ARTICLE
14 February 2014

Express Trusts: Recovering Goods Or Proceeds From A Bankrupt Client

LL
Lerners LLP

Contributor

Lerners LLP is one of Southwestern Ontario’s largest law firms with offices in London, Toronto, Waterloo Region, and Strathroy. Ours is a history of over 90 years of successful client service and representation. Today we are more than 140 exceptionally skilled lawyers with abundant experience in litigation and dispute resolution(including class actions, appeals, and arbitration/mediation,) corporate/commercial law, health law, insurance law, real estate, employment law, personal injury and family law.
When a client goes bankrupt, an unpaid supplier is often left with few remedies.
Canada Insolvency/Bankruptcy/Re-Structuring
Lerners LLP are most popular:
  • with Senior Company Executives, HR and Finance and Tax Executives
  • with readers working within the Banking & Credit, Insurance and Healthcare industries

An express trust exists where one party holds, in trust, money or property for another party with the intention of creating a trust relationship. If an unpaid supplier can demonstrate that it and the bankrupt purchaser intended to create a trust, and the funds and property remain specifically identifiable, it may be entitled to recover the funds or property that is the subject of the trust.

An unpaid supplier may establish the intention of a valid trust by ensuring that the "three certainties" of intention, subject matter, and objects, are met.

In order to meet the certainty of intention, the trustee must administratively hold property for the beneficiary. A trust exists if the trustee is obligated to deal with the property on behalf of the beneficiary. This obligation may be express or implied, but the intention must be clear. Certainty of subject matter requires that the property or funds held in trust be clearly identifiable, while certainty of objects refers to having an identifiable beneficiary.

In addition to the certainty requirements, an unpaid supplier with a valid trust claim must also demonstrate that the trust was properly constituted. This occurs once the trustee has acquired title to the trust property, such that any rights to the property belong to the beneficiary.

Readers are reminded that bankruptcy courts are typically solutions-oriented and that the application of the above-criteria is dependent on the facts of each case.  It is recommended that readers consult an insolvency professional.

lerners.ca/articles:commerciallitigation

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

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