Tort (wrongful act)
A wrongful act causing harm that gives rise to liability outside of any contract.
Définition
A tort, or wrongful act, is a non-contractual ground for liability. It arises when a person unlawfully causes damage to another and the act can be attributed to them. Under article 6:162 BW the wrong may consist of a violation of a right, an act or omission breaching a statutory duty, or conduct contrary to unwritten standards of proper social conduct. Liability requires fault or attributable risk, damage, and a causal link.
Exemple
A contractor whose negligence damages a neighbouring building can be liable in tort even without any contract with the building's owner.
Pourquoi c'est un risque pour l'entreprise
Tort liability arises regardless of whether a contract exists or what a contract says, so a contractual liability cap does not automatically limit a tort claim. Businesses that cause harm through negligent operations, unsafe products or data misuse can face tort claims from third parties who have no contract with them at all. The absence of a written agreement does not provide protection: the standards of proper social conduct set an independent floor of obligation.
Comment le gérer
- Maintain adequate public liability insurance to cover third-party personal injury and property damage claims that arise outside any contract.
- Implement operational safety standards and document compliance, so that if a tort claim arises you can demonstrate the care exercised.
- Note that contractual limitations on liability may not extend to tort claims from third parties, and review your contracts for this gap.
- When operating near third-party assets or persons, document the steps taken to prevent foreseeable harm.
Références juridiques
Sauf mention contraire, les références renvoient au droit néerlandais (Burgerlijk Wetboek, le Code civil néerlandais) ; les instruments de l'UE tels que le RGPD s'appliquent dans toute l'UE. Il s'agit d'informations générales, pas de conseils juridiques. D'autres juridictions traitent ces concepts différemment. Vérifiez le texte en vigueur et votre situation avec un avocat qualifié.
Foire aux questions
Questions courantes sur ce terme.