Aifc Regulations On Obligations 2017 - New Design
Aifc Regulations On Obligations 2017 - New Design
Aifc Regulations On Obligations 2017 - New Design
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AIFC REGULATIONS ON OBLIGATIONS
CONTENTS
PART 1: GENERAL
1. Name
2. Date of enactment
3. Commencement
4. Legislative authority
5. Application of these Regulations
6. Interpretation
7. Non-assignment of right of action for Personal Injury
8. Rights cumulative
9. Limitation period
10. Causation
11. Intervening act
PART 2: CAPACITY
12. Capacity
CHAPTER 2: NEGLIGENCE
CHAPTER 4: MISREPRESENTATION
CHAPTER 5: DECEIT
31. Deceit
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CHAPTER 8: DEFENCES
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SCHEDULE 1: INTERPRETATION
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PART 1: GENERAL
1. Name
2. Date of enactment
These Regulations are enacted on the day they are approved by the Governor.
3. Commencement
4. Legislative authority
These Regulations are adopted by the Governor under article 4 of the Constitutional Statute
and subparagraph 3) of paragraph 9 of the Management Council Resolution on AIFC Bodies.
These Regulations apply in the jurisdiction of the Astana International Financial Centre.
6. Interpretation
(1) A right of action under these Regulations based on Personal Injury cannot be
assigned.
(2) Subsection (1) does not prohibit the assignment of proceeds arising from a right of
action.
8. Rights cumulative
(1) The existence of a right of action under these Regulations does not affect any other
right of action under these Regulations or any other AIFC Regulations or any AIFC
Rules.
(2) A Claimant may sue a Defendant in relation to any right of Action under these
Regulations.
9. Limitation period
(1) Despite anything to the contrary provided by the AIFC Court Regulations, if a cause
of action arises as a result of fraud by the Defendant, there is no time limit within which
the Action must be commenced.
(2) For an Action under a relevant Chapter of Part 3 (Obligations of general application),
a cause of action arises on the earliest day the Claimant knows, or ought reasonably
to know, about the Loss that gives rise to the cause of action. However, any Action
must be commenced within 15 years after the day that the cause of action in fact
arose.
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(3) If a Person seeks to recover a contribution from another Person under section 14
(Apportionment of Joint and Several liability), the Person must commence an Action
to recover it within 3 years after the day that judgement was given against the Person
by the Court or the Person agreed to make a payment in settlement of the relevant
claim, as the case may be.
10. Causation
(1) To establish liability under these Regulations, a Claimant must show that the
Defendant’s conduct caused Loss to the Claimant by showing that, apart from the
Defendant’s conduct, the Claimant would not have suffered the Loss, and that the
Defendant’s conduct was a substantial cause of the Claimant’s Loss.
(2) Once a Claimant has shown that the Defendant’s conduct caused the Claimant’s Loss,
within the meaning given by subsection (1), and assuming that all other requirements
for the Defendant to be liable are made out, the Defendant is liable for the Claimant’s
entire Loss, subject to Chapter 1 (Apportionment of liability) of Part 3 (Obligations of
general application) and the AIFC Regulations on Damages and Remedies.
If the Defendant’s conduct caused Loss to the Claimant within the meaning given by section
10 (Causation), the Defendant is not responsible for Loss to the Claimant to the extent that a
supervening event has the result that the Defendant’s conduct is no longer an operative cause
of the Claimant’s Loss.
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PART 2: CAPACITY
12. Capacity
(1) Unless otherwise provided by these Regulations, all Persons are entitled to sue, and
are liable to be sued, in Actions under these Regulations.
(2) However, a Person is not liable to be sued in an Action under these Regulations if the
Person is under 18 years old at the time of the Person’s act or omission that, apart
from this subsection, would give rise to a liability.
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(1) Subject to the AIFC Court Regulations and the AIFC Court Rules, a Claimant has the
right to sue any number of Persons the Claimant considers to be Jointly Liable or
Severally Liable in relation to any liability to the Claimant under these Regulations.
