3rd party liability Flashcards

1
Q

When 3rd party liability can be found

A

a) Trustee de son tort
b) Person who dishonestly assists
c) Person that receives trust property for her own with knowledge
(Barnes v Addy)

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2
Q

Dishonest assistance - elements of liability

A

At first: culpability of the principal: “Dishonest and fraudulent design on the part of the trustees” (Barnes v Addy)

Now: Culpability of the accessory (Royal Brunei Airlines v Tan)

a) Breach of trust/fiduciary duty (based on primary wrong)
b) Inducement or assistance
c) Fault

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3
Q

Inducement or assistance

A

Question of fact: more than minimal impact, broad test

Causal connection required (Grupo Torras v Al Sabah) between the loss and the breach (Casio Computer v Sayo)

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4
Q

Fault (DA)

A

Previously: Baden scale of knowledge
Currently: objective test for dishonesty on the part of the third party (Royal Brunei Airlines v Tan)

Adopted as self-conscious dishonesty instead (Twinsetra v Yardley)

Acknowledged ambiguity in Royal Brunei, held that Royal Brunei to be followed directly, defendant must have known about aspects of the transaction which made participation transgress those standards (Barlow Clowes v Eurotrust International)

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5
Q

Current state of the law for fault (DA)

A

Objective dishonesty, NOT self-conscious dishonesty

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6
Q

Remedies for dishonest assistance

A

Duplicates the liability of the trustee (Elliott, Mitchell)

Dishonest assistant made jointly and severally liable with trustee for the same amount (like constructive trusteeship)

Davies: not persuaded that constructive trusteeship is the way to go

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7
Q

Duplicative liability for profit

A

Punitive measures, not applicable (Ultraframe v Fielding)

Primary wrongdoer and assistant are not jointly liable for profits, although they may be severally liable to disgorge their own profits (Michael Wilson v Nicholls, Grimaldi v Chameleon)

Dishonest assistant must disgorge profits she made for herself (Novoship)

Account of profits available, when there is a sufficient causal connection between dishonest assistance and the profit (Grimaldi v Chameleon, Novoship)

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8
Q

Knowing receipt - elements

A

a) Proprietary base
b) Breach of duty
c) Beneficial receipt
d) Fault

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9
Q

Breach of duty

A

Liability founded on breach of fiduciary obligations (Arthur v AG of Turks and Caicos)

Baden scale irrelevant (Criterion Properties v Stratford Uk Properties LLC)

Conaglen and Nolan: distinction between companies and trust

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10
Q

Beneficial receipt

A

Have to derive benefit (Agip Africa v Jackson)

Implication: banks no benefit, so no liability - odd (Davies)

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11
Q

Fault (KR)

A

State of knowledge that makes it unconscionable for him to retain benefit of the receipt (Akindele)
(was rejected in Royal Brunei)

Dishonesty not required (Belmont Finance Corp v Williams Furniture)

Fault or knowledge based liabiltiy is the same question (Credit Agricole Corp and Investment Bank v Papadimitriou)

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12
Q

Debate about whether recipients should also owe strict liability in unjust enrichment

A

Lord Nicholls, P Birks: yes
Davies: nope

Authorities supporting strict liability

a) Re Diplock - recipient of funds improperly distributed
b) Criterion Properties - improper purpose
c) Primlake v Matthews Assoc - misappropriate trust assets used to pay off security charge, subrogation

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13
Q

Defence: change of position

A

Reduces defendant’s liability to the extent to which his or her circumstance have changed as a consequence of an enrichment

Exception: bad faith (Lipkin Gorman v Karpnale)

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14
Q

Remedies: constructive trust

A

Restore property immediately, as constructive trustee

If not, substitutive performance claims applied

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