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14 Lewis & Clark L. Rev. 1401 (2010)
What's Reasonable: Self-Defense and Mistake in Criminal and Tort Law

handle is hein.journals/lewclr14 and id is 1431 raw text is: WHAT'S REASONABLE?: SELF-DEFENSE AND MISTAKE IN
CRIMINAL AND TORT LAW
by
Caroline Forellt
In this Article, Professor Forell examines the criminal and tort mistake-
as-to-self-defense doctrines. She uses the State v. Peairs criminal and
Hattori v. Peairs tort mistaken self-defense cases to illustrate why
application of the reasonable person standard to the same set of facts in
two areas of law can lead to different outcomes. She also uses these cases
to highlight how fundamentally different the perception of what is
reasonable can be in different cultures. She then questions whether both
criminal and tort law should continue to treat a reasonably mistaken
belief that deadly force is necessary as justifiable self-defense. Based on the
different purposes that tort and criminal law serve, Professor Forell
explains why in self-defense cases criminal law should retain the
reasonable mistake standard while tort law should move to a strict
liability with comparative fault standard.
I.     INTRODUCTION                             .................................... 1402
II.    THE LAW OF SELF-DEFENSE            ............................. 1403
III.   THE PEAIRS MISTAKE CASES .          ....................   ..... 1406
A.   The Peairs Facts    ..........................      ....... 1408
B.   The Criminal Case ................................. 1409
1. The Applicable Law ........................... 1409
2. The Criminal Trial     .................    ............... 1410
3. The Aftermath        .................................. 1413
C.   The Hattoris' Wrongful Death Trial and Appeal.......  ..... 1415
1. The Civil Trial................................. 1415
2. The Civil Appeal: Hattori v. Peairs....     ............. 1415
D. Comparing the Outcomes in the Criminal and Civil Cases......... 1417
E.   The Influence of Different Purposes for Tort Law and
Criminal Law         ..................................... 1418
Clayton R. Hess Professor of Law, University of Oregon School of Law. This
Article is part of the Lewis & Clark Law Review's Spring 2010 Symposium, Who Is The
Reasonable Person? I benefited from my colleagues' comments when I presented a
version of this Article at a session of the University of Oregon School of Law's
Academic Flash Mob, June 10, 2010. Thanks to Dorothy Kim and Jen Costa for their
excellent research assistance.

1401

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