Green / Randall QC | The Tort of Conversion | Buch | 978-1-84113-833-6 | www.sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 266 Seiten, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 234 mm, Gewicht: 553 g

Green / Randall QC

The Tort of Conversion


Erscheinungsjahr 2009
ISBN: 978-1-84113-833-6
Verlag: Bloomsbury Academic

Buch, Englisch, 266 Seiten, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 234 mm, Gewicht: 553 g

ISBN: 978-1-84113-833-6
Verlag: Bloomsbury Academic


The legal and commercial importance of the tort of Conversion is difficult to overstate, and yet there remains a sense that the principles of the tort are elusive. Most recently, this was illustrated by the difficulties posed for the House of Lords by the Conversion issue in OBG v Allan [2007] UKHL 21, on which it was closely divided.

Conversion, as we now recognise it, has a complex pedigree. Showing little regard for received taxonomies, it has elements which make lawyers think in terms of property, despite its eventful descent from actions in personam. Conversion is, therefore, something of a hybrid creature, which perhaps explains the paucity of scholarly analysis of the subject to date, property lawyers and tort lawyers each regarding it as the other's concern.

This book is the first comprehensive appraisal of the modern tort of Conversion. It offers a coherent and accessible rationalisation of the subject, supported by rigorous analysis of all aspects, from title to sue to the available remedies. The principal thesis of the work is that the development of Conversion has somewhat stagnated, and in consequence the tort has so far been unable to fulfil either its theoretical or its practical potential as a legal device. Whilst this is partly a result of historical factors, it is also a consequence of the fact that no systematic examination of the tort in England appears ever to have been carried out. The primary objectives of the book, therefore, are to provide such an analysis, to present Conversion as a useful and important tort, well suited to the demands of contemporary law and commerce, and to offer a principled framework for its future development.

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Weitere Infos & Material


1 Introduction

2 The History of Conversion

INTRODUCTION AND CONTEXT

THE MEDIEVAL ANCESTORS OF CONVERSION

Appeal of Robbery or Larceny

Trespass de bonis asportatis

Replevin

Detinue

Detinue sur bailment

The Plea of devenerunt ad manus

Detinue sur trover

The Shortcomings of Detinue sur trover

THE EMERGENCE OF TROVER

1. Possessed of the Goods of his Own Property

2. Loss and 3. Finding

4. Delivery Up Requested but Refused

5. Conversion to Own Use (Causing Loss)

Conclusion

THE HEGEMONY OF TROVER

Trover takes the Ground of Trespass

Trover takes the Ground of Detinue

Residual Categories

Conclusion

THE RECOGNITION OF CONVERSION

CONVERSION IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY

Statutory Reforms

A New Legal Fiction-the Conversion of Choses in Action
Evidenced by Converted Documents

Affirmation of Strict Liability

The Common Law (Still) Presents Great Difficulties

CONVERSION IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY

Obscurities Remain

Expansion of the New Legal Fiction

Financing of and Title to Motor Cars

The Report of the Law Reform Committee

Statutory Intervention

CONCLUSIONS

3 What is a Conversion?

NAME

INTERESTS PROTECTED

THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE WRONGFUL INTERFERENCE TORTS

Trespass

Reversionary Injury

THE IMPORTANCE OF POSSESSION

A Peculiar Notion of Possession?

RELATIONSHIP TO VINDICATIO

THE GIST OF CONVERSION

CONVERSION IN THE CONTEXT OF THE PROPERTY TORTS

Nature of the Interference

Degree and Extent of the Interference

THE REQUISITE CONDUCT OF THE DEFENDANT

Actions of the Defendant: Use and Possession

Intention

Innocent Converters

THE THREE ELEMENTS OF CONVERSION

1. A Claimant who has the Superior Possessory Right

2. A Deprivation of the Claimant's Full Benefit of that Right

3. An Assumption by the Defendant of that Right

AN EXCEPTION TO THESE PRINCIPLES: STATUTORY CONVERSION

4 Title to Sue

THE NATURE OF THE PROBLEM

RELATIVITY OF TITLE

WHY THE COMMON LAW PROTECTS THE POSSESSION OF WRONGDOERS

LEGAL POSSESSION

WHAT IS ACTUAL POSSESSION?

