Seddon On Deeds
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Author | : Nicholas Seddon |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 248 |
Release | : 2015 |
Genre | : Deeds |
ISBN | : 9781760020194 |
Seddon on Deeds provides important insights for practitioners on the hazards that can be encountered in using deeds and sets out how to ensure that a deed is legally sound and how to avoid trouble. This is the first Australian text on the law of deeds.
Author | : Charles Moore |
Publisher | : charles moore |
Total Pages | : 93 |
Release | : |
Genre | : Law |
ISBN | : |
The idea of making a deal with a handshake—what we generally call an incomplete contract—makes most of us uncomfortable. While complete contracts are inevitably imperfect; electronic signatures represent legal trickery, which produces incomplete contracts. The legal system via electronic signatures has conjured up a set of unknowables, technical inept, and incomplete set of legal experimentation, which seeks to produce incomplete and legally reputable contracts and agreements. Signatures don’t work very well in a vacuum, and only have meaning when existing alongside something else, the faith we have in the meaning of signatures stems from the mechanisms involved in the use of paper. Electronic signatures are a question of understanding an unknowable technology. Bruce Schneier - a renowned cryptologist - once wrote that “electronic signature” probably is the greatest terminological mistake in the history of cryptology. THROUGHOUT HUMAN HISTORY A SEAL APPLIED TO A PIECE OF PAPER AND LATTER A WET SIGNATURE REMAINS THE GOLD STANDARD OF INTENT AND NON-REPUDIATION.
Author | : Peter Butt |
Publisher | : Bloomsbury Publishing |
Total Pages | : 968 |
Release | : 2021-02-25 |
Genre | : Law |
ISBN | : 1509936262 |
Clarity and precision in legal writing are essential skills in the practice and study of law. This book offers a straightforward, practical guide to effective legal style from a world-leading expert. The book is thoughtfully structured to explain the elements of good legal writing and its most effective use. It catalogues all aspects of legal style, topic by topic, phrase by phrase, usage by usage. It scrutinises them all, suggesting improvements. Its 'dictionary' arrangement makes it easy to navigate. Topics range as widely as ambiguity, definitions, provisos, recitals, simplified outlines, terms of art, tone, and the various principles of legal interpretation. Words and phrases deal with legal expressions that non-lawyers find opaque and obscure. The purpose is to show that you can usually substitute a plain-English equivalent. Usage entries include matters such as abbreviations, acronyms, active and passive voice, brackets, bullet points, citation methods, cross-referencing, deeds, fonts, document design, footnotes, gender-neutral language, numbering systems, plain language, punctuation, the use of Latin, structures for legal advices and documents, and techniques for editing and proofreading. With an emphasis on technical effectiveness and understanding, the book is required reading for all those engaged in the practice and study of law.
Author | : Nicholas Seddon |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 342 |
Release | : 1999 |
Genre | : Government purchasing |
ISBN | : 9781862873308 |
The operation of government purchasing contracts and the way the law applies to them, is the subject of thorough and penetrating analysis in this new edition of a standard work. It provides a complete analysis of important new developments and new material on legal risk in contracting, statutory contracts and trade practices law.
Author | : John Tarrant |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : |
Release | : 2020-03-12 |
Genre | : |
ISBN | : 9781760022365 |
Author | : Nicholas Seddon |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 399 |
Release | : 2004-01 |
Genre | : Law |
ISBN | : 9781862875319 |
This book is Australia's definitive legal text on all levels of government contracting. It explains the law in a manner that is accessible to government contract managers and their private sector counterparts doing business with government. The book has been referred to as an authoritative text in State, Federal and High Court judgments. In the first chapter, the book covers the policy debate about the use of contract by government and provides a very practical guide to the contracting out decision, keeping in mind the limitations of contract and what can be done about them. This chapter also examines the implications for central, State and Territory governments of the Australia-United States Free Trade Agreement. The remaining chapters analyse the extra law that applies when a government body is a party to a contract. This includes the special position of government in its powers and procedures when contracting and the still-existing government privileges and immunities, including the source of "sovereign risk" for contractors. Government claims of exemption from legislation are a continuing complex and difficult problem, with new cases showing the prevalence of this practice. A chapter is devoted to how the Trade Practices Act and associated legislation binds and does not bind government bodies. The phenomenon of private sector bodies claiming derivative immunity appears to be increasing. A chapter discusses the latest Australian case law on government tenders, an area that continues to develop. As with previous editions, the latest Canadian case law is also included because it provides guidance on almost any conceivable tender mishap. In this and other areas of government commercial activity, administrative law remedies are increasingly being sought by disgruntled private sector entities. Note: As this book went to press the High Court handed down an important decision (NT Power Generation Pty Ltd v Power and Water Authority) which held that a government utility was bound by the competition provisions of the Trade Practices Act. This case is covered in the book. This book is indispensable for lawyers, government contract managers and their private sector counterparts.
