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Guest
Guest
Re: Just to complicate matters
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Actualy just thinking about it it might be that.
1. The owners were knowingly negligent in employing a person who they should have or did know was incompetent for the job.
2. The person in charge of the helm 'skipper' was negligent in causing the circumstance surrounding the accident.
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As mentioned before it's a matter of recklessness, not negligence. But you couldn't commit manslaughter just by recklessly employing someone who wasn't very competent, unless perhaps you knew that that person was a psychopathic lunatic whose speciailty was murdering peopoe by deliberately sinking boats.
Your proposition 2. is quite possible: as I say, whether he is called 'skipper' or not is not really the point. If it was the person in charge of the helm doing some really stupid things, then he could be prosecuted.
[ QUOTE ]
Actualy just thinking about it it might be that.
1. The owners were knowingly negligent in employing a person who they should have or did know was incompetent for the job.
2. The person in charge of the helm 'skipper' was negligent in causing the circumstance surrounding the accident.
[/ QUOTE ]
As mentioned before it's a matter of recklessness, not negligence. But you couldn't commit manslaughter just by recklessly employing someone who wasn't very competent, unless perhaps you knew that that person was a psychopathic lunatic whose speciailty was murdering peopoe by deliberately sinking boats.
Your proposition 2. is quite possible: as I say, whether he is called 'skipper' or not is not really the point. If it was the person in charge of the helm doing some really stupid things, then he could be prosecuted.