(2) Persons who are Jointly Liable or Severally Liable in relation to the same Loss are
liable for the whole Loss.
(3) Persons who are Severally Liable in relation to different Loss are each liable only for
the Loss that each has caused.
(1) A Person who is liable under these Regulations for any Loss may recover contribution
from any other Person who is liable in relation to the same Loss.
(2) A Person who makes a payment in settlement of a claim under these Regulations may
recover from any other Person who would have been liable in relation to the same
Loss if the factual basis of the claim against the other Person could be established.
(3) A contribution recovered from a Person under this section is the contribution that the
arbitrator or the Court considers just, having regard to the Person’s responsibility for
the Loss in question.
(1) An employer is Jointly Liable with the employer’s employee in relation to liability of the
employee under these Regulations arising in the course of the employee’s service.
(2) If a relationship of service exists under which a Person (A) provides services for
another Person (B), B is jointly liable with A in relation to liability of A under these
Regulations arising during the course of A’s service.
(3) Whether a relationship of service exists between A and B depends on the substance
of the relationship between them in all its aspects, rather than its form. It is not
essential that there should be a contract of service between them.
(4) A principal is Jointly Liable with the principal’s agent in relation to liability of the agent
under these Regulations arising in the course of the agency if the act or omission of
the agent that gives rise to the liability is within the agent’s authority.
(5) If a Person knowingly and actively instigates another Person to act or omit to act in a
way that gives rise to liability under these Regulations, or otherwise acts in concert
with another Person in relation to an act or omission that gives rise to liability under
these Regulations, the Person is Jointly Liable with the other Person.
A parent or other Person responsible for a child is Jointly Liable with the child in relation to
liability of the child under these Regulations if, at the time the child commits the act or omission
that gives rise to the liability, the parent or other Person:
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(a) has control of, or is negligent in permitting the child to use, a dangerous thing that
causes the Loss suffered by the Claimant; or
(b) is negligent in not exercising proper control and supervision of the child; or
(d) if the Loss suffered by a third Person arises from a perilous situation created by the
act of the child—ought reasonably to have anticipated the situation in the
circumstances.
CHAPTER 2: NEGLIGENCE
(1) A Defendant is liable in negligence to a Claimant if, and to the extent that:
(b) the Defendant breaches the duty of care to the Claimant; and
(c) the Defendant’s acts or omissions in breach of the duty of care to the Claimant
cause Loss to the Claimant.
(2) The Defendant’s liability under subsection (1) is reduced by the extent to which the
Claimant’s negligent acts or omissions contributed to the Claimant’s Loss.
(b) the relationship between the Defendant and the Claimant is sufficiently
proximate for a duty of care to exist; and
(c) it is fair, just and reasonable in the circumstances that the Defendant should
owe the Claimant a duty of care.
(3) Also, a Person only owes a duty positively to act if the Person has assumed
responsibility for the Claimant, for certain property, or for a third party, causing Loss
to the Claimant.
(1) A public authority may owe a duty of care in carrying out a statutory or other legal duty.
(2) If a public authority takes a decision or action in the exercise of a statutory or other
legal discretion, the public authority may owe a duty of care in relation to the decision
or action, but only if the decision or action is outside the ambit of the discretion.
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(3) To fall outside the ambit of the public authority’s statutory or other legal discretion, the
decision or action must be so unreasonable that there has been no real exercise of
the discretion given to the public authority.
(4) A public authority cannot owe a duty of care in relation to a Failure to exercise a
statutory or other legal discretion.
(5) A public authority does not owe a duty of care under subsections (1) and (2) so far as
it is subject to an immunity or exemption from liability in relation to the duty.
(1) If a Claimant has suffered only pure economic loss as a result of the Defendant’s
conduct, the Defendant only owes a duty of care to the Claimant if:
(a) the requirements of section 17 (Liability for negligence) are met; and
(2) For this section, if a Person makes a statement, the Person assumes a responsibility
to each Person to whom the statement is made, or becomes available, (a recipient)
if:
(a) the Person knows, or ought to know, that the statement will be communicated
to the recipient, either specifically or as a member of an ascertainable class
and that it is likely to be acted on by the recipient for the purpose for which the
statement was made; and
(b) the Person intends, or the recipient reasonably believes that the Person
intended, for the recipient to act on the statement for that purpose.
