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Contract in Commercial Law is a collection of essays based on the papers presented at the Contracts in Commercial Law Conference 2015. This work brings together the views of leading commentators in the area - Judges, Academics and Legal Practitioners- in this key area of the law. This publication is the fourth title in the prestigious "Commercial Law Library" series, accompanying Equity in Commercial Law, Unjust Enrichment in Commercial Law and Torts in Commercial Law. Together these works comprise an unparalleled collection of essays examining deeper controversies and issues of principle in commercial law. Contract in Commercial Law guides practitioners through a complex, difficult and controversial area of the law, offering a unique resource illuminating the many particular and difficult issues of contract law.
Based on the papers presented at the Restitution in Commercial Law Conference held in August 2007, this book brings together in one volume a series of essays from a team of prestigious contributors analysing the nature and operation of the law of unjust enrichment in commercial law. The Editors, Drs Simone Degeling and James Edelman have specifically chosen topics that reflect current problems in legal analysis from the viewpoint of commercial legal practitioners. This book will provide access to the views from the world's leading commentators in this field including esteemed judges, legal practitioners and academics.
On July 27,2000 the House of Lords delivered a decision where, for the first time in English law, it explicitly recognised that damages for civil wrongs can be assessed by reference to a defendant (wrongdoer)'s gain rather than a claimant's loss. The circumstances in which such gain-based damages might be available were left for development incrementally. This book considers the nature of gain-based damages and explains when they have historically been available and why, and provides a framework for appreciating the operation of such damages awards. The first part of the book justifies the existence of these damages, which focus upon a defendant wrongdoer's gain made as a result of a civil w...
This collection of essays interrogates significant issues at the forefront of scholarship and legal practice in the field of money remedies in equity. Chapters address the contentious and developing field of equitable compensation, including: the nature of equitable compensation; the relevant causation inquiry for equitable compensation; whether notions of contribution apply to multiple agents; accessorial liability; the role of discretion in limiting equitable compensation; which wrongs yield equitable compensation; and the extent to which compensation in equity differs from money remedies at common law. Other chapters examine the remedy of disgorgement of profit, and specifically the theoretical basis of that remedy, its application in the context of fiduciary obligations, and third-party issues. A number of chapters also examine the interrelationship between loss- and gain-based money relief. In addressing these issues the book includes both doctrinal and theoretical perspectives, and brings together leading equity scholars and judges from across the common law world.
Unjust Enrichment in Australia contains a comprehensive summary and analysis of the case and statute law on unjust enrichment in Australia. It is presented in a way which is designed to be easily accessible for students and practitioners who are not familiar with the area and it engages in discussion of many of the immensely difficult issues of theory that lie beneath the surface in this area of rapidly developing law.
TORTS IN COMMERCIAL LAW guides practitioners through a complex, difficult and controversial area of the law, offering a resource illuminating the many particular and difficult issues at this intersection. The third volume in a compelling "commercial law library", accompanying Equity in Commercial Law and Unjust Enrichment in Commercial Law, this new book will be turned to frequently. Based on the papers presented at the international conference, "Torts in Commercial Law 2010", this book brings together in one volume a series of chapters from a team of prestigious contributors analysing the interaction of common law and equity in commercial law. Its unique strength is its sustained examinatio...
Based on the papers presented at Fusion: The Interaction of Common Law and Equity in Commercial Law held in Sydney in December 2004 -- Intro.
Written by leading experts who have shaped and defined the law of restitution, the book provides an authoritative and scholarly guide to the subject. The second edition of this seminal title continues the formula of the first edition by combining a comprehensive coverage of cases with extracts from leading academic authorities.
This book covers the principles of the law of unjust enrichment in Australia, New Zealand, England and Canada. The book uses the leading cases to distil and explain the fundamental principles of this branch of private law.
"The prayers of those of us who have long hungered for a comprehensive, historically deep, learned and accessible account of international agrarian movements have finally been answered in full. We will long be in debt to Edelman and Borras for this exceptional and lasting contribution to agrarian scholarship." - James C. Scott, founding Director, Yale University Agrarian Studies Program, author of The Art of Not Being Governed