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Torts and crim law if you want interesting.
I've forgotten the name of the case but here's a run down of one of my favourtie Torts cases: guy sitting on a tram, there is a sign in the tram that says not to put any thing or any body part out of the window. So the guy sticks his head out and it gets knocked off by a telephone/electrical pole (or some sort). His family then sues the tram company on the basis that it was reasonable to expect that someone might put their head out and the proximity the track was laid to the pole meant it was reasonably forseeable.
They won the case and iirc part of the reasoning was the fact there was a sign forbidding it suggested that it could have been forseen.
Also, just for anyone thinking of doing College of Law after their degree, think long and hard about it. It may seem better because it's faster than Leos, but it's a mountain of effort if you do it propertly.
anyone ever come across the contract case from the states regarding 'pepsi points'? leonard v pepsico...
by drinking pepsi products, you could accumulate 'pepsi points', or you could purchase them for 10 cents each. these there was an advertisement stating how many points you would need to earn specific merchandise... pepsi sunglasses - 175 points; pepsi leather jacket - 1 450 points etc. each time the guy in the ad put on the merchandise, its points value would pop up on screen.
at the end of the ad, the guy turns up to school in a harrier jump jet, and its 'pepsi points' value is put up on screen - 7 000 000 points.
some guy (perhaps a syndicate, rather than one person) saved up the $700 000 required to purchase the 7 000 000 points and tried to claim his harrier. it was not a case we were required to study, but just an interesting one our lecturer told us about, but pepsi won the case and avoided having to hand over a couple of hundred million dollars worth of military hardware.






