词条 | Prince Albert v Strange |
释义 |
Prince Albert v Strange was a court decision made by the High Court of Chancery in 1849, and began the development of confidence law in England.[1] The court awarded Prince Albert an injunction, restraining Strange from publishing a catalogue describing Prince Albert’s etchings. Lord Cottenham LC (Charles Pepys, 1st Earl of Cottenham) noted that "this case by no means depends solely upon the question of property, for a breach of trust, confidence, or contract, would [sic] of itself entitle the plaintiff to an injunction". SummaryBoth Queen Victoria and Prince Albert sketched as a hobby. Sometimes they showed them to friends or gave them away. Strange obtained some of these sketches from a person named Brown[2] and scheduled a public viewing of these. He also published a catalog listing these sketches. Prince Albert filed suit for the return of the sketches and a surrender of the catalog for destruction. His plea was granted.[3] See also
References1. ^Bently, Lionel, Prince Albert v Strange (1849), in: Mitchell, Charles/Mitchell, Paul Mitchell (Ed.), Landmark Cases in Equity 2012, p.235–267. 2. ^{{cite web|url=http://swarb.co.uk/prince-albert-v-strange-chd-8-feb-1849/|title=Prince Albert v Strange: ChD 8 Feb 1849|date=17 June 2016|publisher=Swarb.Co.Uk|accessdate=12 September 2017}} 3. ^{{cite book|last1=Spetz|first1=Steven N.|title=Can I sue? : an introduction to Canadian tort law|date=1974|publisher=Pitman Pub.|location=Toronto|isbn=0273041894|pages=29–30}}
6 : English privacy case law|1849 in case law|1849 in British law|Court of Chancery cases|Albert, Prince Consort|English law articles needing infoboxes |
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