This article will address circumstances under which \u27gifts\u27 of personalty, made without legal supervision by lay people, should be construed as declarations of trust in order to carry out the wishes of the property owner. The declaration of trust doctrine may salvage some attempted gift transactions because the property which is the subject of the trust need not be delivered to the trust beneficiary
In 1930 plaintiff received certain shares of stock from his uncle by way of outright gift. Seven mon...
The Theft Act 1968 (UK) marked a major reform of United Kingdom criminal law resulting in numerous o...
An unincorporated association is a strange phenomenon. As a matter of fact, it undoubtedly exists an...
This article will address circumstances under which \u27gifts\u27 of personalty, made without legal ...
This, the second part of a two-part article concerning claims to the family home by an unmarried par...
It seems to be widely believed that settlors can never make valid declarations of trust over propert...
Within a liberal, ‘law of things’ understanding of property, the donative trust is seen as a species...
This thesis explores the nature of the resulting trust and its role in the law of restitution. Part ...
This article discusses the Court of Appeal judgment in Pankhania v Chandegra on whether an express d...
An article suggesting that revocable gifts in the context of not only testamentary promises, but als...
The doctrine of estates is the common law system for the classification of divided ownership. Its ...
Examines the central role of the "declaration" in self-declarations of trust. Reviews the difference...
SOME human actions fit rather neatly into legal categories; many do not. This is as true of attempts...
Over the past two years, a significant number of appellate courts in jurisdictions throughout the co...
In Pitt v Holt [2013] UKSC 26, the Supreme Court ruled on the conditions under which a voluntary dee...
In 1930 plaintiff received certain shares of stock from his uncle by way of outright gift. Seven mon...
The Theft Act 1968 (UK) marked a major reform of United Kingdom criminal law resulting in numerous o...
An unincorporated association is a strange phenomenon. As a matter of fact, it undoubtedly exists an...
This article will address circumstances under which \u27gifts\u27 of personalty, made without legal ...
This, the second part of a two-part article concerning claims to the family home by an unmarried par...
It seems to be widely believed that settlors can never make valid declarations of trust over propert...
Within a liberal, ‘law of things’ understanding of property, the donative trust is seen as a species...
This thesis explores the nature of the resulting trust and its role in the law of restitution. Part ...
This article discusses the Court of Appeal judgment in Pankhania v Chandegra on whether an express d...
An article suggesting that revocable gifts in the context of not only testamentary promises, but als...
The doctrine of estates is the common law system for the classification of divided ownership. Its ...
Examines the central role of the "declaration" in self-declarations of trust. Reviews the difference...
SOME human actions fit rather neatly into legal categories; many do not. This is as true of attempts...
Over the past two years, a significant number of appellate courts in jurisdictions throughout the co...
In Pitt v Holt [2013] UKSC 26, the Supreme Court ruled on the conditions under which a voluntary dee...
In 1930 plaintiff received certain shares of stock from his uncle by way of outright gift. Seven mon...
The Theft Act 1968 (UK) marked a major reform of United Kingdom criminal law resulting in numerous o...
An unincorporated association is a strange phenomenon. As a matter of fact, it undoubtedly exists an...