Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments

Positive_Debate7048 t1_izl1rza wrote

If you’re in uniform on the clock, and on the premises, a court is basically always gonna find that the employee was acting within scope of employment.

1

Unspec7 t1_izl2v4k wrote

If an employer has specifically instructed its employees to not confront a thief, confronting a thief would most likely no longer be serving the purposes of your employer, regardless of how much goodwill you're trying to show the big man. As such, it would be outside their scope of employment, regardless of uniform or premise.

This is speaking specifically of intentional torts, since injuring a thief likely involved battery.

1

Positive_Debate7048 t1_izlnexz wrote

I don’t care to debate this but courts have disagreed in the past. There’s plenty of case law on this.

1

Unspec7 t1_izlntse wrote

Would you mind citing some cases? You're basically saying that case law is stating a bright line rule and contradicting a base principle of torts, which is that scope of employment has no bright line rules. I'd be interested to see the cases and their opinion.

1