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This book presents a clear, carefully-analysed picture of the
operation of equity today, across the common law world. Rather than
revisit the abstract debate as to whether or not equity has 'fused'
with the common law, it focuses on specific equitable principles
and doctrines. Expert contributors step back and take a wider view
of those doctrines, examining how they can best be understood
today, and how they might develop in the future. This will prove
invaluable to practitioners and courts (at first instance as well
as appellate level), allowing them to navigate the
constantly-growing mass of case law. Drawing on expertise from
across the worlds of academia, practice and the bench, this seminal
collection provides the most illuminating picture available of how
equity operates.
Land Law: Text, Cases, and Materials has been designed to provide
students with everything they need to approach their land law
course with confidence. Experts in the area, the authors combine
clear and insightful commentary with carefully chosen extracts to
offer students a full account of the subject. Using the popular
Text, Cases and Materials format the authors take a critical
approach to the subject, presenting thought-provoking analysis of
the leading case-law in the area and inviting students to develop
their own analytical skills ready for exams. The book can be used
as a stand-alone resource, or as a complement to Land Law: Core
Text, written by the same authors. Covering a broad range of
topics, the authors have used their unique approach to land law to
provide a consistent structure with which students and lecturers
can tackle the subject. This approach arms students with the tools
needed to analyse content autonomously by seeing how individual
rules fit into a broader structure, leading students towards a
comprehensive and advanced understanding of this complex subject
area. Digital formats and resources The fifth edition is available
for students and institutions to purchase in a variety of formats,
and is supported by online resources. The e-book offers a mobile
experience and convenient access along with functionality tools,
navigation features and links that offer extra learning support:
www.oxfordtextbooks.co.uk/ebooks A range of resources for this book
are available online: - Self-test questions with feedback -
Exclusive online chapters - Guidance on answering end-of-chapter
questions - Links to further research and websites
McFarlane, Hopkins, and Nield's Land Law is the most succinct,
analytical textbook available in this subject area. These
experienced and respected authors have used their unique approach
to land law to provide a consistent structure with which students
and lecturers can tackle the topics. The approach arms students
with the tools needed to analyse content covered in classes and
exams autonomously by demonstrating how to consider rules in
isolation before looking at the full picture. This method helps
students make links across topics. The concise treatment allows
students to concentrate on building an in-depth, sophisticated
grasp of the core principles. The authors' direct writing style and
contextual outlook guides readers through the depth and detail and
gives lucidity to abstract rules. The use of significant cases to
exemplify rules in practice and diagrams for visual learners gives
additional clarity to concepts that are particularly difficult to
imagine. Students are encouraged to test their knowledge by
answering end-of-chapter questions and to widen their research by
referring to the resources suggested in the further reading lists
accompanying each chapter. Digital formats and resources This
edition is available for students and institutions to purchase in a
variety of formats, and is supported by online resources. - The
e-book offers a mobile experience and convenient access along with
functionality tools, navigation features, and links that offer
extra learning support: www.oxfordtextbooks.co.uk/ebooks - The
Online Resources include the following materials for students: *
Web links to useful sites containing further information on
chapter-specific topics * Self-test multiple-choice questions with
instant feedback * Guidance on how to answer end of chapter
questions * Updates on legal developments in land law
This is the second edition of the leading authority on the law of
proprietary estoppel, which has been cited by courts across the
common law world. It is a comprehensive and practically structured
resource which offers guidance on managing proprietary estoppel
cases. Relevant authorities are set out in a clear and accessible
way, helping readers to make sense of a complex and rapidly
developing area of law. Recent case-law discussed in the second
edition, from England but also with updated reference to other
common law jurisdictions, including new decisions of the top courts
in each of Australia, Canada, and Singapore. Proprietary estoppel
has come to particular prominence in recent years: it is frequently
pleaded by litigants wishing to show that they have informally
acquired an interest in land. As a result of its vigorous
development by the courts, there is no comprehensive and
uncontroversial definition of the doctrine. There is also much
debate as to the relationship between proprietary estoppel and
other doctrines, such as constructive trusts and unjust enrichment.
A problem faced by anyone seeking to make, or respond to, a
proprietary estoppel claim is that the law is to be found almost
entirely in cases. This new edition of The Law of Proprietary
Estoppel sets out a clear structure with which to understand the
law and thus assists practitioners, academics, and others in
navigating their way through the complex case-law on proprietary
estoppel, and also in understanding its relationship with related
doctrines, particularly other forms of estoppel. It has been fully
updated with analysis of key recent cases in the farming and family
context (eg Davies v Davies [2016] EWCA Civ 463, Moore v Moore
[2018] EWCA Civ 2669, Habberfield v Habberfield [2019] EWCA Civ 890
and Guest v Guest [2020] EWCA Civ 387) and in the commercial
context (eg Hoyl Group Ltd v Cromer Town Council [2015] EWCA Civ
782 and Farrar v Miller [2018] EWCA Civ 172), considering issues
such as the requirements of a proprietary estoppel claim, the role
of formalities, and the satisfaction of an estoppel equity.
This book contains a collection of papers presented at the Twelfth
Biennial Modern Studies in Property Law Conference held at
University College London in April 2018. The conference and its
published proceedings are an established forum for property lawyers
from around the world to showcase the latest research. This
collection includes a keynote address by Dame Elizabeth Gloster,
former Vice President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division), on
technology in property law. It also includes plenary addresses by
Professor Henry Smith on the architecture of property law and the
challenge of compiling the American Law Institute's Fourth
Restatement of Property, and by Her Honour Judge Karen Walden-Smith
on the role of the first instance judge in property cases. Sixteen
further chapters address a wide range of issues, including the
theory and taxonomy of land law, the re-evaluation of land
obligations, the nature and operation of equitable property rights
and shares, the role of property in commerce, comparative
approaches to leases and trusts, and contemporary issues in land
registration. Collectively, the chapters demonstrate the vibrancy,
diversity and importance of property law and of current research in
the subject.
This book contains a collection of papers presented at the Twelfth
Biennial Modern Studies in Property Law Conference held at
University College London in April 2018. The conference and its
published proceedings are an established forum for property lawyers
from around the world to showcase the latest research. This
collection includes a keynote address by Dame Elizabeth Gloster,
former Vice President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division), on
technology in property law. It also includes plenary addresses by
Professor Henry Smith on the architecture of property law and the
challenge of compiling the American Law Institute’s Fourth
Restatement of Property, and by Her Honour Judge Karen Walden-Smith
on the role of the first instance judge in property cases. Sixteen
further chapters address a wide range of issues, including the
theory and taxonomy of land law, the re-evaluation of land
obligations, the nature and operation of equitable property rights
and shares, the role of property in commerce, comparative
approaches to leases and trusts, and contemporary issues in land
registration. Collectively, the chapters demonstrate the vibrancy,
diversity and importance of property law and of current research in
the subject.
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