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Compose a 1000 words essay on Property Law Master. Needs to be plagiarism free!Download file to see previous pages... or acted to her detriment on the basis of the common intention."In a statement mad
Compose a 1000 words essay on Property Law Master. Needs to be plagiarism free!
Download file to see previous pages...or acted to her detriment on the basis of the common intention."
In a statement made by Lord Bridge emphasizing that, "an express agreement by the parties to share the ownership of a land establishes a constructive trust." He specifically said that, "The first and fundamental question which must always be resolved is whether independently of any inference to drawn the conduct of the parties in the course of the sharing the house as their home and managing their joint affairs, there has at any prior to acquisition, or exceptionally at some later date, been any
Based on the facts of the case of Eves v Eves3 and Grant v Edwards4 where there are similar situations to the above cited cases which were good examples of constructive trust created through an express common interest. ...
He further said that the said house was intended for their family to live in. In Grant v Edwards6, a man purchased a house for him and his lover and placed it his name alone with the reason that it will prejudice the divorce proceeding of the woman. In both of these there was in truth and in fact only a simulation of common interest for the truth to the matter is that the men had no intention of including the women in the ownership. However, the recent cases of Yaxley v Gotts and Banner Homes plc v Luff Developments Ltd are deemed to have the true common interest intention meanings in them. In the case Yaxley v Gotts7, this case decided by the Court of Appeals held that this is a case of proprietary estoppel on the grounds that a constructive trust was established on the basis of an oral understanding with a builder that he would acquire the ground floor, so with this premise in mind, he did the work to convert and refurbish the said house into flats. On the other hand, in Banner Homes plc v Luff Developments8 the Court of Appeals held that a constructive trust was formed by the agreement of two companies to acquire a property on joint venture but one of the said companies without the knowledge of the other went ahead to develop the site on its own.
The statement made by Peter Gibson LJ of the Court of Appeals which stressed in Drake v
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2 [1991] 1AC 107 at 132
3 [1975] 1 WLR 1338
4 [1986] Ch. 638
5 [1975] 1WLR 1338
6 Although they shared the same name, they were unmarried. She had changed her name to his by deed poll.