
Claims to Traceable Proceeds
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Content
- Cover
- Half title
- Claims to Traceable Proceeds
- Copyright
- Contents
- Table of Cases
- Table of Legislation
- 1 The Peculiarities of Tracing
- 1.1 Why is Tracing Necessary?
- 1.2 What Does Tracing Require?
- 1.3 What is a Substitution?
- 1.4 Conclusions
- 2 Value and Other Metaphors: Tracing, Claiming, and Following
- 2.1 The Value Model of Tracing and its Roots in the Case Law
- 2.2 Value as a Fact: Problems with the Evidential Model
- 2.3 Value as a Legal Construct
- 2.4 Conclusions
- 3 The Principles of Tracing
- 3.1 The Invention of Tracing
- 3.2 Kirk v Webb: Tracing into Land and 'Money Has No Earmark'
- 3.3 Taylor v Plumer: Intention, Authority, and 'Money Has No Earmark'
- 3.4 Justifying the Principles of Tracing
- 3.5 Conclusion: Defining an Unauthorized Substitution
- 4 Rules of Tracing I: Against a Wrongdoer
- 4.1 Lack of Evidence of Transactional History
- 4.2 Tracing Through Clean Substitutions
- 4.3 Mixed Substitutions and Cherry-?Picking
- 5 Rules of Tracing II: Innocent Co-?Contributors
- 5.1 Bank Accounts: The Residual Role of the 'First In, First Out' Rule
- 5.2 Other Mixed Substitutions: Proportionate Shares or the Rolling Charge
- 5.3 Requirement of a Defined Mixed Fund
- 6 Property Rights, Fiduciary Duties, and the Control of Assets
- 6.1 The Language of the Cases: Trustees, Fiduciaries, and Owners
- 6.2 Difficulties with the Fiduciary Duty Analysis
- 6.3 Difficulties with the Proprietary Base Analysis
- 6.4 Control of Assets and Other Power-?Liability Relations
- 6.5 Conclusions: Identifying a Relationship of Control of Assets
- 7 Control of Assets in Equity
- 7.1 The Nature of Equitable Powers
- 7.2 Control of Assets in Equity: Power to Deal With the Asset, Not the Interest
- 7.3 Vendor-?Purchaser 'Constructive Trusts'
- 7.4 Recipients of Misdirected Assets
- 7.5 Recipients Under Rescinded Transactions
- 8 Control of Assets at Law
- 8.1 The Nature of Common Law Powers
- 8.2 Money
- 8.3 Hard Cases
- 8.4 No Special Rules of Common Law Tracing
- 8.5 No Common Law Titles to Substitute Assets
- Index
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