deviating from the principle of full compensation in belgian tort law
ilse samoy, sophie stijns, pieter gillaerts

As an exception to the rule that the loss lies where it falls, tort law shifts the loss on the basis of the tortfeasor’s responsibility. Key to the scope of the redress is the fundamental principle of full compensation. It is based on a traditional balancing of interests, where the interest of the innocent victim prevails over the interest of the guilty person. Yet, our increasingly complex society and the wide array of deviations calls for a reassessment of the absolute nature of the 200-year-old principle of full compensation. What if it becomes completely unfair to award a full compensation? How does one take into account that strict liabilities also spread the loss instead of merely shifting it?

Belgian tort law is faced with a major incoherence today. The principle of full compensation is confronted with numerous deviations. Although, in theory, the entire loss should be compensated without any possibility for the judge to moderate, in reality, different legal actors such as the legislator and the judge have tried to find solutions for unfair situations resulting from this principle of full compensation. For example, judges moderate on improper grounds for lack of an appropriate tool to moderate. This thesis has transcended the fragmentation and incoherent compartmentalisation by taking a bird’s-eye view. The tension between the absolute principle of full compensation and the numerous deviating systems is assessed by analysing important deviating systems and comparing Belgian law to Dutch and French law.

As an exception to the rule that the loss lies where it falls, tort law shifts the loss on the basis of the tortfeasor’s responsibility. Key to the scope of the redress is the fundamental principle of full compensation. It is based on a traditional balancing of interests, where the interest of the innocent victim prevails over the interest of the guilty person. Yet, our increasingly complex society and the wide array of deviations calls for a reassessment of the absolute nature of the 200-year-old principle of full compensation. What if it becomes completely unfair to award a full compensation? How does one take into account that strict liabilities also spread the loss instead of merely shifting it?

Belgian tort law is faced with a major incoherence today. The principle of full compensation is confronted with numerous deviations. Although, in theory, the entire loss should be compensated without any possibility for the judge to moderate, in reality, different legal actors such as the legislator and the judge have tried to find solutions for unfair situations resulting from this principle of full compensation. For example, judges moderate on improper grounds for lack of an appropriate tool to moderate. This thesis has transcended the fragmentation and incoherent compartmentalisation by taking a bird’s-eye view. The tension between the absolute principle of full compensation and the numerous deviating systems is assessed by analysing important deviating systems and comparing Belgian law to Dutch and French law.