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Cover Image
Revolution and evolution in private law:
Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Worthington, Sarah 1955- (Editor), Robertson, Andrew 1966- (Editor), Virgo, Graham 1966- (Editor)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Oxford ; Portland, OR Hart Publishing 2018
Subjects:
Rechtsdogmatik
Rechtsvergleich
Common law
Privatrecht
Civil law
Comparative law
Civil law / Great Britain
Civil law / Australia
Australia
Great Britain
LAW / Administrative Law & Regulatory Practice
Links:http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=030187746&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA
Physical Description:xxvii, 340 Seiten
ISBN:9781509913244
Staff View

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Record in the Search Index

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adam_text Table of Contents Preface....................................................................... v Table of Cases...............................................................xiii Table of Legislation..........................................................xxv Notes on Contributors........................................................xxix FOUNDATIONS 1. Revolution and Evolution in Private Law................................3 Sarah Worthington 2. Revolutions in Private Law?...........................................11 David Ibbetson I. Introduction......................................................11 II. The Law of Tort................................................. 13 III. Contract...................................................... 19 IV. Unjust Enrichment............................................... 24 V. Concluding Thoughts......................................... 29 3. Private Law’s Revolutionaries: Authors, Codifiers and Merchants?......31 Hector L MacQueen I. Introduction......................................................31 II. Berman’s Law and Revolutions .................-..................32 III. Roman Law in the Western Legal Tradition........................ 35 IV. Civil Codes and Revolutions.......................................41 V. Revolutions in the Law of Obligations: Scotland and Stair.........43 VI. Mercantile Contracts..............................................47 4. Paradigms Lost or Paradigms Regained? Legal Revolutions and the Path of the Law................................................51 TT Arvind I. Introduction: The Revolutionary Turn in Private Law............. 51 II. The Limits of Legal Revolutions................................. 55 A. (Mis)interpreting the Past: A Revolutionary Problem..........55 B. Normative Choices and Legal Change...........................58 III. Scientific Revolutions and Legal Revolutions.................... 59 A. A Matter of Light............................................59 B. A Legal Parallel?.............................................60 IV. Paradigms, Theories and Black-Letter Law........................ 62 A. Revolutions and Paradigms................................... 62 B. Theoretical Revolutions and Black-Letter Law..................65 V. Conclusion: The Failure of Legal Revolutions......................71 Table of Contents viii DOCTRINES 5. Risk Revolutions in Private Law........................................75 Jenny Steele I. Introduction....................................................75 II. Risk Revolutions and Private Law................................77 A. Security and Responsibility..................................77 B. Risk Revolutions; A Brief Overview..........................77 C. Risk in Private Law.........................................79 D. Risk and Regulatory Change...................................81 III. A Recognised Security5 Revolution..............................82 A. Security Revolution and the Context of Private Law......... 85 B. After Effects................................................86 IV. Backwards or Forwards with a New Risk Revolution.................87 V. Tort, Security, Responsibility and Risk........................ 92 VI. Conclusions: Revolution upon Revolution?.........................96 6. The Unacknowledged Revolution in Liability for Negligence..............99 Steve Hedley I. Introduction.....................................................99 II. Asocial Theories ........................................... 100 III. Bringing in the Modern World....................................102 IV. Modern Irrelevance of Asocial Theories?....................... 103 V. Abolishing Tort?.............................................. 106 VI. Tort from the Government’s Point of View........................107 VII. Modern Theories about Tort.................................. 113 A. Tort as Compensation or Insurance...........................113 B. Abolition...................................................114 C. Symbolic Theories...........................................115 VIII. Symbolic Action: Current Debates.............................. 117 IX. Bureaucratic Action: Prospects for the Future...................119 X. Conclusion......................................................120 7. A Revolution in Vicarious Liability: Lister, the Catholic Child Welfare Society Case and Beyond........................................121 Paula Giliker I. Introduction.................................................. 121 II. Tracing the Need for Change: Sexual Abuse and Vicarious Liability................................................•......123 III. The Lister Revolution: Replacing Unauthorised Mode5 with the Close Connection5 Test.........................................127 IV. Lister Revisited: A Modern Theory of Vicarious Liability........131 V. Back to the Supreme Court: Cox, Mohamud and the Two-Stage Test..................................................134 VI. Conclusion................................................ 