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Recent leading cases have demonstrated the urgent need to modernize
the learning on breach of trust,which has lagged behind the
flourishing scholarship on the creation of trusts. Since breach of
trust or fiduciary duty occupies the centre of the legal stage, it
comes as a surprise that, although one or two novelists have chosen
'Breach of Trust' as the title to their book, no lawyer has so far
thought it necessary to produce a specialized work on the subject.
To fill the gap, this book, written by a team of leading trust
lawyers from a number of common law jurisdictions, investigates all
the principal aspects of the subject. The nature of the trustee's
duties and of the liability for breach is closely examined, and all
available defences and excuses are reviewed. Two substantial
chapters consider the consequences of assisting a breach or
receiving trust property from a trustee acting in breach. The book
closes with a critical overview of the entire topic. CONTENTS: 1
Robert Chambers 'Liability for Breach'; 2 Joshua Getzler 'The Duty
of Care'; 3 Edwin Simpson 'The Conflict of Interest'; 4 David Fox
'Overreaching'; 5 Lionel Smith 'Property Transferred in Breach'; 6
Charles Mitchell 'Assistance'; 7 Peter Birks 'Receipt'; 8 James
Penner 'Exemption clauses'; 9 John Lowry and Rod Edmunds 'Honest
and Reasonable Breach'; 10 Jennifer Payne 'Consent'; 11 William
Swadling 'Limitation'; 12 Gary Watt 'Laches, Estoppel and
Election'; 13 David Hayton 'An Overview'.
This study of the boundaries of personal property has an inward and
an outward perspective, with the intellectual emphasis on the
latter. The inward-looking inquiry considers shares as items of
personal property. Nowadays those who think of themselves as
shareholders often stand one step removed from the share itself.
They hold what this book christens a sub-share. This part of the
book asks in what sense shares and sub-shares can be conceived to
be things, how those things are alienated, and how they are
protected in litigation. The outward-looking inquiry then asks
whether personal property can be contemplated as a sub-category of
the law of things and, more particularly, as the law of all things
locatable in space, alienable, or vindicable in court. The outward
inquiry considers three boundaries. Within the law of property the
line between realty and personalty proves relatively
uncontroversial; the second boundary lies between property and
obligations; the third between wealth and non-wealth. The second
boundary is the main concern. Respect for it necessitates a
differentiation between the law of property in the strict sense and
the all-encompassing law of wealth, even where the consequence
might be to exclude shares and sub-shares from the law of property.
In maintaining the value of careful proprietary taxonomy and in
reviving the underlying concepts on which it depends, this book
opposes modern scepticism as to the possibility and desirability of
precision in legal classification. In these commitments it could
fairly be styled a post-modern study of personal property. Winner
of the SLS Birks Prize for Outstanding Legal Scholarship 2006 -
Second Prize.
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