Gardner v London Chatham and Dover Railway Co (No 1): 1867

When Parliament expressly confers powers and imposes duties and responsibilities of an important kind upon a particular body, it is, as he put it, improper for the court by the appointment of a manager . . . itself to assume those powers and duties. Cairns LJ: ‘When the court appoints a manager of a business or undertaking, it in effect assumes the management into its own hands; for the manager is the servant or officer of the court, and upon any question arising as to the character and details of the management, it is the court which must direct and decide.’

Judges:

Cairns LJ

Citations:

(1867) LR 2 Ch App 201

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedHughes and Others v HM Customs and Excise Admn 21-Dec-2001
The applicants had either been acquitted of drugs trafficking offences, or were third parties. In each case, property had been taken into receivership, and orders had been made for the receivers to take their costs from the assets taken. The . .
CitedKilby v Basildon District Council Admn 26-Jul-2006
Tenants complained that the authority landlord had purported to vary a clause in his secure tenancy agreement which gave certain management rights to tenants.
Held: The powers to let on secure tenancies were governed by statute. The clause . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Administrative, Insolvency

Updated: 01 October 2022; Ref: scu.182892