Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- General editors' preface
- Preface
- Contributors to the volume
- Contributors to the case studies
- List of abbreviations
- Select bibliographies for jurisdictions represented
- Part I Setting the scene
- 1 Commercial trusts in European private law: the interest and scope of the enquiry
- 2 A short note on terminology
- 3 The Hague Trusts Convention twenty years on
- Part II The case studies
- Part III Conclusions
- Index
1 - Commercial trusts in European private law: the interest and scope of the enquiry
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- General editors' preface
- Preface
- Contributors to the volume
- Contributors to the case studies
- List of abbreviations
- Select bibliographies for jurisdictions represented
- Part I Setting the scene
- 1 Commercial trusts in European private law: the interest and scope of the enquiry
- 2 A short note on terminology
- 3 The Hague Trusts Convention twenty years on
- Part II The case studies
- Part III Conclusions
- Index
Summary
The interest and scope of the enquiry
The topic to which this book is dedicated is of great interest for anybody concerned with the expanding field of European private law. In several European countries business transactions commonly require the use of trusts. The litigation of trust law issues in a business context is becoming more frequent than in the past. At the European level, legal instruments enacted by the European Community make explicit reference to trusts, or regulate transactions involving both trusts and other investment vehicles. Principles of European Trust Law, drafted by a distinguished group of scholars, are now available to provide guidance on the development of trust law in European jurisdictions. At the international level, the Hague Convention of 1 July 1985 on the Law Applicable to Trusts and on their Recognition has entered into force in several countries, providing much-needed solutions to conflicts problems raised by trusts, but also posing fresh questions on its impact and its implementation.
The great practical importance of the subject closely matches its burning academic interest. Trusts straddle the law of property and the law of personal obligations. Located at the intersection of core categories of private law, they pose problems that turn on the proper understanding of fundamental notions of private law. From the academic point of view, trusts also raise essential questions about competing claims to property, as well as about the management of property in the broadest sense. Both sets of questions involve hotly debated subjects.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Commercial Trusts in European Private Law , pp. 3 - 44Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005