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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.

not
occur.
If
the
plaintiff
would
have
avoided
the
harm
in
that
world,
the
defendant’s
action
is
considered
causally
relevant.
The
test
helps
separate
legal
responsibility
from
mere
correlation
and
is
often
the
starting
point
for
establishing
liability
in
negligence
and
related
torts.
acts
each
would
have
caused
the
harm,
no
single
act
may
be
a
but-for
cause,
leading
courts
to
use
other
approaches
such
as
the
substantial
factor
or
material
contribution
tests,
or
to
allocate
liability
among
defendants
in
different
ways.
In
some
jurisdictions,
special
doctrines
address
harmful
exposure
from
multiple
tortfeasors
or
uncertain
causation,
including
loss-of-chance
or
market-share
liability
theories.
It
is
distinguished
from
proximate
causation,
which
concerns
policy-based
limits
on
liability,
and
from
legal
causation,
which
governs
outcomes
in
specific
jurisdictions.