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The basis and boundaries of employee fiduciary duties in South African common law

The nature and potential application of the common-law fiduciary doctrine, and of the distinctive nature of the duties to which it gives rise, is seldom appreciated or analysed in South African law. This is particularly evident in the law of employment, where the courts’ references to the ‘fiduc...

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Main Author: Idensohn, Kathleen
Other Authors: Rycroft, Alan
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Commercial Law 2015
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access_status_str Open Access
author Idensohn, Kathleen
author2 Rycroft, Alan
author_browse Idensohn, Kathleen
Rycroft, Alan
author_facet Rycroft, Alan
Idensohn, Kathleen
author_sort Idensohn, Kathleen
collection Thesis
description The nature and potential application of the common-law fiduciary doctrine, and of the distinctive nature of the duties to which it gives rise, is seldom appreciated or analysed in South African law. This is particularly evident in the law of employment, where the courts’ references to the ‘fiduciary’ nature of employment and the ‘fiduciary duties’ of employees have often been ambiguous, confused and unprincipled. In addition, there is almost no reference to employee fiduciary duties in the general literature on South African labour and employment law and, even where these duties are (briefly) mentioned, they are not acknowledged as being in any way separate or distinct from the employee’s other duties to the employer. This contrasts noticeably with other Commonwealth jurisdictions, where fiduciary duties form the basis of increasing numbers of cases, and are well-established and extensively debated aspects of the general jurisprudence, both generally and in relation to employees. This thesis critically explores and advances certain propositions about the general theoretical nature of the South African common- law fiduciary concept and the principles that govern the incidence, nature, purpose, scope and operation of fiduciary duties, with comparative reference to the positions in English and Canadian law. The first six chapters provide a critical analysis of those general propositions and principles. They also locate them and the debates that surround them within their broader legal and theoretical context. Chapter 7 considers their application to relationships of employment in order to determine the basis and boundaries of the fiduciary duties of employees (as ‘ordinary’ employee and in certain other established ‘fiduciary’ capacities commonly associated with employment) in terms of South African common law. In particular, the chapter considers when those duties will arise, their scope of application, what they require of the employee, and how they differ from other employee duties. Chapter 8 considers the broader issues of whether all relationships of employment are inherently and necessarily ‘fiduciary’ ones and whether they ought generally to be classified as a class of ‘fiduciary relationship’. The final chapter critiques the current position in South African law on these matters. It also suggests a set of fiduciary principles and propositions for the future application and development of fiduciary duties, both generally and in relation to employment, that are theoretically sound, clear, coherent and, where appropriate, consistent with contemporary jurisprudence in other comparable jurisdictions.
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publishDate 2015
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/15469 The basis and boundaries of employee fiduciary duties in South African common law Idensohn, Kathleen Rycroft, Alan Commercial Law The nature and potential application of the common-law fiduciary doctrine, and of the distinctive nature of the duties to which it gives rise, is seldom appreciated or analysed in South African law. This is particularly evident in the law of employment, where the courts’ references to the ‘fiduciary’ nature of employment and the ‘fiduciary duties’ of employees have often been ambiguous, confused and unprincipled. In addition, there is almost no reference to employee fiduciary duties in the general literature on South African labour and employment law and, even where these duties are (briefly) mentioned, they are not acknowledged as being in any way separate or distinct from the employee’s other duties to the employer. This contrasts noticeably with other Commonwealth jurisdictions, where fiduciary duties form the basis of increasing numbers of cases, and are well-established and extensively debated aspects of the general jurisprudence, both generally and in relation to employees. This thesis critically explores and advances certain propositions about the general theoretical nature of the South African common- law fiduciary concept and the principles that govern the incidence, nature, purpose, scope and operation of fiduciary duties, with comparative reference to the positions in English and Canadian law. The first six chapters provide a critical analysis of those general propositions and principles. They also locate them and the debates that surround them within their broader legal and theoretical context. Chapter 7 considers their application to relationships of employment in order to determine the basis and boundaries of the fiduciary duties of employees (as ‘ordinary’ employee and in certain other established ‘fiduciary’ capacities commonly associated with employment) in terms of South African common law. In particular, the chapter considers when those duties will arise, their scope of application, what they require of the employee, and how they differ from other employee duties. Chapter 8 considers the broader issues of whether all relationships of employment are inherently and necessarily ‘fiduciary’ ones and whether they ought generally to be classified as a class of ‘fiduciary relationship’. The final chapter critiques the current position in South African law on these matters. It also suggests a set of fiduciary principles and propositions for the future application and development of fiduciary duties, both generally and in relation to employment, that are theoretically sound, clear, coherent and, where appropriate, consistent with contemporary jurisprudence in other comparable jurisdictions. 2015-11-30T13:14:23Z 2015-11-30T13:14:23Z 2015 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/15469 eng application/pdf Department of Commercial Law Faculty of Law University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Commercial Law
Idensohn, Kathleen
The basis and boundaries of employee fiduciary duties in South African common law
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title The basis and boundaries of employee fiduciary duties in South African common law
title_full The basis and boundaries of employee fiduciary duties in South African common law
title_fullStr The basis and boundaries of employee fiduciary duties in South African common law
title_full_unstemmed The basis and boundaries of employee fiduciary duties in South African common law
title_short The basis and boundaries of employee fiduciary duties in South African common law
title_sort basis and boundaries of employee fiduciary duties in south african common law
topic Commercial Law
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/15469
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