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Full-Text Articles in Law
Compelling Trustees To Exercise Their Discretion: A Principle Of Non-Intervention?, Hang Wu Tang
Compelling Trustees To Exercise Their Discretion: A Principle Of Non-Intervention?, Hang Wu Tang
Research Collection Yong Pung How School Of Law
This article explores the limitsof the principle of non-interference and examine situations where the courtshave overridden the discretion of the trustee and compelled the trustee to actin a particular manner. While there havebeen numerous instances where the courts have avoided the trustee’s act, thecases where the courts have actually compelled a trustee to exercise a power ina particular manner are relatively few. The thesis of this article is that amore helpful way to conceptualise the philosophy behind the judicial control ofa trustee’s discretion is not to say that the court is bound by a so-calledprinciple of non-interference; rather, the contention …
Out Now: Recognition And Enforcement Of Foreign Judgments In Asia, Adeline Chong
Out Now: Recognition And Enforcement Of Foreign Judgments In Asia, Adeline Chong
Research Collection Yong Pung How School Of Law
A compendium of country reports on the law on the recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments in ASEAN, Australia, China, India, Japan and South Korea has been published by the Asian Business Law Institute, a research institute based in Singapore.
Mareva Injunctions Under Singapore Law, Adeline Chong
Mareva Injunctions Under Singapore Law, Adeline Chong
Research Collection Yong Pung How School Of Law
Whether the Singapore court has the jurisdiction or power to grant a Mareva injunction in aid of foreign court proceedings was recently considered by the Singapore High Court in PT Gunung Madu Plantations v Muhammad Jimmy Goh Mashun [2018] SGHC 64. Both plaintiff and defendant were Indonesian and the claim related to alleged breaches of duties which the defendant owed to the plaintiff. The plaintiff had obtained leave to serve the writ in Indonesia on the defendant. The defendant thereupon applied, inter alia, to set aside service of the writ and for a declaration that the court has no jurisdiction …
Construing A Treaty Against State Parties' Expressed Intentions: Sanum Investments Ltd V Government Of The Lao People’S Democratic Republic, Mahdev Mohan, Siraj Shaik Aziz
Construing A Treaty Against State Parties' Expressed Intentions: Sanum Investments Ltd V Government Of The Lao People’S Democratic Republic, Mahdev Mohan, Siraj Shaik Aziz
Research Collection Yong Pung How School Of Law
The Singapore Court of Appeal’s decision in Sanum Investments Ltd v Government of the Lao People’s Democratic Republic was a landmark one in several respects. A key aspect of this decision though may appear controversial at first blush – that is, the apex court placed less weight on the express views of state parties, even though Singapore itself was not a party to the relevant bilateral investment treaty (“BIT”). While doing so was admittedly “counter-intuitive”, the Court of Appeal did not set out to construe the BIT against the intentions of the contracting states. Rather, much turned on the critical …
Should Securities Regulators Allow Companies Going Public With Dual-Class Shares?, Aurelio Gurrea-Martinez
Should Securities Regulators Allow Companies Going Public With Dual-Class Shares?, Aurelio Gurrea-Martinez
Research Collection Yong Pung How School Of Law
In the past years, several companies, such as Google, Linkedin, Facebook, and Alibaba, went public with dual-class share structures, that is, share structures that typically include two classes of ordinary shares carrying unequal voting rights. Those shares with more voting rights (eg, ‘class A’ shares) are usually held by the company´s founders and executives, while the rest of the company´s share capital, formed by stock with regular voting rights (eg, ‘class B’ shares), is generally sold to outside investors.