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Article on Defining the Scope of Fiduciary Liability

FiduciaryPaul B. Miller recently published an Article entitled, Defining the Scope of Fiduciary Liability, Wills, Trusts, & Estate Law eJournal (2017). Provided below is an abstract of the Article:

This essay highlights and pays tribute to Justice Thomas Cromwell’s contributions to Canadian fiduciary jurisprudence on the occasion of his retirement from the Supreme Court of Canada. The essay situates these contributions in the context of points of uncertainty in the Court’s earlier fiduciary jurisprudence. Justice Cromwell has left the Court with a much-improved conception of the nature of fiduciary relationships and, in turn, a principled method for defining the scope of fiduciary liability. The net result is a body of law that is more stable and predictable yet also dynamic and adaptive. In reviewing Justice Cromwell’s contributions, I highlight three particularly important advancements: first, his clarification of the definitive properties of fiduciary relationships; second, his emphasis on mandates in defining the scope of fiduciary relationships; and third, his explanation of conditions requisite to the formation of fiduciary relationships.

Special thanks to Robert H. Sitkoff (John L. Gray Professor of Law, Harvard Law School) for bringing this article to my attention.