Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the fifth edition
- Acknowledgments
- Table of abbreviations
- Useful websites
- Table of statutes
- Table of statutory instruments
- Table of cases
- 1 Trusts introduced
- 2 The evolution of the private express trust
- 3 Taxation, wealth-holding and the private trust
- 4 Creating the trust – I
- 5 Creating the trust – II
- 6 Trusts and public policy
- 7 Flexibility in relation to beneficial entitlement
- 8 The taxation of private trusts
- 9 An introduction to trustees and trusteeship
- 10 Aspects of the management of trusts
- 11 Trusteeship, control and breach of trust
- 12 Implied trusts and the family home
- 13 Trusts in commerce I: occupational pension schemes
- 14 Trusts in commerce II: commerce and equitable remedies
- 15 Trusts in commerce III: commerce, credit and the trust
- 16 Trusts in commerce IV: fiduciary relationships, commerce and the trust
- 17 Trust, contract and unincorporated associations
- 18 An introduction to the law of charity
- 19 A legal definition of ‘charity’
- 20 The regulation of charities
- Index
1 - Trusts introduced
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the fifth edition
- Acknowledgments
- Table of abbreviations
- Useful websites
- Table of statutes
- Table of statutory instruments
- Table of cases
- 1 Trusts introduced
- 2 The evolution of the private express trust
- 3 Taxation, wealth-holding and the private trust
- 4 Creating the trust – I
- 5 Creating the trust – II
- 6 Trusts and public policy
- 7 Flexibility in relation to beneficial entitlement
- 8 The taxation of private trusts
- 9 An introduction to trustees and trusteeship
- 10 Aspects of the management of trusts
- 11 Trusteeship, control and breach of trust
- 12 Implied trusts and the family home
- 13 Trusts in commerce I: occupational pension schemes
- 14 Trusts in commerce II: commerce and equitable remedies
- 15 Trusts in commerce III: commerce, credit and the trust
- 16 Trusts in commerce IV: fiduciary relationships, commerce and the trust
- 17 Trust, contract and unincorporated associations
- 18 An introduction to the law of charity
- 19 A legal definition of ‘charity’
- 20 The regulation of charities
- Index
Summary
Introduction
A ‘trust’ in English law is in some measure the translation into legal terms of the word ‘trust’ as used in ordinary speech. Its conceptual starting-point is ‘a confidence reposed in some other’ (this phrase is from the sixteenth-century legal commentaries of Lord Chief Justice Coke). The ‘confidence’ so reposed gives rise to moral obligations to which the courts, aided by the legislature, have purported to develop legal parallels. Inevitably, the moral weight given to trust and trusteeship in ordinary usage – to be ‘in breach’ of a ‘sacred trust’ is a serious matter, with repercussions possibly in the next world as well as this one – has had a significant impact on both the scope and the content of trusts law principles. There are still some contexts in which it may be difficult to say whether the word ‘trust’ is used in a legal or purely moral sense.
Yet this is by no means the whole story of trusts law. In the early twentieth century the historian and jurist F W Maitland praised the trust (see Equity (2nd edn, 1936) p 23 and Selected Historical Essays (1936) p 129); he regarded ‘the development from century to century of the trust idea’ as ‘the greatest and most distinctive achievement performed by Englishmen in the field of jurisprudence’. But this was not because the trust embodied basic ethical principles but rather because of its versatility.
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- Information
- Trusts LawText and Materials, pp. 1 - 34Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009