Understanding Assignments: English, Comparative and Private International Law
Date: 21 January 2020
Time: 17:00 - 19:00 (registration from 16:30)
Event Details
The law of equitable assignment within English law simulates the effects of what would be termed 'assignment' in Civilian jurisdictions. Based on the work of Professor CH Tham, it appears that equitable assignment operates in a manner which is quite different from the substitutive transfer of the assignee in place of the assignor as envisaged in Civilian notions of 'assignment'. Looking at how English law has developed, the best explanation of the operation of equitable assignment is to understand it as a composite institution which operates in the manner of a bare trust coupled with an unusual form of irrevocable agency. If correct, this model of equitable assignment poses interesting questions for civilian jurisdictions who may wish to understand (and perhaps assimilate) how equitable assignment is able to address as wide a range of intangible assets as it presently does.
It also raises interesting questions for private international law. In particular, if the United Kingdom is not going to associate itself with the proposed EU Regulation on the third party effects of assignments, and as the rules of English private international law are still incomplete, it is timely to look again at how assignments really work, to see whether this examination paves the way for a more acceptable choice of law rule.
Chair
Andrew Dickinson, University of Oxford
Keynote
Chee Ho Tham, Singapore Management University, School of Law
Commentators
- Jonathan Hardman, University of Edinburgh
- Adrian Briggs, University of Oxford, Blackstone Chambers
- Sir Roy Goode QC, St John's College, University of Oxford
- Mr Justice Marcus Smith, Fountain Court Chambers
Event convened by Eva Lein, Senior Research Fellow in Private International Law and Director, Centre for Comparative Law
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