fourhorses wrote:cinyc wrote:
I don't know if the court will buy the duty to mitigate argument - but it's certainly innovative.
Two interesting observations ...
With insurance, there is a duty to mitigate.
Goading to increase the damages - interesting
There is a general duty on plaintiffs to mitigate the damage in all actions. Where Ms Kasluzka (sp?) is on the right track is that prior to the interwebs there was little a complainant could do to mitigate the damage.
The goading is part of legal doctrine, basically you're not supposed to use the legal process to further injure a person's reputation. What is normally covered by that is you can't assert things you know to be untrue to be part of your defence. To make goading work as a plaintiff you have to prove
1) The assertions are false
2) The defendants know that the assertions are false
3) The defendants repeat the assertions despite knowing they are false
With the Rogers' internet records that could prove Richard Warman to be innocent of the Cools post gone Warman has long row to hoe if he wants to get goading up and working for him. Interestingly in his Claim he presents no proof of his innocence of the Cools post, only his word - which as demonstrated by the Fournier's defence isn't something that you can take as carved in stone.