The attainment, the volume and the range of the publications he left behind are truly -remarkable, but for many Canadian lawyers, as surely for lawyers throughout the common law world beyond American shores, the name of William F. Fratcher is associated with Scott on Trusts,\u27 a work that everywhere has long been recognised as a classic. Today that subject is a matter of debate, and this article, in order to mark the distinguished work of Scott\u27s first editor, sets out to examine, in the context of the common law jurisdictions of the Commonwealth (formerly the British Commonwealth), the present day situation of the trust treatise
In this Article, Professors Henry Hansmann and Ugo Mattei analyze the functions served by the law of...
In this article, Lord Wedderburn provides a detailed examination on the evolution of the concepts of...
Usually thought of as only a remedial measure, the resulting trust may now be ready to take on an ex...
The attainment, the volume and the range of the publications he left behind are truly -remarkable, b...
Professor Scott, in his four volume work on the Law of Trusts, has given us a book worthy to stand b...
In the culture of Anglo-American law, we think of the trust as a branch of the law of gratuitous tra...
This paper discusses the various statutory and common law methods for attacking trusts, the ways to ...
In an Epilogue to both the first and second editions Professor Scott, with characteristic concisenes...
Final author version of work accepted for publication as: STEBBINGS, Chantal: ‘Lewin’s Practical Tr...
In every generation there are some judicial decisions so revolutionary that any summary of developme...
This piece is a short discussion on the English; and more widely the common law concept of the trust...
As a preface to a discussion of any of the tentative drafts of the restatement of law it is interest...
On its publication in 1988, Trusts Law was greeted with enthusiasm, Brenda Sufrin stating in the Con...
This article examines the ancient, well attested, but largely unexamined, inherent jurisdiction of t...
The reception of common law in the United States was stimulated by a very popular and influential tr...
In this Article, Professors Henry Hansmann and Ugo Mattei analyze the functions served by the law of...
In this article, Lord Wedderburn provides a detailed examination on the evolution of the concepts of...
Usually thought of as only a remedial measure, the resulting trust may now be ready to take on an ex...
The attainment, the volume and the range of the publications he left behind are truly -remarkable, b...
Professor Scott, in his four volume work on the Law of Trusts, has given us a book worthy to stand b...
In the culture of Anglo-American law, we think of the trust as a branch of the law of gratuitous tra...
This paper discusses the various statutory and common law methods for attacking trusts, the ways to ...
In an Epilogue to both the first and second editions Professor Scott, with characteristic concisenes...
Final author version of work accepted for publication as: STEBBINGS, Chantal: ‘Lewin’s Practical Tr...
In every generation there are some judicial decisions so revolutionary that any summary of developme...
This piece is a short discussion on the English; and more widely the common law concept of the trust...
As a preface to a discussion of any of the tentative drafts of the restatement of law it is interest...
On its publication in 1988, Trusts Law was greeted with enthusiasm, Brenda Sufrin stating in the Con...
This article examines the ancient, well attested, but largely unexamined, inherent jurisdiction of t...
The reception of common law in the United States was stimulated by a very popular and influential tr...
In this Article, Professors Henry Hansmann and Ugo Mattei analyze the functions served by the law of...
In this article, Lord Wedderburn provides a detailed examination on the evolution of the concepts of...
Usually thought of as only a remedial measure, the resulting trust may now be ready to take on an ex...