0 someone who gets actively involved in something, rather than just thinking or talking about it: --
Such is the case when a victim suffers injury from a nonnegligent doer and therefore, in a negligence regime, can state no legal claim for compensation.
But there is no such substratum; there is no "being" behind the doing, effecting, becoming; "the doer" is simply fabricated into the doing - the doing is everything.
The doctrine of proximate cause in tort law manifests this principle of fairness by negating brute luck for doers.
As doers actively involved in coaxing machines into doing our bidding, we appreciate the problem.
It limits the doer's liability to the extent that she, and not luck, caused the harm. 44.
Of course, a tort where everything is under the doer's control does not exist.
Some doers have adapted these checklists and provide them in their guidance documents (15;45).
The aunt may be the selfless unrewarded doer of good.