Example: X gives Y £5 and tells them they must use it to go buy them a Mars bar.
Trustee: the person subject to the duty (i.e. Y who is using the £5)
Beneficiary: the person to whom the duty is owed (i.e. X who is owed the Mars bar)
Settlor: person who sets up the trust (i.e. X who gave the £5 to Y)
Express trusts Resulting and constructive trusts
® Intentionally created ® Arise by operation of law
® Can be private or public ® Known as “implied trusts”
Key case: Westdeutsche v Islington
1. Equity operates on a person’s conscience
2. A person cannot be a trustee unless they have knowledge of circumstances which
affect their conscience
3. A trust requires identifiable property
4. A beneficiary of a trust has an equitable proprietary interest in the trust property
Characteristics
Trust Property is an essential requirement for a trust. Almost every asset or
property right can be held on trust (Lord Strathcona Steamship Co Ltd v
Dominion Coal Company Ltd)
A trust will CEASE to exist if the trust property is destroyed/consumed
without any fault on part of trustee
N.B. In many trusts, the trust property fluctuates: selling the property
does not destroy a trust, it simply changes the trust assets
, A trustee Trustee owns the trust property - must exercise their rights & powers of
legal ownership consistently w/ basic trust duty
Function & duties of trustees are NOT unitary = determined by the nature
of the trust they are administering
® Role of a trustee is a voluntary office, but professional trustees are
entitled to renumeration
A duty Basic duty: to hold/apply property for the benefit of the beneficiary
(South Australian Insurance Co v Randell)
A trustee CAN be one of the beneficiaries of a trust. However, they will
still owe duties to the other beneficiaries.
Limited exception: In re Lehman Brothers International (Europe) (in
administration - ability of broker to sell trust securities on its own
account & for its own profits was NOT inconsistent w/ a trust because
broker had duty to replace any securities it sold with identical securities
Objects Must have a beneficiary or be for a permitted purpose = ‘trust objects’
A purpose trust = a trust for the promotion or realisation of a purpose (a
trust without a beneficiary). Can ONLY be for a permitted purpose.
Equitable Beneficiary has rights in the property KEY advantages:
proprietary
interest 1)Beneficiary’s rights are enforceable against ANY third party except a
purchaser for value w/ no notice (Akers v Samba Financial Group)
® If a trustee misapplies trust property, beneficiary can demand it be
restored to the trust (incl. any ‘traceable proceeds’)
2) Beneficiary’s rights are protected against trustee entering into
insolvency: beneficiary enjoys ‘priority’ over unsecured creditors.
Almost every asset & right can be held on trust (Hunter v Moss – shares)
I) Trust property requirement: trust property must be easily identified – WHAT is it?
Issue (1): Identifying subject matter by description
® Cannot create a trust out of the ‘bulk’ because it is not possible to ascertain how
much of it constitutes bulk (Palmer v Simmonds)
® Cannot create a trust of ‘net assets’ because ‘net assets’ is not any specific property
of company = abstract monetary sum (Wilkinson v North)
, ® Can create trust over a fractional interest of a wider mass regardless of property type
Issue (2): Identifying subject matter out of a larger mass (specific no. = issue)
Tangible and intangible Fungible and non-fungible
Tangible assets = physical assets Fungible assets = those that are identical and readily
(cash, diamonds) exchangeable (ordinary share)
Intangible = NO physical form Non-fungible = distinguishable + non-interchangeable
(shares, IP rights, debts) (diamonds – different shape, cut etc. different value!)
*Trustees’ obligation = to carry out a survey of the class appropriate to the particular trust*
Fixed trust Discretionary trust
Greater degree of certainty – must show: Less stringent test of certainty – must only
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