(1) To establish a breach of a duty of care, a Claimant must show that a Defendant Failed
to exercise Reasonable Care to avoid causing Loss to the Claimant, having regard to
the probability, and the likely seriousness, of the Loss.
(2) For these Regulations, Reasonable Care is the care that a Person of ordinary care
and skill, engaged in the type of activity in which the Defendant was engaged, would
have exercised.
(3) A professional Person exercises Reasonable Care if the Person shows the standard
of care of an ordinary skilled Person exercising and professing to have the special skill
in question.
(4) If there are different views within a profession about what is Reasonable Care, a
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professional Person in the profession shows Reasonable Care if the Person takes an
approach endorsed or followed by a responsible body of professional opinion in that
profession.
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(a) the Occupier owes the other Person a duty of care; and
(b) the Occupier breaches the duty of care to the Person; and
(c) the Occupier’s acts or omissions in breach of the duty of care to the Person cause
Loss to the Person.
(1) An Occupier of Premises must, in performing the Occupier’s duty under section 23
(Occupier’s duty of care to Visitors) to a Visitor, take the care, that is reasonable in all
the circumstances of the case, to see that the Visitor will be reasonably safe in using
the Premises for the purposes for which the Visitor is invited or permitted by the
Occupier to be there.
(2) In working out whether the Occupier has performed the duty of care to a reasonable
standard:
(a) the Occupier must expect that children will be less careful than adults; and
(b) the Occupier may expect that a Person, in the exercise of the Person’s
employment, profession or calling, will guard against any special risks
ordinarily incident to it, if the Occupier allows the Person to do so.
(3) The Occupier is not liable for a danger caused by the faulty work of an independent
contractor employed by the Occupier if the Occupier took reasonable steps in the
circumstances to see that the contractor was competent and that the contractor’s work
was properly done.
(1) An Occupier of Premises owes a duty to take Reasonable Care of a Non-Visitor if:
(a) the Occupier knows, or has reasonable grounds to know, that there is a danger
on or in the Premises; and
(b) the Occupier knows, or has reasonable grounds to know, that the Non-Visitor
is, or may come, within the vicinity of the danger; and
(c) the risk is a risk against which the Occupier ought reasonably to offer
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protection.
(2) In working out whether the Occupier has performed the Occupier’s duty of care to a
reasonable standard, the Occupier must expect that children will be less careful than
adults.
(2) The Non-Visitor must prove that the Occupier has breached the Occupier’s duty of
care.
(3) A Non-Visitor may only recover for Personal Injury under this Chapter and cannot
recover for any other Loss.
An Occupier of Premises may absolve the Occupier of liability to a Non-Visitor by taking steps,
which are reasonable in all the circumstances, to give a warning of the danger.
CHAPTER 4: MISREPRESENTATION
(1) For this Chapter, a Person (the Representor) makes a Misrepresentation to another
Person (the Representee) if:
(i) the Person to whom the representation is made or, if the Person is an
agent of another Person, the other Person;
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and the Representee (or the Representee’s agent, acting in the agent’s capacity as
agent) has reasonable grounds for believing that the opinion is true.
(a) the Misrepresentation was made to induce a Person to enter into a contract or Persons
to enter into contracts; and
(b) the Representee entered into a contract after the Misrepresentation was made; and
(c) the Misrepresentation influenced the Representee to enter into the contract or affected
the terms on which the Representee agreed to enter into it; and
(d) the Representee suffers Loss as a result of entering into the contract.
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CHAPTER 5: DECEIT
31. Deceit
(b) the Defendant intends that a Person should rely on the fraudulent statement;
and
(3) It is not a defence to an Action under this section that the Claimant could have
discovered the deceit if the Claimant had exercised Reasonable Care.
