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  • Episode 11: Trust Applications and Classifications
    2025/07/07

    Dr Sarah McKibbin brings trust law to life through the High Court case of Byrnes v Kendle—where an ordinary couple's property arrangements demonstrate how trust principles operate when relationships break down. Explore five major trust applications shaping Australian society: family wealth management, business structures, collective investments, testamentary arrangements, and charitable purposes.

    Master essential trust classifications from express, resulting, and constructive trusts to the Quistclose trust. Learn to distinguish trusts from agency, debt, and charges—distinctions that can mean the difference between recovery and loss in insolvency situations.

    Get an exclusive preview of Queensland's new Trusts Act 2025, representing the most significant modernisation of trust law in over 50 years, with enhanced beneficiary protections and mandatory trustee duties.

    ⚖️ Perfect for: Law students tackling trust classifications, lawyers handling family or commercial trust disputes, and professionals navigating the intersection of trust law with other legal frameworks.

    📻 Credits

    Host & Producer: Dr Sarah McKibbin, University of Southern Queensland
    Audio Production & Sound Design: Ben Meares

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    43 分
  • Episode 10: Introduction to Trusts — Foundations and Structure
    2025/07/07

    Dr Sarah McKibbin begins an essential new module exploring trusts—equity's most versatile and far-reaching creation. Starting from medieval origins, this episode builds your understanding of what makes trusts unique: the remarkable separation of legal and beneficial ownership that touches everything from your superannuation to complex commercial structures.

    Discover the four essential building blocks that create every valid trust, meet the key players in trust relationships (trustees, beneficiaries, settlors, and appointors), and explore how trusts can be created through declaration or transfer. Navigate different trust structures including discretionary family trusts, fixed interest arrangements, and sophisticated hybrid models that adapt to changing circumstances.

    Through practical examples and clear explanations, understand why trusts have become cornerstones of Australian legal practice—and why the fiduciary relationship at their heart represents one of law's highest standards of care.

    ⚖️ Perfect for: Law students beginning trust law studies, lawyers advising on family wealth structures, and professionals wanting to understand how superannuation and investment trusts actually work.

    📻 Credits

    Host & Producer: Dr Sarah McKibbin, University of Southern Queensland
    Audio Production & Sound Design: Ben Meares

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    27 分
  • Episode 7: Breaches of Fiduciary Duty and Remedies
    2025/06/26

    Dr Sarah McKibbin continues the fiduciary obligations discussion with her two enthusiastic co-host students—Katie Forsythe and Matt Acheson—diving into what happens when fiduciaries breach their duties of loyalty. This episode examines the strict liability that can arise from conflicts of interest, unauthorised profits, and 'double character' situations—even when the fiduciary acts honestly and causes no harm.

    Explore the limited defences available to fiduciaries, from fully informed consent to contractual variations, and discover equity's powerful remedial arsenal: accounts of profits, equitable compensation, constructive trusts, and more. The discussion extends to third-party liability through the two limbs of Barnes v Addy, examining when non-fiduciaries can be held accountable for 'knowing receipt' or 'knowing assistance' in breaches.

    Through cases spanning centuries—from 1874 (Barnes v Addy) to today—understand how these ancient principles continue to evolve to address contemporary commercial challenges.

    ⚖️ Perfect for: Law students preparing for equity exams, practitioners dealing with fiduciary claims, and professionals wanting to understand the serious consequences of breaching duties of trust.

    📻 Credits

    Host & Producer: Dr Sarah McKibbin, University of Southern Queensland

    Student Co-Hosts: Matt Acheson and Katie Forsythe

    Audio Production & Sound Design: Ben Meares

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    31 分
  • Episode 6: Understanding Fiduciary Relationships
    2025/06/26

    Dr Sarah McKibbin is joined by two enthusiastic students—Katie Forsythe and Matt Acheson—to explore one of equity's most distinctive areas—fiduciary obligations. This episode unpacks what makes a relationship 'fiduciary', examining both traditional categories like solicitor-client and director-company relationships, and how courts identify fiduciary duties in new contexts.

    Through landmark cases including Maguire v Makaronis, Chan v Zacharia, and Boardman v Phipps (an English case with a fascinating Toowoomba connection!), discover why equity imposes such strict duties on those in positions of trust. Learn about the 'no-profit' and 'no-conflict' rules, the prophylactic nature of fiduciary obligations, and why good intentions often aren't enough to escape liability.

    Whether you're a law student, legal practitioner, or anyone working in a professional capacity, this episode provides essential insights into relationships of trust and confidence that permeate commercial and professional life.

    🎯 Perfect for: Law students studying equity and trusts, legal practitioners, business professionals, and anyone interested in understanding duties of loyalty and trust.

    📻 Credits

    Host & Producer: Dr Sarah McKibbin, University of Southern Queensland

    Student Co-Hosts: Matt Acheson and Katie Forsythe

    Audio Production & Sound Design: Ben Meares

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    36 分
  • Episode 5: Estoppel in Equity (Special Solo Edition)
    2025/06/02

    A special solo lecture by Dr Sarah McKibbin, recorded to ensure students have the essential material while our regular dialogue episode is still in production.

    Sarah takes you on a journey through one of equity's most practical doctrines — estoppel. Starting with the story of David Stone, who worked a farm for 23 years based on a promise of inheritance, this lecture explores when and why the law holds people to their promises even without a contract.