138 Table of Contents ix 8. Revolutions in Contractual Interpretation: A Historical Perspective....141 Joanna McCunn I. Introduction.....................................................141 II. Some Background............................................... 142 III. Contractual Interpretation in the Sixteenth Century.............145 A. Tbrockmerton v Tracy........................................ 145 B. The Identification of Intentions.............................147 C. Intentions and Reason........................................148 D. Conceptions of Contractual Intention.........................150 E. Interpretation and Equity....................................152 IV. Two Approaches to Interpretation.................................. 154 V. The Seventeenth Century and Beyond............. ................157 VI. Conclusion.................................................. 159 9. Revolutions and Counterrevolutions in Equitable Estoppel...............161 Andrew Robertson I. Introduction................................................ 161 II. Early Expansionism: Making Representations Good.................163 III. The Nineteenth-Century Contraction............................ 166 IV. Re-expansion: Proprietary and Promissory Estoppel.............169 A. Proprietary Estoppel.........................................169 B. Promissory Estoppel........................................... 171 V. Contemporary Contractionary Turns.............. ................172 VI. Conclusion.................................................. 175 10. Reflections on the Restitution Revolution..............................177 1. England and Wales................................................177 Amy Goymour I. Introduction................................................ 177 II. The First Edition of Goff and Jones....................... 178 A. The Pre-existing Legal Landscape........................178 B. Ambitions of the First Edition........................ 179 C. Contemporary Critical Reception....................... 180 III. The Development of the Subject Since 1966................. 181 A, Evolution ............................................ 182 (i) Tracking Evolution via Statistics...................182 (ii) Tracking Evolution via Substantive Developments ..... 183 B. Attempts at Revolution................................ 184 IV. The Place of Goff and Jones in the Subject’s Intellectual Evolution.....................................................187 A. ‘But for5 the Publication of Goff and Jones in 1966 .. 187 B. Viewing the Precise Contribution of Goff and Jones, with the Benefit of Hindsight............................188 (i) Stages in the Subject’s Intellectual Evolution..... 188 x Table of Contents (ii) The Place of Goff and Jones in the Evolutionary Process............................................189 (iii) Evaluating this Mode of Intellectual Evolution....189 V. The Future (R)evolution of the Subject.......................190 A. Some Micro-level Concerns................................190 B. Some Macro-level Concerns................................191 C. Goff and Jones at 100?...................................192 2. Australia....................................................... 193 Elise Bant I. A Potted History of Unjust Enrichment in Australia pre-AjRSL v Hills Industries.................................193 II. AFSL v Hills Industries.......................................194 IIL The Future of Unjust Enrichment and Restitution Law in Australia....................................................196 A. Evolution and Refinement of the Fourfold Inquiry.........196 B. Unjust Enrichment and Restitution...................... 197 C. Equity and Unjust Enrichment.............................199 IV. Conclusion.................................................. 201 3. Canada............................................................202 Mitchell Mclnnes I. Introduction.............................................. 202 II. History..................................................... 202 III. A False Start.................................................204 IV. A New Direction............................................. 205 V. Positive Developments.................................... 205 VI. A Very Bad Idea............................................ .207 VII. Conclusion.................................................. 210 4. South Africa.................................................. 210 Helen Scott I. The Idea of Unjustified Enrichment............................210 II. The Rationalisation of Unjustified Enrichment.................213 IIL Farewell to Unjustified Enrichment?............................216 5. A Judicial Perspective............................................219 Sir Terence Etherton MR 11. Revolutions in Personal Property: Redrawing the Common Law’s Conceptual Map.........................................................227 Sarah Worthington I. Introduction.................................................... 227 II. What Has English Law Done with the Numerus Clausus Principle?....................................................... 229 III. Which Things’ Count as Property?................................ 230 IV. Which Types of Interests’ Count as Property?.....................235 Table of Contents xi V. Consequences....................................................243 VI. Conclusion..................................................... 247 GENERAL ISSUES 12. Modern Equity: Revolution or Renewal from Within?....................251 Pauline Ridge I. Introduction............................................... 