A History of Private Law in Scotland: Volume 2: ObligationsScotland has a special claim for the attention of comparative lawyers, of legal historians, and of those who seek to identify a common core in European private law or to develop a new jus commune. For Scotland stands at the intersection of the two great traditions of European law—of the law of Rome, received and developed in Continental Europe, and of the law which originated in England but was exported throughout the British Empire. In Scotland, uniquely in Europe, there is to be found a fusion of the civil law and the common law. Law in Scotland has a long history, uninterrupted either by revolution or by codification. It is rich in source material, both printed and archival. Yet hitherto the history of legal doctrine has been relatively neglected. This work is the first detailed and systematic study in the field of private law. Its method is to take key topics from the law of obligations and the law of property and to trace their development from earliest times to the present day. A fascinating picture emerges. The reception of civil law was slow but profound, beginning in the medieval period and continuing until the eighteenth century. Canon law was also influential. This was flanked by two receptions from England, of Anglo-Norman feudalism in the twelfth century and beyond, and, more enduringly, of aspects of English common law in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In addition there was much that was home-grown. Over time this disparate mixture was transformed by legal science into a coherent whole. |
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Contents
Table of Contents vii | xxiii |
Table of Cases | xxxiii |
Formation of Contract | 1 |
THE CLASSIFICATION OF CONTRACTS | 8 |
AND WE DO ALWAYS PREFER THE SENSE | 18 |
OFFER | 33 |
CONCLUSION | 44 |
Interpretation | 47 |
THE NINETEENTH CENTURY | 319 |
CONCLUSION | 331 |
Insurance | 333 |
ENGLISH LAW | 339 |
THE AGE OF MATURITY? | 350 |
A CENTURY OF SCOTS | 356 |
PAST PRESENT AND FUTURE | 365 |
Unjustified Enrichment | 369 |
Types of writing coming before the courts | 53 |
EARLY NINETEENTHCENTURY CASES | 59 |
SUMMARY OF POSITION AT MIDDLE | 65 |
CONCLUSION | 70 |
Error | 72 |
STEWART v KENNEDY | 86 |
Force and Fear | 101 |
THE CONDICTIONES | 120 |
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS | 127 |
Pacta Illicita | 129 |
EFFECT OF AN ILLEGAL CONTRACT | 149 |
Judicial Control of Unfair Contract Terms | 157 |
Breach of Contract | 175 |
DAMAGES AND THE EMERGENCE | 184 |
CONCLUSIONS | 193 |
Specific Implement | 195 |
THE JUDICIAL DISCRETION | 206 |
Keep open clauses in leases | 213 |
CONCLUSION | 219 |
Jus Quaesitum Tertio | 220 |
BANKTON ERSKINE | 227 |
IRREVOCABILITY | 235 |
GLOAGS | 245 |
Promise | 252 |
THE TERM POLLICITATIONA DIGRESSION | 267 |
THE REQUIREMENTS OF WRITING SCOTLAND | 278 |
Contractual Restrictive Covenants | 283 |
THE MIDTWENTIETH CENTURY | 294 |
CONCLUSION | 303 |
Sale | 305 |
THE LATER SEVENTEENTH CENTURY | 310 |
CLASSIFICATION AND DEVELOPMENT | 372 |
THREE STUDIES OF RECEPTION | 396 |
CONCLUSIONS | 419 |
The Structure of the Law of Delict in Historical Perspective | 422 |
THE EIGHTEENTH | 446 |
THE TWENTIETH CENTURY | 456 |
REMEDIES AND BOUNDARIES OF DELICT | 470 |
The Intentional Delicts | 477 |
THE NOMINATE DELICTS OF THE INSTITUTIONAL | 483 |
Intrusion and ejection | 491 |
Contravention of lawburrows wrongful use of lawburrows | 497 |
POSTINSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENTS | 506 |
ANALYSIS AND CONCLUSION | 513 |
Negligence | 517 |
THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE MODERN LAW | 542 |
Strict Liability | 548 |
STABULARIORUM | 569 |
Vicarious Liability | 584 |
GENERAL VICARIOUS LIABILITY | 601 |
CONCLUSION | 610 |
Liability among Neighbours | 612 |
THE DEVELOPMENT OF SCOTS CASE LAW | 617 |
SOME FINAL OBSERVATIONS | 629 |
Defamation | 633 |
FROM THE REFORMATION TO THE MID | 638 |
THE SECOND HALF OF THE EIGHTEENTH | 654 |
AREAS OF DOCTRINAL STRESS ARISING FROM | 662 |
FROM THE START OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY | 684 |
FROM THE FIRST WORLD WAR ONWARDS | 706 |
Other editions - View all
A History of Private Law in Scotland, Volume 1 Kenneth G. C. Reid,Reinhard Zimmermann (jurist) No preview available - 2000 |
Common terms and phrases
acceptance according action agreement appears applied approach authority Bankton Bell cause century cited civil claim clear common Company concerned condictio considered contract court damages decision deed defender delict discussion distinction doctrine duty early effect enforce England English law enrichment error Erskine essential evidence example expression fact fault give given ground held House of Lords Hume important influence institutional Insurance intention interest interpretation judges later Law of Scotland liability Limited Lord matter meaning nature negligence noted obligation offer party performance person Practicks President principle promise pursuer question Railway reason reference regarded relation remedy Reports respect restitution result Roman law rule Scotland Scots law Scottish seems sense Session Smith specific Stair Stewart suggests tion Walker writing wrong