Chapter 1
I: Introduction
II: Following, Tracing and Claiming
III: Motives for Tracing
IV: Swollen Assets: Claiming Without Tracing
V: Terminology
Chapter 2
I: Introduction
II: Following Into Mixtures
III: The End of Following Through The Destruction of the Subject
Matter
Chapter 3
I: What Do we Trace?
II: Prerequisites to the Exercise of Tracing
III: Follow or Trace?
Chapter 4
I: Characteristics of Clean Substitutions
II: The Role of Intention
III: Some Specific Cases
IV: Quantifying The Traced Value in a New Form
Chapter 5: TRACING RULES II MIXED SUBSTITUTIONS
I: General Principles
II: Mixed Substitutions and Physical Mixtures: Solutions by
Analogy
III: Tracing Into and Out of Bank Accounts
IV: Tracing Into and Out of Other Mixtures of Indistinguishable
Intangible Assets
V: Tracing into Insurance Proceeds
VI: Set-off
VII: Services and Physical Alterations
Chapter 6: TRACING RULES III SPECIAL PROBLEMS
I: Tracing in Transit
II: Proving Substitutions
III: Foreign Elements
Chapter 7
Conclusion
Joint Winner of the STPL Award 1999
a book on the highly challenging area of the law of tracing is
necessary and welcome...an intelligent work, peppered with relvant
and helpful examples, serving to illustrate the doctrine of tracing
from its historical roots to the modern day...The text is to be
commended for its comparative approach...a useful addition to the
practitioner's shelves.
`outstanding monography ... it is a masterpiece which proves that
traditional common law scholarship is not only alive and well, but
moreover, is extremely useful to students, academics and
practitioners ... The book is much more than the exposition of
jurisprudence pertaining to the subject matter. Rather, the author
goes much beyond providing a detailed and accurate description of
case law. The principal strength of the work is the critical and
thorough
analysis of case law against underlying general principles that
this case law has purported but often failed to implement ... The
book is well researched and ably presented ... this is an excellent
book. It
is a first class piece of doctrinal scholarship ... The book is of
great use to the student, practitioner, and academic.'
Benjamin Geva, Banking and Finance Law Review 14.
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