Although it is an entrenched principle of company law that the abuse of corporate personality may require the “corporate veil” of a company to be “pierced”, this possibility has only recently become a feature of South African trust law. While this is a salutary development in theory, the application and practical usefulness of this remedy remain shrouded in uncertainty. A particularly acute manifestation hereof arises where it is argued that (the value of) trust property should be considered for the purposes of dividing matrimonial property at divorce. By drawing on the established principles of “piercing” in the company context and analysing relevant case law, Part One of this article concludes that the prevailing position in respect of tr...
Deficiencies in the Property (Relationships) Act 1976 (PRA) have led to allegations of sham trusts, ...
Section 18(b) of the Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984 allows for non-patrimonial damages to be cl...
In this article, I assess the constitutive status accorded to trust deeds in Potgieter v Potgieter a...
Although it is an entrenched principle of company law that the abuse of corporate personality may re...
LLM (Estate Law), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2015This mini-dissertation is aimed a...
This paper addresses a dilemma faced by South African courts relating to the status of assets held i...
In this article the different theoretical bases for attacking trusts upon divorce and in maintenance...
This thesis analyses the doctrines of the sham and the alter-ego and their application to the law of...
Based on an empirical study of marital dissolution, this paper examines the effectiveness of the Rec...
The protective legislation which frequently resulted in assets held within a family trust being remo...
This dissertation examines the “bundle of rights” theory as it meets at the intersection of trust an...
It is generally assumed that financial apportionment between cohabiting parties, when the relationsh...
Substantive gender equality has yet to be achieved in South Africa. As such, when a decision is made...
This article discusses the reasoning of the High Court and Court of Appeal in Harvey v Beveridge in ...
Section 18(b) of the Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984 allows for non-patrimonial damages to be cl...
Deficiencies in the Property (Relationships) Act 1976 (PRA) have led to allegations of sham trusts, ...
Section 18(b) of the Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984 allows for non-patrimonial damages to be cl...
In this article, I assess the constitutive status accorded to trust deeds in Potgieter v Potgieter a...
Although it is an entrenched principle of company law that the abuse of corporate personality may re...
LLM (Estate Law), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2015This mini-dissertation is aimed a...
This paper addresses a dilemma faced by South African courts relating to the status of assets held i...
In this article the different theoretical bases for attacking trusts upon divorce and in maintenance...
This thesis analyses the doctrines of the sham and the alter-ego and their application to the law of...
Based on an empirical study of marital dissolution, this paper examines the effectiveness of the Rec...
The protective legislation which frequently resulted in assets held within a family trust being remo...
This dissertation examines the “bundle of rights” theory as it meets at the intersection of trust an...
It is generally assumed that financial apportionment between cohabiting parties, when the relationsh...
Substantive gender equality has yet to be achieved in South Africa. As such, when a decision is made...
This article discusses the reasoning of the High Court and Court of Appeal in Harvey v Beveridge in ...
Section 18(b) of the Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984 allows for non-patrimonial damages to be cl...
Deficiencies in the Property (Relationships) Act 1976 (PRA) have led to allegations of sham trusts, ...
Section 18(b) of the Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984 allows for non-patrimonial damages to be cl...
In this article, I assess the constitutive status accorded to trust deeds in Potgieter v Potgieter a...