Abstract
Maine's comparative negligence statute provides that a plaintiff who is partly at fault for his or her own injury may recover so long as he or she is not "equally at fault." The statute is simple to apply when there is only one defendant. In cases that involve two or more defendants, however, neither the Maine Supreme Judicial Court nor the Legislature has indicated whether the plaintiff's fault is compared with the fault of each defendant individually or all defendants combined.
First Page
345
Recommended Citation
Karen P. O'Sullivan,
Comparative Negligence: The Multiple Defendant Dilemma,
36
Me. L. Rev.
345
(1984).
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.mainelaw.maine.edu/mlr/vol36/iss2/9