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(a) the Defendant knows that a third party owes a legal obligation to the Claimant; and
(b) the Defendant intentionally induces the third party to breach the obligation; and
33. Intimidation
(1) Subject to section 35 (Exception to sections 33 and 34), a Defendant is liable if:
(b) as a result of the threat, the second Person refrains from acting as the second
Person is entitled to act; and
(c) as a result of refraining to act, the second Person or a third Person suffers
Loss; and
(d) the Defendant would be liable to the second Person or third Person had the
Defendant committed the unlawful act.
(2) If the requirements of subsection (1) are met, the second Person or third Person, or
both, may commence an Action against the Defendant.
(2) For the Defendant to be liable, it is not necessary that the unlawful means be directed
at the other Person.
(3) The means are only unlawful if any Person would have a right of action as a result of
the Defendant using them.
(1) If 2 or more Persons conspire to do an unlawful act with the intention to cause Loss to
the Claimant, and Loss is caused to the Claimant by the performance by at least one
of them of the unlawful act, they are Jointly Liable to the Claimant.
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(2) The act is only unlawful if the Claimant would have a right of action as a result of any
one Person performing it.
(1) Subject to subsection (5), a Person (the relevant Person) has a duty not to misuse
specific information that the Person has received from another Person (the
confidant), directly or through an intermediary, if the information can reasonably be
regarded as confidential and the Person knows or ought to know that the information
is confidential.
(2) If the relevant Person breaches the Person’s duty under subsection (1), the Person is
liable to the confidant.
(c) it is in the public interest that the information should not be confidential.
(4) Misuse of the information includes, but is not limited to, its disclosure.
(6) It is not a defence that the relevant Person did not know that the Person was misusing
the confidential information.
(c) the Defendant makes the Misrepresentation without regard for its truthfulness;
and
(d) the Claimant suffers, or is likely to suffer, damage as a result of that confusion
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or deception.
(2) For this section, it is not necessary that the Persons confused or deceived should be
aware of the Claimant’s identity, if they are accustomed to the Claimant’s business,
goods or services.
(3) It is not a defence to an Action under this section that the Defendant did not intend to
cause the confusion or deception mentioned in subsection (1)(b).
(4) In this section (and sections 30 (Liability for Misrepresentation) and 40 (Passing off:
interpretation):
A Defendant is liable if the Defendant knowingly assists or facilitates passing off under section
38 (Passing off) by another Person.
For section 38(1)(b) (Passing off), a Misrepresentation confuses or deceives Persons if, for
example, it results in the reasonable belief that:
(a) the Defendant’s business, goods or services are the business, goods or services of
the Claimant, or vice versa; or
(b) the Claimant’s goods or services of one class, quality, condition or state are of another
class, quality, condition or state; or
(c) the Defendant’s goods or services belong to a class of goods or services with a
discrete reputation, and they do not; or
(d) goods are covered by the Claimant’s guarantee, and they are not covered.
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(1) A Defendant is liable to another Person if, the Defendant wrongfully interferes with
Property in which the other Person has an Interest and the other Person suffers Loss
as a result of the interference.
(b) deals with the Property or, for Property for which the Defendant owes a duty
of care, neglects the Property so that it is destroyed or damaged; or
(c) deals with the Property in a way that constitutes a denial of title or possession
of, or enjoyment by, the other Person.
(3) However, the Defendant does not interfere with the Property if the Defendant merely
denies the other Person’s Interest in it.
(4) The Defendant’s interference is wrongful if it happens without the other Person’s
permission, express or implied.
(5) It is not a defence that the Defendant did not know that the other Person had an
Interest in the Property.
In this Chapter:
Property has the meaning given to it in the AIFC Personal Property Regulations, but does not
include money, things in action and intellectual property.
For this Chapter, a Person has an Interest in Property if the Person has any interest in it,
present or future, direct or derivative, possessory or proprietary.
(1) A co-owner, or any other Person with a limited Interest in the Property, may recover
under this Chapter proportionately according to the Person’s Interest.
