Fr. 271.20

The Property Rights of Cohabitees

English · Hardback

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Description

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Although disputes upon the termination of a marriage are usually resolved in accordance with a legislatively determined scheme,similar disputes between unmarried cohabitees generally fall to be determined on the basis of rules developed by the courts. Much of the difficulty surrounding the area is attributable to the fact that it straddles a number of the traditional legal compartments, falling somewhere between equity, property, family, contract and restitution. The present book makes a determined effort to isolate each strand of the doctrinal tangle and to trace it back to its source. To this end, it considers developments in the established doctrines of resulting trust and estoppel before moving on to consider, in turn, the English 'common intention' trust; the modified resulting trust analysis favoured in Ireland; Lord Denning's abortive 'constructive trust of a new model'; the Canadian unjust enrichment approach; the Australian 'unconscionability' doctrine; and, finally, New Zealand's 'reasonable expectations' model. A comparative approach is taken throughout the book, culminating in a concluding chapter which draws together a number of themes that recur across the various doctrinal approaches.

Product details

Authors John Mee, John (University College Cork Mee
Publisher Hart Publishing
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.04.1999
 
EAN 9781901362763
ISBN 978-1-901362-76-3
No. of pages 384
Dimensions 156 mm x 234 mm x 30 mm
Series Bloomsbury 3PL
Subject Social sciences, law, business > Law > Miscellaneous

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