Description

Book Synopsis
As torts and as crimes, champerty and maintenance were abolished by statute in England and Wales in 1967. They were considered to be obsolete and the product of a bygone age, when abuses of the court system as practised by rich and powerful noblemen required a robust legal response. A modern, sophisticated, and independent judiciary rendered it unnecessary either to punish or to compensate for champerty or maintenance any longer. However, post-1967, their impact was retained via a ''reservation provision'', which ensures that any contract tainted by champerty or maintenance ''is to be treated as contrary to public policy or otherwise illegal.'' Fast forward five decades to the present day, and whilst maintenance has arguably reached its use-by date in English law, the same cannot be said of its more aggressive cousin. Champerty, as a doctrine, retains considerable modern impact in this jurisdiction, stalking the modern funding and civil procedure landscape. It continues to have greatest impact in two areas: the funding of litigation, and the assignments of causes of action. The Modern Doctrines of Champerty and Maintenance looks comparatively at jurisdictions'' attitudes towards champerty and maintenance, together with an analysis of law reform studies in the area, both in England and elsewhere.

Table of Contents
Part I: Setting the Context 1: Introducing Champerty and Maintenance 2: The Abolition, and Reservation, of Champerty and Maintenance in England 3: Champerty and Maintenance in Other Jurisdictions Part II: Champertous Funding 4: The Modern Effects of Champerty and Maintenance on Funded Litigation 5: Non-Lawyers' Funding 6: Lawyers' Funding Part III: Champertous Assignments 7: General Concepts: Assessing Champertous Assignments 8: Assigning Causes of Action Ancillary to Property Interests 9: Assigning 'Bare' Causes of Action: Proving a Genuine Commercial Interest 10: Public Policy and the Administration of Justice Part IV: The Potential for Reform 11: Key Reform Issue for Funded Litigation 12: Key Reform Issues for Assignments

The Modern Doctrines of Champerty and Maintenance

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A Hardback by Prof Rachael Mulheron

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    View other formats and editions of The Modern Doctrines of Champerty and Maintenance by Prof Rachael Mulheron

    Publisher: Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 27/07/2023
    ISBN13: 9780192898739, 978-0192898739
    ISBN10: 0192898736

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    As torts and as crimes, champerty and maintenance were abolished by statute in England and Wales in 1967. They were considered to be obsolete and the product of a bygone age, when abuses of the court system as practised by rich and powerful noblemen required a robust legal response. A modern, sophisticated, and independent judiciary rendered it unnecessary either to punish or to compensate for champerty or maintenance any longer. However, post-1967, their impact was retained via a ''reservation provision'', which ensures that any contract tainted by champerty or maintenance ''is to be treated as contrary to public policy or otherwise illegal.'' Fast forward five decades to the present day, and whilst maintenance has arguably reached its use-by date in English law, the same cannot be said of its more aggressive cousin. Champerty, as a doctrine, retains considerable modern impact in this jurisdiction, stalking the modern funding and civil procedure landscape. It continues to have greatest impact in two areas: the funding of litigation, and the assignments of causes of action. The Modern Doctrines of Champerty and Maintenance looks comparatively at jurisdictions'' attitudes towards champerty and maintenance, together with an analysis of law reform studies in the area, both in England and elsewhere.

    Table of Contents
    Part I: Setting the Context 1: Introducing Champerty and Maintenance 2: The Abolition, and Reservation, of Champerty and Maintenance in England 3: Champerty and Maintenance in Other Jurisdictions Part II: Champertous Funding 4: The Modern Effects of Champerty and Maintenance on Funded Litigation 5: Non-Lawyers' Funding 6: Lawyers' Funding Part III: Champertous Assignments 7: General Concepts: Assessing Champertous Assignments 8: Assigning Causes of Action Ancillary to Property Interests 9: Assigning 'Bare' Causes of Action: Proving a Genuine Commercial Interest 10: Public Policy and the Administration of Justice Part IV: The Potential for Reform 11: Key Reform Issue for Funded Litigation 12: Key Reform Issues for Assignments

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