(2) A co-owner may commence an Action under this Chapter against a fellow co-owner
of the same Property.
(1) It is a defence to an Action under this Chapter to show that a third party has a better
claim to title of the relevant Property than the Claimant.
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(2) If a Defendant has been found liable to a Claimant under this Chapter, and
subsequently another Claimant is found to have a superior claim to or Interest in or to
the relevant Property, the first Claimant is liable to account to the other Claimant.
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CHAPTER 8: DEFENCES
(a) the Claimant has knowingly subjected the Claimant to the risk on which the claim is
based; and
(b) the Claimant wishes to be subject to the risk or agrees to be subject to the risk.
A Claimant may not claim under this Part for Loss or other injury in the course of, or as a
consequence of, the Claimant’s unlawful conduct, or if it would be unlawful for the Claimant
to obtain a remedy.
It is a defence to any liability under this Part that the Defendant was taking the action that was
in the Defendant’s view both reasonable and necessary to prevent the commission of a crime
or harm to Persons or property.
It is a defence to any liability under this Part that the Defendant’s conduct was authorised by
law.
Unless otherwise provided by these Regulations, a Person can exclude or limit the Person’s
liability under this Part, subject to the AIFC Implied Terms in Contracts and Unfair Terms
Regulations.
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(2) For these Regulations, a Contract of Insurance is a contract under which a Person
(the Insurer) undertakes to indemnify, or to provide a corresponding benefit to or for
the benefit of, another Person (the Insured) with an insurable interest on the
happening of a specified event.
(1) An Insured under a Contract of Insurance is under a duty to the Insurer to disclose to
the Insurer every fact within the Insured’s knowledge that would influence the
judgement of a prudent insurer in deciding the terms and conditions of the contract or
in deciding whether to enter into the contract.
(2) The duty in subsection (1) continues for the life of the Contract of Insurance.
(a) an Insured is taken to have knowledge of matters of which the Insured’s agent
has knowledge if:
(i) the Insured relies, or has relied, on the agent in relation to information
about the subject matter of the insurance; or
(b) if an agent enters into the Contract of Insurance on behalf of the Insured—the
Insured is also under a duty to ensure disclosure of every fact within the
knowledge of the agent that would be disclosable under that subsection if
known by the Insured.
(1) All parties to a Contract of Insurance are under a duty to act honestly and with the
utmost good faith in relation to the contract.
(2) The duty in subsection (1) continues for the life of the Contract of Insurance.
(3) For subsection (1), the duty to act with the utmost good faith is satisfied by a party to
a Contract of Insurance if the party:
(c) intends to carry out, and carries out, the party’s obligations with the utmost
good faith.
(1) If a party to a Contract of Insurance breaches a duty under this Part in relation to the
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(2) However, subsection (1) applies in relation to a claim under the Contract of Insurance
only if the breach of duty is material to the claim.
(3) This section does not limit the power of the Court to grant any remedy in relation to a
dispute relating to a Contract of Insurance.
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(1) This Part applies to any Bailment of property possessed or owned by a Person within
the AIFC.
(2) However, this Part does not apply in relation to securities or negotiable instruments.
(1) A Bailment arises whenever a Person (the Bailor) lawfully in possession, or entitled
to possession, of property transfers possession of the property to another Person (the
Bailee).
(2) For this part, possession of property (the relevant property) may be transferred by:
(b) Delivery of any property (including a document of title) entitling or enabling the
recipient to possess the relevant property.
(3) However, possession by an agent, acting within the agent’s authority, of property
owned by the agent’s principal is not a Bailment. The transfer by an agent of
possession of property belonging to the principal, if done within the agent’s authority,
is a Bailment.
(a) contractual; or
(b) non-contractual.
(7) An Involuntary Bailment must be presumed to be for the benefit of the Bailor unless
otherwise proved.
A Sub-Bailment is the transfer of possession of property from a Person (other than the owner)
entitled to possession of the property (the Sub-Bailor) to a Person other than the owner of
the property (the Sub-Bailee). Bailment by an agent on behalf of the agent’s principal under
section 57(3) (Bailment defined etc.) is not a Sub-Bailment.
