William Prosser

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

William Lloyd Prosser (born March 15, 1898, New Albany, Indiana; died 1972) was the Dean of the College of Law at UC Berkeley from 1948 to 1961. Prosser authored several editions of Prosser on Torts, universally recognized as the leading work on the subject of tort law for a generation and still widely used today (now in its 11th Edition). Furthermore, in the 1950's, Dean Prosser became Reporter for the Second Restatement of Torts.

After spending his first year at Harvard Law School, Prosser transferred to and received his Juris Doctor from the University of Minnesota Law School in 1932. After a brief stint in private practice at the modern-day Dorsey & Whitney, he became a professor of law at the University of Minnesota Law School, where he wrote Prosser on Torts. Prosser returned to private practice from 1943 until 1947, when he returned to Harvard as a professor. The following year, Prosser became Dean of the College of Law at UC Berkeley. In 1961, Prosser left Berkeley to teach at the Hastings College of Law, where he remained until his death in 1972.

In the ground level of the Campanile at UC Berkeley Prosser is quoted as saying "If the authority exists to discharge a professor because he will not sign this oath on demand, then it exists to fire him because he will not sign an oath that he is not a Catholic, not a Mason, not a consumer of beer...there is no place to stop." in a small exhibit about the Loyalty Oath.

[edit] Prosser and strict products liability

Prosser became closely associated with the doctrine of strict liability for products injuries. His first edition of Prosser on Torts in 1941 argued that strict products liability was developing in American law, and predicted that it would be the law of the future. By the time his influential article The Assault on the Citadel (Strict Liability to the Consumer) was published in 1960, the New Jersey Supreme Court fulfilled his prediction, holding in Henningsen v. Bloomfield Motors that manufacturers implicitly warrantied their products against personal injury to all users. As Reporter for the Second Restatement of Torts, he helped codify strict products liability in the Restatement's Section 402A.

In the early 1940s Prosser prepared the Comments and Notes to the predicessor of the Uniform Commercial Code: Commercial Code, Tentative Draft No. 1 - Article III. His work was limited to sections 1-51 of Article III, which focused primarliy on commercial paper.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Commercial Code Comments and Notes to Tentative Draft No. 1 - Article III, Introductory Note on p.5 (The American Law Institute, 1946)
Languages