Injuria Sine Damno: Legal Injury Without Damage

Injuria Sine Damno (Latin for “injury without damage”) is a legal maxim in tort law which states that the violation of a legal right is actionable per se (by itself), even if the plaintiff has suffered no actual, tangible harm, loss, or financial damage.

Key Principle

  • Injury (Injuria) is Paramount: The law is concerned primarily with the infringement of a legally protected right.
  • Damage (Damno) is Irrelevant: Whether the plaintiff suffered any measurable loss (like financial ruin or physical harm) is secondary to the fact that their right was violated.
  • Actionable Per Se: Because a legal right has been violated, the plaintiff has an immediate cause of action and is entitled to a legal remedy, often in the form of nominal damages (a small sum, like a dollar or a rupee) to acknowledge the breach of their right.

Landmark Case: Ashby v. White (1703)

The most famous case illustrating this principle is Ashby v. White.

ElementDescription
FactsThe plaintiff, a qualified voter, was wrongfully prevented from casting his vote in a parliamentary election by the returning officer (the defendant).
DamageThe candidate for whom the plaintiff intended to vote won the election anyway, so the plaintiff suffered no actual loss (damnum)—the election result wasn’t affected.
Court’s RulingThe court held the defendant liable. The mere fact that the plaintiff’s legal right to vote was violated (injuria) was sufficient to ground a claim, even in the absence of tangible harm.

This case established that every citizen is entitled to the free exercise of their legal rights, and any obstruction of that right is a legal wrong.

Comparison Summary

The two maxims establish the fundamental role of legal rights in tort law:

FeatureInjuria Sine DamnoDamnum Sine Injuria
MeaningLegal Injury without Actual DamageActual Damage without Legal Injury
Legal RightVIOLATED (Injuria occurred)NOT VIOLATED (Injuria did not occur)
Actual LossDid NOT occur (or is irrelevant)DID occur (Damnum occurred)
Actionable?YES (Actionable per se)NO (No cause of action)
ExampleWrongfully denying a qualified vote (Ashby v. White)Loss of business due to fair competition (Gloucester Grammar School Case)

In short: Injuria Sine Damno protects rights regardless of harm, while Damnum Sine Injuria means harm without the violation of a right is simply part of life’s risks, not a legal wrong.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *