Proprietary Remedies in Context
By (Author) Craig Rotherham
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
23rd April 2002
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Public health and safety law
344.4104233
Hardback
384
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 30mm
764g
There is a tension in English law between the idea that the courts might provide a remedy by creating new property rights and the understanding that the judiciary's role is limited to the protection of existing proprietary interests with the power to redistribute property residing in the legislature alone. While there are numerous instances in which the courts intervene to readjust property rights, these are disguised in metaphor and fiction. However, this has meant that the law in this area has developed without open consideration of justifications for redistributing property. The result of this is that there is little coherence in the law of proprietary remedies as a whole and a good deal of it is indefensible. This book examines redistributive processes such as tracing, subrogation and proprietary estoppel and the use of the constructive trust in the context of contracts to assign property, vitiated transactions, the profits of wrongdoing and the breakdown of intimate relationships. In doing so, it contrasts the English treatment of this area of law with developments in other common law jurisdictions.
Proprietary Remedies in Context is a rewarding book, with much to offer. It has a healthy radical edge and it argues with care, conviction and high intelligence. A great deal is packed into the book, but the virtues of clarity and economy of expression are very evident. -- David Carey Miller * Legal Studies *
Craig Rotherham is a Reader in Law at the University of Nottingham.