Decisions taken by trustees have consequences. When trustees make mistakes, especially mistakes that cost the trust fund dearly, can the courts ever erase those errors and let the trustees unwind what they have done and start afresh? To do so, of course, has obvious advantages for both the trustees and those beneficiaries affected by the mistakes, but it is correspondingly disadvantageous for any outsiders who might be equally affected by the court’s decision to erase - in England most typically Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs. For a long time, the answer to the question posed seemed to be yes. This invaluable ‘get out of jail free’ card was delivered to errant trustees by virtue of what was routinely known as the ‘rule in Re Hastings-Bas...
Dr Christopher Forsyth (University of Cambridge) examines the role of the Home Secretary in determin...
P, as administrator of settlor\u27s estate, brought an action to terminate a trust. Trial court dism...
Relying on contractual and equitable principles to overcome fairly explicit statutory language, the ...
Decisions taken by trustees have consequences. When trustees make mistakes, especially mistakes that...
Not every decision we make is a good one. The power to make decisions includes the power to make bad...
The rule in Re Hastings-Bass is an equitable control on the exercise of powers by trustees. It has d...
In the United Kingdom a broad principle has been developing which effectively allows trustees to imp...
Section 61 of the Trustee Act 1925 provides that: “61. Power to relieve trustee from personal liabil...
A personal response to the Law Commission of England and Wales Consultation Paper 171, Trustee Exemp...
This article is concerned with s. 61 of the Trustee Act 1925. It will analyse the origins, design an...
The rule in Clayton’s case (1816) 1 Mer 572, despite being potentially capricious and arbitrary (bei...
(Excerpt) Imagine that you have been appointed to serve as a trustee in a bankruptcy case. As the “r...
(Excerpt) A Chapter 7 trustee cannot recover from the debtor, through a turnover motion, postpetitio...
(Excerpt) Quasi-judicial immunity is best understood as a blessing and a curse. A bankruptcy trustee...
For almost a century, bankruptcy trustees have argued with courts regarding appropriate compensation...
Dr Christopher Forsyth (University of Cambridge) examines the role of the Home Secretary in determin...
P, as administrator of settlor\u27s estate, brought an action to terminate a trust. Trial court dism...
Relying on contractual and equitable principles to overcome fairly explicit statutory language, the ...
Decisions taken by trustees have consequences. When trustees make mistakes, especially mistakes that...
Not every decision we make is a good one. The power to make decisions includes the power to make bad...
The rule in Re Hastings-Bass is an equitable control on the exercise of powers by trustees. It has d...
In the United Kingdom a broad principle has been developing which effectively allows trustees to imp...
Section 61 of the Trustee Act 1925 provides that: “61. Power to relieve trustee from personal liabil...
A personal response to the Law Commission of England and Wales Consultation Paper 171, Trustee Exemp...
This article is concerned with s. 61 of the Trustee Act 1925. It will analyse the origins, design an...
The rule in Clayton’s case (1816) 1 Mer 572, despite being potentially capricious and arbitrary (bei...
(Excerpt) Imagine that you have been appointed to serve as a trustee in a bankruptcy case. As the “r...
(Excerpt) A Chapter 7 trustee cannot recover from the debtor, through a turnover motion, postpetitio...
(Excerpt) Quasi-judicial immunity is best understood as a blessing and a curse. A bankruptcy trustee...
For almost a century, bankruptcy trustees have argued with courts regarding appropriate compensation...
Dr Christopher Forsyth (University of Cambridge) examines the role of the Home Secretary in determin...
P, as administrator of settlor\u27s estate, brought an action to terminate a trust. Trial court dism...
Relying on contractual and equitable principles to overcome fairly explicit statutory language, the ...