    This narrative lecture weaves together:

    • Why William Money couldn't rely on a promise of debt forgiveness in the 1840s, and how that revealed a crucial gap in the law
    • The wartime promise that launched promissory estoppel (and why Denning J's most important words were technically just 'obiter')
    • How the Mahers' demolished building in Nowra changed Australian law forever
    • The human story behind Kramer v Stone — substandard housing, holes in the roof, and a third of average wages for decades
    • Why the High Court's 2024 decision in Kramer matters: when is a promise itself enough?
    • Justice Gleeson's powerful dissent in Kramer and what it reveals about ongoing tensions in the law
    • The difference between standing by silently (acquiescence) and making promises (encouragement) — and why it matters
    • When courts award money versus making promises come true


    Note: This solo lecture was recorded to support student learning while our regular conversational episode is being produced. The full episode with our student co-host will explore these themes through dialogue and additional examples.

    Key points

    • Duration: 15:06
    • Format: Narrative journey through estoppel's development
    • Focus: Making complex doctrine accessible through stories and clear explanation
    • Essential listening before classes on equitable estoppel


    Produced by Dr Sarah McKibbin for the University of Southern Queensland

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    15 分
  • Episode 4: Unconscionable Conduct and Undue Influence
    2025/06/02

    Join Dr Sarah McKibbin and student co-host Katie Forsythe as they navigate the practical application of equity through two powerful doctrines that protect vulnerable parties from exploitation and overreaching.

    This episode examines:

    • The crucial distinction: Learn how unconscionable conduct targets exploitation of special disadvantage while undue influence focuses on overborne will — with guidance from the High Court's decision in Thorne v Kennedy
    • The Amadio case: Follow the heartbreaking story of elderly Italian migrants misled into unlimited liability while their son's company maintained a 'façade of prosperity'
    • Special disadvantage: Understand what vulnerabilities equity protects from limited English and old age to illness, poverty, and lack of education
    • Categories of influence: Navigate the classification systems from actual versus presumed influence to modern understandings of proof methods
    • Protected relationships: Explore presumed relationships including solicitor-client, doctor-patient, and religious adviser-disciple through vivid cases
    • Real-world tragedy: Witness how equity responds when relationships cross boundaries, from elderly 'Rocker' relegated to a tent to the scandalous Bar-Mordecai case
    • Third party implications: Discover when banks and other institutions can be caught by another's undue influence
    • Rebutting presumptions: Learn what constitutes meaningful independent advice and when even emphatic legal warnings aren't enough


    Perfect for understanding how equity intervenes to ensure fairness in transactions beyond mere legal compliance. The episode transforms abstract principles into practical tools for recognising and addressing exploitation in professional practice.


    Key points

    • Duration: 35:43
    • Content: Suitable for legal education and professional development
    • Format: Educational dialogue with landmark Australian case studies


    Hosted by Dr Sarah McKibbin with student co-host, Katie ForsytheProduced by Dr Sarah McKibbin for the University of Southern QueenslandPost-production editing by Michael Fleming

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    36 分
  • Episode 3: Modern Equity and Its Maxims
    2025/05/22

    In this concluding episode of Module 1, Dr Sarah McKibbin and student co-host Jennifer Beaumont tackle the ongoing debates that shape modern equity and introduce the timeless principles that guide equitable decision-making.

    This episode explores:

    • The fusion debate: Are equity and the common law truly separate streams, or should they blend? Discover why this 150-year-old question still matters in today's courts
    • The fusion fallacy: Learn why Australian courts reject New Zealand's more integrated approach, and what this means for legal practice
    • Modern applications: See equity's maxims in action through contemporary cases such as X v Twitter, Black Uhlans, and Maguire v Makaronis
    • Course roadmap: Preview how the historical foundations connect to upcoming topics: estoppel, fiduciary duties, trusts, and equitable remedies
    • Guiding principles: Master the equitable maxims that can be used as thinking tools: 'equity acts in personam', 'clean hands', and 'equity will not suffer a wrong without a remedy'
    • Practical wisdom: Understand why these ancient principles arguably remain relevant for modern legal problems

    This episode bridges historical understanding with contemporary practice, preparing you for advanced study of specific equitable doctrines.

    Key points

    • Duration: 33:49
    • Content: Suitable for legal education and professional development
    • Format: Educational dialogue with modern case examples and practical applications


    Hosted by Dr Sarah McKibbin with student co-host Jennifer Beaumont

    Produced by Dr Sarah McKibbin for the University of Southern Queensland

    Post-production editing by Ben Meares

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    34 分
  • Episode 2: The Development of Equity Through Conflict and Reform
    2025/05/22

    Join Dr Sarah McKibbin and student co-host Jennifer Beaumont as they continue their journey through equity's fascinating evolution, exploring how a medieval court system transformed into the modern legal framework we know today.


    This episode examines:

    • Chancery's lasting legacy: Discover how innovations like discovery, written testimony, and trials by judge alone still shape modern litigation
    • The three-pronged jurisdiction: Understand how Chancery's exclusive, concurrent, and auxiliary jurisdictions operated alongside common law courts
    • A broken system: Experience the frustration of 19th-century litigants navigating multiple courts with conflicting procedures, immortalised in Dickens' Bleak House
    • Revolutionary reform: Witness the most radical court restructuring in 700 years through the Judicature Acts 1873-75
    • Australian variations: Learn why Queensland embraced reform immediately while NSW waited nearly a century to 'advance back to 1873'
    • Practical implications: See how jurisdictional conflicts played out in real cases such as Lovell v Galloway and Lord Eldon's forgotten decisions


    Perfect for understanding how historical developments continue to influence modern legal practice. The episode includes reflection points and real-world examples that bring legal history to life.


    Key points

    • Duration: 32:24
    • Content: Suitable for legal education and professional development
    • Format: Educational dialogue with historical case studies


    Hosted by Dr Sarah McKibbin with student co-host Jennifer Beaumont

    Produced by Dr Sarah McKibbin for the University of Southern Queensland

    Post-production editing by Ben Meares

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    32 分