251 II. A Revolutionary Narrative of Modern Equity.................. ...252 III. A Counter Narrative of Modern Equity........................... 253 IV. The Integration of Common Law and Equity.........................254 A. The Revolutionary Narrative: Undue Influence................254 B. The Counter Narrative: The Claim for Money Had and Received................................................257 C. Ancillary Liabilities for Receipt of Trust Property.........258 (i) Background: The Knowing Receipt and Persisting Property Claims.......................................258 (ii) The Revolutionary Narrative and Knowing Receipt......259 (iii) The Counter Narrative: The Heperu Claim..............259 (iv) The Revolutionary Narrative: Great Investments Ltd v Warner..............................................260 (v) Has Either Narrative Prevailed?......................263 V. Conscience.............................................. ....264 A. Introduction................................................264 B. The Two Roles of Conscience.................................265 (i) Conscience as a Doctrinal Rationale: The Heperu Claim................................ .....265 (ii) Conscience as a Determinant of Liability ............267 VI. Judicial Method............................................ 267 VII. Conclusion............................................... 270 13. Concurrent Liability: A Spluttering Revolution........................273 Paul S Davies I. Introduction............................................... ..273 II. Contract versus Tort........................................... 275 A. First Steps: Contract Trumps Tort...........................275 B. Asserting Concurrent Liability........................ .....277 C. The Beginnings of a Counter Revolution?.....................281 (i) Remoteness........................................ 281 (ii) Type of Loss.........................................285 (iii) Contributory Negligence..............................286 (iv) Choice of Law........................................287 (v) Limitation........................................ 287 D. Conclusions .................................................288 III. Contract versus Trusts..................................... 288 IV. Conclusions.................................................... 293 xii Ta b le of Co n ten ts 14. The Illegality Revolution............................................. 295 Graham Virgo I. Introduction......................................................295 II. The Central Controversy: Rule versus Discretion................. 296 A. No Reliance on Illegality.....................................299 B. Withdrawal from an Illegal Transaction........................300 C. The Parties are not In Pari Delicto...........................301 D. The Policy Behind the Illegality..............................302 E. Close Connection or Inextricable Link....................... 302 III. Patel v Mirza.................................................. 303 IV. Patel v Mirza: Revolution or Evolution?...........................309 A. Impact on Legal Doctrine......................................309 B. Judicial Reception of the Decision............................310 V. Synthesis.........................................................311 15. The Revolutionary Trajectory of EU Contract Law towards Post-national Law......................................................315 Hugh Collins I. A Revolutionary Cocktail for the Ancien Régime....................315 II. Techno-law................................. .....................317 A. Instrumentalism...............................................318 B. Functions................................................... 321 C. Incompleteness................................................322 III. The Impact of Techno-law..........................................323 IV. From Rule-Book to Rights-Based Conception of the Rule of Law.....326 A. Legitimation..................................................328 B. Enhanced Functionalism...................................... 330 C. The Implications of a Rights-Based Conception of the Rule of Law................................................. 331 V. Real Transnational Law............................................332 VI. Post-national Law.................................................335 Index.................................................................... 337
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spellingShingle Revolution and evolution in private law
Rechtsdogmatik (DE-588)4128412-4 gnd
Rechtsvergleich (DE-588)4115712-6 gnd
Common law (DE-588)4130774-4 gnd
Privatrecht (DE-588)4047304-1 gnd
subject_GND (DE-588)4128412-4
(DE-588)4115712-6
(DE-588)4130774-4
(DE-588)4047304-1
title Revolution and evolution in private law
title_alt Evolution and revolution in private law
title_auth Revolution and evolution in private law
title_exact_search Revolution and evolution in private law
title_full Revolution and evolution in private law edited by Sarah Worthington, Andrew Robertson, Graham Virgo
title_fullStr Revolution and evolution in private law edited by Sarah Worthington, Andrew Robertson, Graham Virgo
title_full_unstemmed Revolution and evolution in private law edited by Sarah Worthington, Andrew Robertson, Graham Virgo
title_short Revolution and evolution in private law
title_sort revolution and evolution in private law
topic Rechtsdogmatik (DE-588)4128412-4 gnd
Rechtsvergleich (DE-588)4115712-6 gnd
Common law (DE-588)4130774-4 gnd
Privatrecht (DE-588)4047304-1 gnd
topic_facet Rechtsdogmatik
Rechtsvergleich
Common law
Privatrecht
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