula. Kuwait University Publishing. Second Edition. 1982.
[5] Ahmed Salaman Shuhaib Al-Sa'adawi and Jawad Kadhum Jawad Sumaisem. The sources of Obligations, A comparative study with civil laws and Islamic jurisprudence. Second Edition. Zeinjuridique library. Beirut. 2017.
[6] Atiyah, P, S. Accidents compensation and the law, fifth edition weidenfield and Nicholson, 1993.
[7] Catherine Elliott and Frances Quinn, Tort law, Eighth edition. Longman, Pearson 2011.
[8] Hasan Ali Al-Thannon. The extensive commentary on the explanation of the Civil Code. Third part on the causal link. First Edition. Dar Wael for printing and publishing. 2006.
[9] Hasan Ali Al-Thannon. The extensive commentary on the explanation of the Civil Code. Second part on the Fault. First Edition. Dar Wael for printing and publishing. 2006.
[10] Hasan Ali Al-Thannon. The extensive commentary on the explanation of the Civil Code. First part on the damage. First Edition. Dar Wael for printing and publishing. 2006.
[11] Hasan Ali Al-Thannon. The extensive commentary on the explanation of the Civil Code. Fifth part on the things. First Edition. Dar Wael for printing and publishing. 2006.
[12] Hasan Ali Al-Thannon, sources of Obligations, Baghdad, 1970.
[13] Hepple and Matthews, Tort cases and Materials, 5thButterworths, 1996.
[14] Ismat Abdul Majeed Baker. The general theory of obligations. Part one. in Arab civil laws. Al-Thakira Publishing house. Baghdad. 2011.
[15] James Goudkamp. Tort law defences. Hart Publishing. Hart studies in private law. 2013.
[16] John Cooke. Law of torts. Fourth edition. Financial Times. Pitman Publishing, 1999.
[17] Joseph Glannon, the law of torts, examples and explanations. Third ed. Aspen publishers, 2005.
[18] Kirsty Horsey and Erika Rackely, Tort law, oxford university press, 2009.
[19] Linda Edwards. Stanley Edwards. Patricia Kirtley Wells, Tort Law, Fifth edition, DELMAR, 2012.
[20] Munther Al-Fadhel, The Medium Commentary on the explanation of the civil law, A comparative study between Islamic Jurisprudence and Arab and foreign laws, A study reinforced by opinions of both the jurisprudence and judiciary. Aras Publishing house, Erbil, 2006.
[21] Paula Giliker and silas Beckwith, Tort, Fourth edition, sweet & Maxwell, 2011.
[22] Ralph Tiernan. tort in nutshells. Sweet and Maxwell. 2006.
[23] Simon Deakin, Angus Johnston and Basil Markesinis. Markesinis and Deakin’s Tort law. Seventh Edition. Clarendon press. Oxford. 2013.
[24] Sterling Education. Essential Law, Tort Self-Teaching Guide. Third Edition. Sterling Education. USA. 2022.
[25] Vera Bermingham, Nutshells Tort, sixth edition, sweet and Maxwell, 2003.
[26] The Egyptian civil law No 131 of 1948.
[27] The English Common law.
[28] The Iraqi civil law No 40 of 1951.
[29] Dan E. Stigall. Iraqi Civil Law: Its Sources, Substance, and Sundering. Journal of Transnational Law & Policy. Volume 16. Number 1. 2006.
[30] Mary Ziegler. Modern Tort Law. Independently Published. 2022.
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  • APA Style

    Younis Salahuddin Ali. (2023). The Civil Liability from Medical Negligence of Doctors Treating Complications of Coronavirus in the English Law / A Comparative Study with the Iraqi Civil Law. International Journal of Law and Society, 6(1), 1-9. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijls.20230601.11

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    ACS Style

    Younis Salahuddin Ali. The Civil Liability from Medical Negligence of Doctors Treating Complications of Coronavirus in the English Law / A Comparative Study with the Iraqi Civil Law. Int. J. Law Soc. 2023, 6(1), 1-9. doi: 10.11648/j.ijls.20230601.11

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    AMA Style

    Younis Salahuddin Ali. The Civil Liability from Medical Negligence of Doctors Treating Complications of Coronavirus in the English Law / A Comparative Study with the Iraqi Civil Law. Int J Law Soc. 2023;6(1):1-9. doi: 10.11648/j.ijls.20230601.11

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  • @article{10.11648/j.ijls.20230601.11,
      author = {Younis Salahuddin Ali},
      title = {The Civil Liability from Medical Negligence of Doctors Treating Complications of Coronavirus in the English Law / A Comparative Study with the Iraqi Civil Law},
      journal = {International Journal of Law and Society},
      volume = {6},
      number = {1},
      pages = {1-9},
      doi = {10.11648/j.ijls.20230601.11},
      url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijls.20230601.11},
      eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ijls.20230601.11},
      abstract = {The Author has tried hard in this study to make a logic comparison between two different legal systems. That is to say the English common law, considered the leading system among other Anglo-American ones. And the Iraqi civil law highly affected and influenced by both the Islamic jurisprudence and the Egyptian civil law. It is worth-bearing in mind that the English common law includes many types of torts and the civil liability arising from them, including the tort of negligence in general. The general principles applied to which, can also be applied to medical negligence in particular. After the wide-spread dissemination of the coronavirus the British national health services organ (NHS) has given the cases of the doctor's treating the complications of this pandemic an ultimate importance. And the English courts based the civil liability arising from the medical negligence on three basic elements: the duty of care taken by doctors, the breach of this duty, and the damage suffered by patients. As well as the causation or the causal link between the tort of negligence and the damage or injury. Whereas the Iraqi civil law No. (40) of 1951 deals with the problems related to the civil liability arising from medical negligence of treating patients from coronavirus pandemic, by resorting to the general rules of the civil liability from the illegal act, which is based upon three basic elements: the trespass or transgression committed by the wrongdoer, the damage suffered by the victim and the causal link between them. As opposite to the Egyptian civil law No. (131) of 1948, which considers the first element of this liability as the fault rather than the trespass or transgression. After discussing the attitudes adopted by both the English and Iraqi laws, the author recommends that the Iraqi legislator should adopt the attitude taken by the English law, and let the Act of God deny both the fault element and the causation element of the civil liability arising from medical negligence. And also let the plea volenti non fit injuria deny both the fault element and the causation element of the civil liability of the defendant doctor arising from medical negligence.},
     year = {2023}
    }
    

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Author Information
  • College of Law and International and Diplomatic Relations, Cihan Private University, Erbil, Iraq

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