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HISTORIOGRAPHY AND THE LAW OF PROPERTY ACT 1925: THE RETURN OF FRANKENSTEIN

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 September 2018

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Abstract

This article considers how problems in legal historiography can lead to real legal problems, through a case-study of two recent judgments which appear to revolutionise the law on overreaching under section 2(1)(ii) of the Law of Property Act 1925. Their reasoning ignored plain wording in the Act, in a way foreshadowed by problems in the historiography of the 1925 property legislation; and the legislative history shows that the version of overreaching they promote, one with a clear political meaning, was rejected by Parliament. One of these decisions has now been reversed on appeal, but on reasoning so untenable as to invite further challenge; and now two Court of Appeal judgments on overreaching contradict, without even mentioning, two prior Court of Appeal decisions and a decision of the House of Lords. The court should reaffirm the law on overreaching, and academics should develop a new historiography.

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Articles
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Copyright © Cambridge Law Journal and Contributors 2018 

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Footnotes

*

Lecturer in Property Law, University of Manchester; Fellow, Cambridge Centre for Property Law.

I am grateful to the Parliamentary Archivists for finding a lost Bill, and to Martin Dixon, Hazel Carty, Michael Haley, John Bell and the anonymous reviewers for their very helpful comments on earlier drafts. All faults remain my own.

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67 HL Deb. vol. 41 cols. 486–487 (26 July 1920); cf. Anderson, Lawyers, pp. 297–298.

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76 HC Deb. vol. 154 cols. 129–130 (15 May 1922); A.G.M. Hesilrige (ed.), Debrett's House of Commons and the Judicial Bench (London 1922), 21.

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102 HL Deb. vol. 63 col. 575 (16 March 1926); HL Deb. vol. 64 col. 357 (10 June 1926).

103 Cf. s. 11, instruments “creating a legal estate or charge by way of legal mortgage”.

104 Although it was included in counsels’ skeleton arguments on appeal: Baker [2018] 3 W.L.R. 401, 402D.

105 Lambert [2017] Ch. 93, at [1], [3], [9].

106 Ibid., at paras. [2], [4], [6]–[7].

107 Ibid., at p. 95A–B.

108 Ibid., at p. 95B, paras. [9], [11].

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147 Cf. Lightwood, “Trusts”, pp. 68–69.

148 Cf. Sabherwal (2000) 80 P & CR 256, at [22]; M. Dixon, “Overreaching and the Trusts of Land and Appointment of Trustees Act 1996” [2000] Conv. 267.

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157 Ibid., at p. 721B–C, cf. 719C–721G.

158 City of London Building Society v Flegg [1988] A.C. 54.

159 Ibid., at pp. 63G–64A, 83D–E, 86H–91B.

160 Law Commission Working Paper 106, Trusts of Land: Overreaching (1988), iv.

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165 Banwaitt v Dewji [2015] EWHC 3441 (Ch).

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167 One footnote mentions “an ad hoc trust” – Megarry & Wade, at [12-037], fn 317 – but few 21st-century readers will know that this phrase was used in the 20th century to mean a trust complying with s. 2(2): see e.g. Anon, “The Law of Property Acts” (1925) 60 L.J. 461; and Shiloh [1973] A.C. 691, 698F, 715A.

168 As indicated above, it is strongly arguable that the Court of Appeal judgments in both Lambert and Craggs were per incuriam.

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170 Modern interest in the doctrine that “statute is always speaking” was triggered by R. v Ireland [1998] A.C. 147, in which the House of Lords resorted to “updating” on the basis of sheer assertion about the past; had they considered historical work and evidence, “updating” would not have been necessary.

171 A useful short survey is contained in Beatson, J., “Legal Academics: Forgotten Players or Interlopers?” in Burrows, A., Johnstone, D., and Zimmermann, R. (eds.), Judge and Jurist: Essays in Memory of Lord Rodger of Earlsferry (Oxford 2013), 523542CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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