You tried repeatedly to claim that "tortuous" meant "winding" when used in conjunction with "battery"...
There are two spellings for the term you used in the context of tort law. You didn't know what either meant, did you?
tor·tious
ˈtôrSHəs/
adjectiveLaw
adjective: tortious
constituting a tort; wrongful.
Origin
late Middle English: from Anglo-Norman French torcious, from the stem of torcion ‘extortion, violence,’ from late Latin tortio(n-) (see torsion). The original sense was ‘injurious.’
Translate tortious to
Use over time for: tortious
In law, something is "tortious" when it constitutes a tort.
Are you going to claim that a tort is a pastry in the legal context?
Or perhaps you think "battery" is an electrical storage device in the law.
Poor BLABO.