Butfor
But-for causation, or the but-for test, is a standard used in tort law to determine factual causation between a defendant’s conduct and a plaintiff’s harm. It asks whether the plaintiff’s injury would have occurred if not for the defendant’s actions. If the injury would have happened anyway, the defendant’s breach is not a factual cause; if the injury would not have occurred without the defendant’s conduct, that conduct is a but-for cause.
In practice, the test is applied by considering a hypothetical world in which the defendant’s conduct did
The but-for test has limits, especially when there are multiple concurrent or alternative causes. If two independent
Historically rooted in common-law reasoning, the but-for standard remains a foundational concept in determining factual causation.