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This Chapter, other than sections 64 (Bailee’s duty not to act in way inconsistent with owner’s
title etc.) and 73 (Duty of Bailee to return property under non-contractual Bailment), does not
apply to contracts of hire.
(1) A Bailor under a Voluntary Bailment is under a duty to disclose to the Bailee
information about the property bailed if the Bailee would reasonably expect notice of
the information and the absence of the information could reasonably cause Loss to
the Bailee.
(2) A Bailor under an Involuntary Bailment is under a duty to disclose to the Bailee, as
soon as reasonably practicable after becoming aware of the Bailment and the identity
of the Bailee, information about the property bailed if the Bailee would reasonably
expect notice of the information and the absence of the information could reasonably
cause Loss to the Bailee.
(3) A Failure to comply with an obligation under subsections (1) and (2) is a breach of a
duty of care owed by the Bailor to the Bailee under Chapter 2 (Negligence) of Part 3
(Obligations of general application).
(a) unless there is evidence of a contrary intention by the Bailee, the Bailor is
under a duty to pay the reasonable expenses of the Bailee incurred in
undertaking the Bailment of the property if the purpose of the Bailment is for
custody or otherwise for the benefit of the Bailor; and
(b) in all other cases, the Bailor and Bailee must bear their own costs.
(2) For an Involuntary Bailment, the Bailor is under a duty to pay the reasonable expenses
of the Bailee incurred in undertaking the Bailment of the property.
(1) A Bailee must take the care of the property bailed that is reasonable in all the
circumstances.
(2) A Bailee under a contractual Bailment may vary the standard of care applying under
subsection (1) in the contract of Bailment, subject to the AIFC Implied Terms in
Contracts and Unfair Terms Regulations.
(3) A Bailee under a Voluntary Bailment may vary the standard of care applying under
subsection (1) by notice to the Bailor, subject to the AIFC Implied Terms in Contracts
and Unfair Terms Regulations. However, the notice may only take effect from the time
the Bailor becomes aware, or ought reasonably to have become aware, of its contents.
(4) If a Bailee complies with the Bailee’s obligations under this section, the Bailee is not
responsible for the loss, destruction or deterioration of the property bailed, subject to
any contrary agreement.
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(5) A Failure by a Bailee to comply with the obligation under subsection (1) is a breach of
a duty of care owed by the Bailee to the Bailor under Chapter 2 (Negligence) of Part
3 (Obligations of general application).
(6) In deciding whether a Bailee has complied with the Bailee’s obligations under this
section, all of the circumstances of the Bailment must be taken into account. In
particular, regard must be had of the following matters:
(b) whether the Bailor and Bailee (if either) benefits from the Bailment;
(c) whether the Bailor has complied with the Bailor’s obligation under section 60
(Duty of Bailor to disclose information);
(d) any custom of trade, or previous course of dealing, between the Bailor and the
Bailee relevant to the Bailment.
(a) if the Bailment is a contractual Bailment and the Bailee is a custodian for hire
or reward (including, for example, an auctioneer or warehouse keeper)—the
Bailee is presumed to exercise the standard of care of a professional custodian
for hire or reward in relation to property of the type bailed;
(b) if the Bailment is an Involuntary Bailment and the Bailee intends to take
possession of the property bailed—the Bailee is subject to the same standard
of care as the Bailee would have been subject if the Bailment were a Voluntary
Bailment;
(c) if the Bailment is an Involuntary Bailment and the Bailee does not intend to
take possession of the property bailed—the Bailee has no obligation under
section 60 (Duty of Bailor to disclose information) until the Bailee becomes
aware of the Bailment.
(a) if the Bailment is a contractual Bailment—it is presumed that the Bailment does
not benefit either party to the Bailment over the other;
(b) to the extent reasonably necessary for the purpose of the Bailment.
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(2) If the Bailment is an Involuntary Bailment, the Bailee may use the property bailed to
the extent reasonably necessary to prevent the Bailee suffering Loss as a result of or
in connection with the Bailment.
(3) Use by the Bailee of the property bailed otherwise than in accordance with subsections
(1) and (2) is wrongful interference with property under Chapter 7 (Wrongful
interference with property) of Part 3 (Obligations of general application).
64. Bailee’s duty not to act in way inconsistent with owner’s title etc.
(1) Except as permitted by the Bailor, a Bailee is under a duty not to act:
(a) in a way that is inconsistent with the title of the owner of the property; or
(b) in a way that is inconsistent with the rights of the Bailor as notified to the Bailee
(if the Bailor is not the owner of the property).
(2) For subsection (1), the Bailee may assume that the Bailor is the owner of the property
if not notified otherwise by the Bailor, and accordingly the Bailee has no duty under
subsection (1)(b) unless so notified.
(3) A breach by the Bailee of the duty under subsection (1) is wrongful interference with
property under Chapter 7 (Wrongful interference with property) of Part 3 (Obligations
of general application).
(4) If the Bailee breaches the duty under subsection (1), the Bailor may terminate the
Bailment at any time.
(2) A Failure by the Bailee to return the property bailed in accordance with subsection (1)
is wrongful interference with property under Chapter 7 (Wrongful interference with
property) of Part 3 (Obligations of general application).
(1) If property belonging to co-owners is Bailed to a Bailee, the Bailee is obliged to return
the property only on the instructions of all of the co-owners, unless the co-owners
otherwise notify the Bailee.
(2) If property is bailed to more than 1 Person acting as Bailee, each Bailee is Jointly
Liable in relation to any breach of duty under this Part relating to the Bailment.
67. Sub-Bailments
(1) If a Bailment is a Sub-Bailment, the duties of the Sub-Bailee under a relevant section
are owned concurrently to the Sub-Bailor and to the owner of the property.
(2) A Sub-Bailment does not alter the rights and obligations of the Bailor and Bailee under
the original Bailment.
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(c) section 64 (Bailee’s duty not to act in way inconsistent with owner’s title etc.).
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(1) This Part applies to any Person who is a Fiduciary of another Person.
(2) This Part does not apply to the relationship arising under agency.
(1) For these Regulations, a Person is the Fiduciary of another Person (the Principal) if
the Person has undertaken (whether or not under contract) to act for or on behalf of
the other Person in a matter in circumstances that give rise to a relationship of trust
and confidence.
(2) It is presumed, unless demonstrated to the contrary, that Persons acting in the
following capacities are Fiduciaries:
(3) In all other situations it is a question of fact whether in all the circumstances of the
case a Person is a Fiduciary.
(1) A Fiduciary acting in the capacity of Fiduciary is under an obligation of loyalty to the
Principal.
(2) The Fiduciary may exclude or restrict the Fiduciary’s obligation of loyalty under this
section by contract with the Principal, subject to the AIFC Implied Terms in Contracts
and Unfair Terms Regulations.
(1) The Fiduciary’s obligation of loyalty consists of such of the duties set out in the
following subsections as are appropriate in all the circumstances of the relationship
between the Fiduciary and the Principal.
(2) The Fiduciary must act in Good Faith in what the Fiduciary considers to be in the
interests of the Principal without regard to the Fiduciary’s own interests.
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AIFC REGULATIONS ON OBLIGATIONS
(3) The Fiduciary must not place the Fiduciary in a position where the Fiduciary’s own
interests conflict with the Principal’s interests.
(4) If, in any transaction, there is a conflict between an interest or duty of the Fiduciary
and an interest of the Principal, the Fiduciary must account to the Principal for any
benefit the Fiduciary receives from the transaction.
(5) However, the Fiduciary does not have to account for the benefit if the benefit has been
disclosed to and approved by the Principal.
(6) The Fiduciary must not use the Principal’s property, information or opportunities for
the Fiduciary’s own or anyone else’s benefit unless the Principal has consented or the
use has been fully disclosed to the Principal and the Principal has not objected to it.
(7) The Fiduciary must only use information obtained in confidence from the Principal for
the benefit of the Principal, and must not use it for the Fiduciary’s own advantage or
for the benefit of any other Person.
(8) The Fiduciary owes the Principal a duty to exercise the care, skill and diligence that
would be exercised in the same circumstance by a reasonable person having both:
(a) the knowledge and experience that may reasonably be expected of a person
in the same position as the Fiduciary; and
(a) the Fiduciary is liable to pay damages to the Principal in relation to any loss
suffered by the Principal in accordance with the AIFC Regulations on
Damages and Remedies; and
(b) the Fiduciary is liable to account to the Principal for any benefit the Fiduciary
has acquired as a result of the breach.
the Principal may apply to the Court to set aside the agreement or dealing.
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AIFC REGULATIONS ON OBLIGATIONS
SCHEDULE 1: INTERPRETATION
In these Regulations:
AIFC Regulations means regulations adopted by the Management Council or the Governor,
and includes, for example, these Regulations.
AIFC Rules means rules adopted by the Board of Directors of the AFSA, the Board of
Directors of the AIFCA or the Governor.
Bailee, Bailment and Bailor have the meanings respectively given by section 57 (Bailment
defined etc.).
Claimant: means a Person who brings or makes a claim under these Regulations.
Company means a company, whether incorporated in the AIFC or in any jurisdiction other
than the AIFC.
Constitutional Statute means the Constitutional Statute of the Republic of Kazakhstan dated
7th December 2015 On Astana International Financial Centre.
Contract of Insurance has the meaning given by section 52 (Application of Part 4 and
Contract of Insurance etc. defined).
Defendant means a Person against whom a claim is brought or made under these
Regulations.
Good Faith: an act or omission is in Good Faith if it is done or omitted to be done honestly,
whether or not it is done or omitted to be done negligently.
Insured and Insurer have the meanings respectively given by section 52 (Application of Part
4 and Contract of Insurance etc. defined).
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AIFC REGULATIONS ON OBLIGATIONS
Interest in Property, for Chapter 7 (Wrongful interference with property) of Part 3 (Obligations
of general application), has the meaning given by section 43 (Interest in Property defined for
Chapter 7).
Involuntary Bailment has the meaning given by section 57(5) (Bailment defined etc.).
Jointly Liable: 2 or more Persons are Jointly Liable if the same facts cause each of them to
be liable to the same Person in relation to the same Loss.
Management Council means the Management Council of the Astana International Financial
Centre.
Management Council Resolution on AIFC Bodies means The Structure of the Bodies of
the Astana International Financial Centre, adopted by resolution of the Management Council
on 26 May 2016, as amended by resolution of the Management Council, The Amendments
and supplementations to the Structure of the Bodies of the Astana International Financial
Centre, adopted on 9 October 2017.
Non-Visitor, in relation to an Occupier’s Premises, means a Person who enters onto or into
the Premises without the Occupier’s consent, express or implied.
Occupier, in relation to Premises, means the Person who occupies, or any one of a number
of Persons who occupy, the Premises.
Personal Injury means any injury to a person’s body or death, but does not include psychiatric
injury.
Principal, in relation to a Fiduciary, has the meaning given by section 69 (Fiduciary defined
etc.).
Property, for Chapter 7 (Wrongful interference with property) of Part 3 (Obligations of General
application), has the meaning given by section 42 (Property defined for Chapter 7).
Reasonable Care has the meaning given by section 21(2) (Standard of care).
Several Liability: 2 or more Persons are Severally Liable if they cause the same Loss for
which they are not Jointly Liable for all or any parts of the Loss.
Sub-Bailee, Sub-Bailment and Sub-Bailor have the meanings respectively given by section
58 (Sub-Bailment defined etc.).
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AIFC REGULATIONS ON OBLIGATIONS
Visitor, in relation to an Occupier’s Premises, means a Person who enters onto or into the
Premises with the Occupier’s consent, express or implied.
Voluntary Bailment has the meaning given by section 57(5) (Bailment defined etc.).
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