Jus Tertii

WHY ACTUAL POSSESSION CAN BE SUFFICIENT

BAILMENT

FINDERS

THE SIGNIFICANCE OF LEGAL POSSESSION

WHAT AMOUNTS TO A SUFFICIENT PROPRIETARY RIGHT?

EQUITABLE RIGHTS AND CONVERSION

CONCLUSIONS

5 The Subject Matter of Conversion

PROPERTY AND POSSESSION

MEANINGFUL INDICIA OF POSSESSION

Cognitive Indicia

MONEY

PARTS OR PRODUCTS OF THE HUMAN BODY

DIGITIZED PRODUCTS

Manual Indicia

i Excludability and movability

ii Excludability and exclusive access

iii Exhaustibility

Policy Implications

INTANGIBLE PROPERTY

Manual Indicia

i Excludability

ii. Exhaustibility

COPYRIGHT

INFORMATION

Manual Indicia

i. Excludability

ii. Exhaustibility

THE LAW OF THEFT

THE IMPORTANCE OF EFFECTIVE PROTECTION OF PROPERTY INTERESTS

6 Conversion and the Economic Torts

THE NEED TO EXAMINE THEIR RELATIONSHIP

BACKGROUND-THE FRAMEWORK OF TORTIOUS LIABILITY

THE PLACE OF CONTRACTUAL RIGHTS AND OTHER INTANGIBLE PROPERTY

PROPERTY TORTS

Trespass to goods

Conversion

Nuisance

ECONOMIC TORTS

Lumley v Gye-Procuring or Inducing a Breach of Contract

Causing Loss by Unlawful Means

Lawful and Unlawful Means Conspiracies

Conclusion

COMPARISON OF LUMLEY v GYE AND CONVERSION

The Gist of these Torts

The Nature of the Interference Required

The Right to Claim

The Permissible Subject Matter of a Claim

The Mental Element Required

The Remedies Available

CONCLUSIONS

7 Damages and Other Remedies

INTRODUCTION

THE MEASURE OF DAMAGES FOR CONVERSION

(a) The Basic Rule

(b) Time of Valuation

Rising Market Value

Falling Market Value

(c) Absence of a Market

(d) Presumptions as to Value

(e) Special Rules

Assets Severed from Land

Improvements

Title Deeds

Negotiable Instruments, Securities and Like Documents

Other Documents of Some Evidential Status

Claimant with a Limited Interest

(f) Where the Goods are Returned-'Temporary Deprivation'

(g) Consequential Loss

Post-Conversion Increases in Value

User Damages

Costs of Mitigation, and Loss of Business and/or Profits

Miscellaneous

Foreseeability and Remoteness

Causation of Consequential Loss

CAUSATION

EXTINCTION OF TITLE

THE DUTY TO MITIGATE

CONTRIBUTORY NEGLIGENCE

OTHER REMEDIES

(a) Final Orders for Delivery Up: Section 3(1)(a) of the 1977 Act

(b) Alternative Final Orders at the Defendant's Election: Section 3(1)(b)

(c) Interlocutory Orders for Delivery Up: Section 4

(d) Recaption

(e) 'Waiver of Tort'

(f) An Equitable Claim to Converted Assets and their Proceeds of Sale?

CONCLUSIONS

8 Conclusion


Sarah Green is a CUF Lecturer and Fellow and Tutor in Law of St Hilda's College, Oxford.
John Randall MA (Cantab), QC is a Barrister at St Philips Chambers, Birmingham, principally practising in chancery and commercial law. He is a Bencher of Lincoln's Inn, and sits as a Recorder and Deputy High Court Judge. He is a Visiting Fellow at the Faculty of Law of the University of New South Wales in Sydney.



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