Content area

Abstract

The orthodox position in English law is that the constructive trust is as much a trust as the express trust; the only difference being that it is 'constructed' by the court. As a consequence, the constructive trustee has all the duties of a trustee, and the constructive beneficiary has all the benefits he would have as the beneficiary of an express trust. The argument presented here is that that view is false; that the constructive trust is not a trust but a fiction. The reality is that the language masks nothing more than two types of court order: (i) that the defendant pay a sum of money to the claimant; and (ii) that the defendant convey a particular right to the claimant. Only once the fictitious nature of the 'trust' is realized can any coherent analysis of the incidence of such orders be made.

Details

Title
The Fiction of the Constructive Trust
Author
Swadling, William
Pages
399 - 433
Publication year
2011
Publication date
2011
Publisher
Oxford Publishing Limited (England)
ISSN
00701998
e-ISSN
20448422
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1553716745
Copyright
Copyright Oxford Publishing Limited(England) 2011