Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Fiduciary Obligations
- Cases
- Keech v Sandford
- Lease taken by trustee instead of on behalf
of child beneficiary, so when beneficiary of
age sue for account of profits
- Basic rule: a Trustee owes a strict duty of
loyalty so that there can never be a
possibility of any conflict of interest
- Clark Boyce v Mouat
(same matter conflict)
- Lawyer acted for both son and mother
- Conflict of interest because asked to act for
both in arrangement of large insurance on
mother's house to secure loan for the son, if
he can't pay it back, SHE loses the house
- Reading v Attorney General
(secret profiteering/misuse of the
principal's property)
- British army soldier paid to ride
in smuggling lorries to reduce
chances of a search
- He was only able to get money
due to respect of uniform as a
servant of the Crown (principal), and must
therefore hand money over to
the Crown
- Fair dealing conflicts
(fiduciary has personal
interest in outcome)
- Witten-Hannal v Davis
- Lawyer and client in same land transaction
- Day v Mead
- Lawyer and client and lawyer's company
- Characteristics
- One party is in a position of trust and confidence
- One party has influence over someone in a vulnerable position
- One party undertakes to act in the interests of another
- Loyalty: to client/beneficiary.
Not take advantage
- Good faith: honesty, important to
advise client if there is a conflict of
interest
- Avoidance of liability in conflict situations
- Must be sufficient. Documentation must be specific, and
fiduciary MUST explain all details of the transaction
- Must disclose any possible or existing COI to all parties
- Contractual arrangement between parties may restrict conduct
- Must be timely. Disclosure MUST be given before transaction takes place
- Chinese walls
- Organisational device within an organisation designed to
prevent confidential info flowing from one part to another
- What do fiduciary duties require?
- No conflict (in transactions)
- No profits (for self)
- No competition (with the boss)
- No misuse of property (NOT use the boss's property)
- May owe obligations of confidence and must not breach confidence
- E.g. former client conflicts may arise when an advisor who acted for A in
the past is hired by B to act for him/her in a matter that involves A
- Remedies
- Account of profits
- Fiduciary hands over all profits made,
regardless if principal incurred a loss
- Because of the position of trust that a
fiduciary is in, remedies for breaches
extend beyond damages
- 10 key points
- Equity
- Created by Law of Equity
- Equity enforces stringent duties of loyalty
and propriety which go far beyond the
common law obligations in contract or tort
- Loyalty to another
- No conflicts of interest
- Keech v Sandford
- Clark Boyce v Mouat
- Witten-Hannal v Davis
- Day v Mead
- Reading v A-G
- Avoid liability how?
- Equitable remedies
- When do fiduciary obligations arise?
- Status based relationships
(traditional)
- Trustees - beneficiaries
- Partners - fellow partners
- Agents - their principals
- Directors, promoters, liquidators of a company - the company itself (not shareholders)
- Outside traditional categories
- Joint venturer - co-venturer
- Employer - employee
- employees owe duty to their employers