Author | : Ian Jackman |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 226 |
Release | : 2017-03-17 |
Genre | : Replevin |
ISBN | : 9781760021320 |
Over the past decade, the High Court has repeatedly rejected the notion that there is a unifying principle of unjust enrichment at the plaintiff's expense, in contrast to the position in the UK. This book provides a vigorous and sustained justification for the Australian position, and demonstrates that the law in the UK has generated more fictions than it was ever thought to abolish. The law of restitution is shown to comprise several fundamentally distinct legal concepts which fill gaps in the law of contract and tort, and which have nothing in common beyond the historical accident that they arose out of the action of indebitatus assumpsit. These are (i) the recovery of non-voluntary payments (by mistake, duress, undue influence, unconscionable dealing and total failure of consideration); (ii) remuneration for goods or services requested by the defendant in circumstances indicating a promise to pay for them; and (iii) the protection of certain facilitative institutions of private law (such as private property and fiduciary relationships). The book staunchly defends the traditional common law approach of analysing legal principles by the empirical method of treating like cases alike, rather than by derivation from supposedly unifying theories. This edition updates the first edition, which was published in 1998, in the light of almost 20 years of case-law and academic debate. It also adds a separate chapter dealing with the history of the law of restitution and why it matters.
Author | : Denis Ong |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : |
Release | : 2020-11-30 |
Genre | : |
ISBN | : 9781760022488 |
Author | : Robert Frederick Norton |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 774 |
Release | : 1906 |
Genre | : Deeds |
ISBN | : |
Author | : Paul Finn |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 397 |
Release | : 2016-12-06 |
Genre | : Fiducia |
ISBN | : 9781760020774 |
This volume brings together three separate works written by Paul Finn over nearly 40 years. The first, Fiduciary Obligations, was published in 1977. It has been out of print for many years, though it is still widely cited both in judicial decisions in common law countries and in international scholarship on fiduciary law. It has been regarded widely as a 'seminal' or 'classic' piece. Its publication preceded two important developments. The first was the High Court of Australia's systematic reappraisal of equity jurisprudence in the 1980s. This contributed significantly to the shaping and future direction of modern fiduciary law in Australia. The second was the growth in civil litigation in common law countries against banks, advisers in many guises, commercial 'agents', franchisees, joint venturers and other commercial actors which raised issues as to the extent to which, if at all, functions they performed for customers, etc, could attract strict fiduciary standards of conduct or merely those lesser standards otherwise imposed by the common law or equity.These two developments inform the second work in the volume, "The Fiduciary Principle", which was published in Canada in 1989, but is relatively unknown in Australia. Though its scope was limited designedly to those standards of conduct the fiduciary principle imposed on private law fiduciaries, it indicated when, and to what extent, a person or body would be a 'fiduciary' for the purposes of those standards. It accepted that, while 'fiduciary' could not be defined, it could be described. That description, founded on a 'legitimate expectation' test, is commonly used both in Australia and elsewhere.The third piece, "Fiduciary Reflections" was published in 2014 and contains the author's personal reflections on the course of Australian fiduciary law since the publication of Fiduciary Obligations. It suggests that, despite the clear signposts for the future development of fiduciary law given by the High Court in the 1980s, recent decisions of subordinate Australian courts seem to be heading, unnecessarily, in the opposite direction. Now at risk are the coherence of fiduciary law and its rationale.* Click here for information on our title Finn's Law: An Australian Justice edited by Tim Bonyhady.From the Book Launch Fiduciary Obligations and Finn's Law, address by The Hon Keith Mason AC QC, 9 February 2017..."Fiduciary Obligations comes with a modern Introductory Comment by Paul himself, a Preface by Sir Anthony Mason, and the reproduction of two of Paul's many extra-judicial contributions on the topic. These are an article on The Fiduciary Principle that first appeared in 1989 and another, called Fiduciary Reflections, that was published in 2014. The latter tracks developments in Paul's thinking and scholarship on this topic over the past 40 years as well as its reception into law. ... Together, these two books will enable the discerning academic or practitioner to survey large swathes of law. The eminence of the various contributors allows us to be sure that we are shown where the law has come from, where it is going, and where the law in Australia is converging or diverging from that of overseas. Each book shows what vast strides have been made in the coherent understanding of legal and equitable principles, the magnetic interplay between statutory and judge-made law, and the convergence of public and private law discourse that has taken place in the 46 years since Paul Finn first slipped shyly into postgraduate studies at London University." Read Launch Speech...