Description
This innovative and thought-provoking book studies how subrogation and marshalling should be understood in the context of private law.
Subrogation and marshalling are legal rules which give a person new rights with prima facie the same content as someone else's extinguished rights. There is little examination of why the law does this. This book argues that the key to understanding subrogation is the distinctive form of the rights that it creates. The form of rights created reflects a particular role in ensuring interpersonal justice: subrogation's role is to properly distribute the burden of debts. Taking this model, the book goes on to resolve persistent controversies in the case law, including when subrogation should occur, what rights it should create, the relationship between subrogation and marshalling, and whether subrogation is a remedy for unjust enrichment.
This book provides an innovative, thought-provoking study of how subrogation and marshalling should be understood in the context of private law.
About the Author
Rory Gregson is Associate Professor of Law at Merton College, University of Oxford, UK.
Reviews
Gregson's proposal - in the existing categories of subrogation that turn on the actual or presumed intentions of the parties, subrogation enables the proper distribution of the burden of a debt - is an elegant rationalisation of a wide range of difficult cases ... His book makes for an excellent belated Christmas present for the subrogation lawyer in your life. Highly recommended. * Cearta.ie - the Irish for Rights *
Book Information
ISBN 9781509969265
Author Rory Gregson
Format Paperback
Page Count 216
Imprint Hart Publishing
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC