Fiduciary Relationships
Fiduciary Relationships
Fiduciary Relationships
Fiduciary?
The word fiduciary has its roots in the Latin
word fiducia, which means confidence. A
fiduciary relationship is thus a relationship of
confidence. The person in whom confidence is
reposed within that relationship is referred to as
the fiduciary. If a fiduciary abuses his or her
position to obtain an advantage or benefit at the
expense of the confiding party, the latter will be
able to seek relief from a court of equity to
prevent such advantage accruing to the
fiduciary.
Undivided Loyalty
The essence of fiduciary obligations is that
the fiduciary is precluded from acting in
any other way than in the interests of the
person to whom the duty to so act is
owed. In short, the fiduciary obligation is
one of undivided loyalty: Beach
Petroleum NL v Kennedy (1999) 48
NSWLR 467.
A vexed question.
Why was there a fiduciary relationship in
one and not the other?
Does Equity have any role in commercial
bargaining?
Are the economic costs of imposing
fiduciary relationships outweighed by
advantages?
Length of the Chancellors Foot?
Duty
The word duty in this context does not
have a technical meaning. It does not refer
to legally imposed obligations. Rather, it
refers to the actions undertaken by a
fiduciary on behalf of another person.
These actions are not confined to those
undertaken in the performance of a
fiduciarys mandatory or discretionary
functions. These actions also include
voluntary acts.
Interest
The word interest, in this context, signifies the
presence of some personal concern on the part
of a fiduciary or of possible significant pecuniary
value in a decision to be taken by the fiduciary.
Finn (1977) at 204 notes:
The pecuniary dimension of the fiduciarys concern
may take the form of an actual, prospective, or
possible profit to be made in, or as a result of, the
decision he takes or the transaction he effects. Or it
may take the form of an actual, prospective, or
possible saving, or a diminution of a personal liability
Informed consent
The duty imposed upon the fiduciary is
strict. The only way a fiduciary is able to
escape liability for conduct that amounts to
a breach of fiduciary duty is if the conduct
was undertaken with the fully informed
consent of the person to whom the
fiduciary obligations are owed. The
disclosure must be of all material facts and
information that could affect the decision to
give the consent
Unauthorised remuneration
Reading v R [1951] AC 507
Reading was a sergeant in the English army
stationed in Egypt. He accompanied civilian
trucks through security checkpoints in order to
assist them in transporting contraband goods. In
return he was paid for his assistance. The court
ruled that Reading owed fiduciary duties to the
Crown and the amount recoverable by the
Crown was the full amount that Reading had
received for his services.