Description: This book suggests that by looking at accessory liability though the lens of private law, its nature and principles can be better understood and doctrinal confusion regarding the elements of liability, defences and remedies resolved.
Brief description:
Paul S Davies is Professor of Commercial Law at UCL and a Barrister at Essex Court Chambers. He was previously a Fellow of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge and St Catherine's College, Oxford. Paul has also worked at the Law Commission. He is the author of Accessory Liability (Hart Publishing, 2015; revised paperback edition, 2017), which won the main Inner Temple Book Prize in 2018, JC Smith's The Law of Contract (3rd ed, OUP, 2021), and a co-author of Equity and Trusts: Text, Cases and Materials (3rd ed, OUP, 2019 (with Graham Virgo)). Paul is also an editor of both Chitty on Contracts and Snell's Equity. In 2020 Paul was awarded a Philip Leverhulme Prize in Law.
Photo courtesy of Faculty of Law, University of Oxford.Review Quotes:
"Davies is to be congratulated for achieving a task of immense proportions...It is a tremendous feat...Davies is to be heartily commended for bringing to the fore the previously unexplored connections across disparate areas of law, if only to expose them to further long overdue analysis by the legal community." --Timothy Liau, Singapore Journal of Legal Studies
"...Accessory Liability is a well-written, comprehensive, compelling and thought-provoking. In few than 300 pages, it weaves together a staggering range of subjects...This book deserves to become a significant point of reference for private law scholars and practitioners alike." --William Day, Legal Studies "Overall, Accessory Liability is a book to be applauded and highly recommended. Within its pages liesan appraisal and appreciation for this specific area of law that has been sorely lacking for far too long." --Matthew Carn, Trust Law International "As Lord Justice Sales notes in his foreword, this book is long overdue; but the wait has certainly been worthwhile. The learning on display here is rich and deep, and Davies' clear structure and lucid style is an exemplar for future private law scholarship." --Bobby Lindsay, The Edinburgh Law Review "By seeking to unite discrete and substantial areas of private law, the book's mission is unmistakably ambitious. Yet the author is to be congratulated for meeting the challenge admirably by navigating nimbly across and between subject boundaries, and by squarely confronting a substantial corpus of conflicting and unfavourable authorities." --Pey-Woan Lee, Law Quarterly Review "From the foreword by Philip Sales: Judges, practitioners and academic lawyers who read this book will be indebted to Mr Davies for bringing clarity and coherence to what should now be recognised
as a major category of civil liability in its own right." --Foreword "This book deserves to become a significant point of reference for private law scholars and practitioners alike." --William Day, Legal Studies "This magnificent work of awesome scholarship and insight should be essential reading
for judges, practitioners and advanced level students working in the field of private law." --Nick McBride, King's Law Journal "All in all, this is a mould-breaking book, based on deep learning and perceptive analysis, yet written in a clear and accessible style." --Ken Oliphant, Yearbook of European Tort Law "Davies' book is a thoroughly researched and insightful publication. This book presents a challenging, and powerful, argument that the various forms of accessory liability can be drawn together, and Davies' framework provides a clear way towards achieving that goal." --David Salmon, Lecturer in Law, Aston Business School, Birmingham, The Modern Law Review "In Accessory Liability, Davies navigates the reader with clarity and skill through the murky waters of each of these questions and many others besides. It seems to me, therefore, that this book was, in 2015, quite deservedly the joint second prizewinner of the prestigious Society of Legal Scholars Peter Birks Book Prize for Outstanding Legal Scholarship. It is a book of immense learning and careful reflection written by someone who clearly grasps the fact that elegance in legal prose is no mere luxury. It is a book about accessories, but it is also an exemplar of accessibility." --John Murphy, Professor of Law, Lancaster University, LLOYD'S MARITIME AND COMMERCIAL LAW QUARTERLY