This second edition of Sarah Worthington\'s Equity maintains the clear ambitions of the first.
These additions are designed toguide and stimulate students and practitioners in their engagement with the subject..
Each chapter also provides a short list of key cases, and a selective biography chosen for its ability to provoke debate about the principal controversies exposed in the chapter.
The second edition now includes footnote references to the leading cases in the area.
This book provides an accessible and elementary exploration of equity\'splace in our modern legal system, whilst also tackling the most taxing and controversial questions which our dual system of law and Equity raises.
Such integration she perceives as crucial to the continuing success of the modern common law legal system.
Inaddition, she exposes the possibilities, and the need, for coherent substantive integration of common law and equity.
In doing this, she provides a thorough examination of the fundamental principles underpinning equity\'s most significant incursions into the modern law of property, contract, tort, and unjust enrichment.
Worthington delivers a complete reworking of the material traditionally described as equity.
The book comprehensively and succinctly describes the role ofEquity in creating and developing rights and obligations, remedies and procedures that differ in important ways from those provided by the common law itself.
It sets out the basic principles of equity, and illustrates them by reference to commercial and domestic examples of their operation.
This second edition of Sarah Worthington\'s Equity maintains the clear ambitions of the first