false imprisonment
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: 1. A legal tort involving the unlawful restraint of a person's freedom of movement: The act of intentionally confining or detaining an individual without legal justification or their consent. It is a civil wrong (tort) and can also be a crime.
Usage
- This term is primarily used in legal contexts to describe a specific wrongful act.
- It refers to the confinement itself, not necessarily within a prison; it can occur in any location (e.g., a room, a vehicle, a street).
- The confinement must be total and against the person's will. Merely blocking one path while others are available typically does not constitute false imprisonment.
Examples
- Noun:
- The store manager was sued for false imprisonment after detaining a customer suspected of shoplifting without proper cause.
- A claim of false imprisonment can arise if someone is locked in a building without their permission and no means of escape.
Advanced Usage
- Elements of the tort: To prove false imprisonment, one typically must show: 1) an act of restraint, 2) intent to restrain, and 3) resulting confinement. Lack of lawful authority is a key factor.
- Defenses: Common legal defenses against a claim of false imprisonment include having legal authority (e.g., a lawful arrest by police) or the person's valid consent to the restraint.
Variants and Related Words
- False arrest (n): A specific type of false imprisonment involving detention under the asserted authority of law, such as an unlawful arrest.
- Imprisonment (n): The state of being imprisoned; confinement. (Note: "Imprisonment" alone can be lawful or unlawful).
- Unlawful detention (n): A phrase often used synonymously with false imprisonment.
Synonyms
- Wrongful confinement
- Unlawful imprisonment
- Illegal detention
Related Idioms/Phrases
(This legal term does not commonly feature in idiomatic expressions. Its usage is technical and literal.)
Noun
- (law) confinement without legal authority