Knowing Receipt and "Equitable Proprietary Rights": Byers v Saudi National Bank
Type
ArticleAuthor/s
Mohseni, AryanAbstract
In Byers v Saudi National Bank, the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom delivered judgment in perhaps the last episode in the Akers v Samba saga. While the conclusion might be sound, the path to the conclusion is questionable. The reasoning proves too much, and there is a danger ...
See moreIn Byers v Saudi National Bank, the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom delivered judgment in perhaps the last episode in the Akers v Samba saga. While the conclusion might be sound, the path to the conclusion is questionable. The reasoning proves too much, and there is a danger that some labels-particularly of "equitable proprietary claims" - might lead unsuspecting counsel into error in later cases. What emerges from Byers is a view of knowing receipt as contingent on the equity to obtain specific restitution of an asset - a conclusion which could have more readily been reached through the construction of the statute at hand, and which sits ill with the Australian preference to see knowing receipt as fault-based, rather than as a vindication of pre-existing "property rights" and without sufficient interrogation of what we mean by "trust property" for the purposes of Barnes v Addy liability.
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See moreIn Byers v Saudi National Bank, the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom delivered judgment in perhaps the last episode in the Akers v Samba saga. While the conclusion might be sound, the path to the conclusion is questionable. The reasoning proves too much, and there is a danger that some labels-particularly of "equitable proprietary claims" - might lead unsuspecting counsel into error in later cases. What emerges from Byers is a view of knowing receipt as contingent on the equity to obtain specific restitution of an asset - a conclusion which could have more readily been reached through the construction of the statute at hand, and which sits ill with the Australian preference to see knowing receipt as fault-based, rather than as a vindication of pre-existing "property rights" and without sufficient interrogation of what we mean by "trust property" for the purposes of Barnes v Addy liability.
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Date
2024Source title
Australian Law JournalVolume
98Issue
12Publisher
The Law Book CoLicence
Copyright All Rights ReservedFaculty/School
The University of Sydney Law SchoolShare